Daily Mail

ROADSIDE ROBBERY!

How rip-off service stations charge up to FOUR TIMES more for snacks than supermarke­ts just one mile away

- By Toby Walne

PETROL prices may be falling but according to the Government’s Competitio­n and Markets Authority this is not being passed on to customers. And prices aren’t just high at the pumps. Money Mail research reveals customers who shop at motorway service stations pay an astonishin­g mark-up of up to 300 pc or so for basic grocery essentials and snacks.

I visit Birchanger Green motorway service station just off the M11, which is the last — or first — chance to take a break on the journey to or from London, 40 miles south. I compare prices to those in the supermarke­ts just one mile away at Bishop’s Stortford, in Hertfordsh­ire, to see just how overpriced goods are.

On an early June lunchtime, the car park is crammed full of vehicles while the Welcome Break shopping area bustles with drivers and their passengers stocking up on fuel and refreshmen­ts for the journey ahead.

PETROL PUMPS THAT FUEL THE MARK-UP

BEFORE I even get to overpriced groceries, there’s extortiona­te petrol prices to contend with. I drive in a snaking trail of vehicles queuing for fuel. The sign indicates that unleaded petrol is 168.9p a litre while diesel is 179.9p. In old money that means petrol is £7.68 a gallon while diesel stands at £8.18. If you fill up a typical 60litre fuel tank it costs £101.34 and £107.94 respective­ly.

Yet at the local Tesco supermarke­t one mile away, the fuel is 145.9p a litre for petrol and 148.9p for diesel. So filling up the car would cost £87.54 and £89.34 respective­ly.

If you filled up a petrol car once a week for an entire year at a service station you would spend an extra £ 717.60. The RAC says motorway fuel is typically 20p a litre more expensive than at other petrol stations.

CAPTIVE CLIENTS ARE EXPLOITED

FAMILIES who stop at service stations to fill up with fuel and refreshmen­ts are a captive audience and all too easy to exploit.

I decide to withdraw cash from an ATM — this costs £1.99 for the privilege. I was going to check the tyre pressure on the car but this is £1 so I give it a miss — I can do it for free at my local garage.

Staff are friendly at the Shell convenienc­e store — but prices are not. A pint of milk costs £1.50. In shops less than a mile away I can buy two pints of milk for £1.25 (62.5p a pint). Other basics are as high in price as the Welcome Break service station shops adjacent to the forecourt.

SNACK COSTS NOT WELCOME

STROLLING though the giant glass-fronted archway under a Welcome Break sign I am greeted by a host of shops and food outlets.

The open-plan design aims to lure shoppers in to spend money as they battle their way to the toilets at the back of the complex.

WHSmith is immediatel­y to the left. I start by stocking up with a one-litre bottle of Buxton water. It costs £2.50. Yet this bottle bought in a multi-pack at a local supermarke­t works out at 50p. Thirsty customers pay 400 pc more at this price than at a service station.

A packet of cheese and onion Walkers crisps is priced £1.55 at WHSmith. Yet when I scan this 45-gram packet at the till it comes up as £1.60. I was being ripped off before but now I feel downright cheated, especially as the same packet would cost £1 in town.

A packet of Cadbury buttons is another con — £3.50 for 95g. Not only am I paying too much, but I am also a victim of so- called ‘shrinkflat­ion’ as it is £1.35 for a 119g bag at the nearby Tesco and Waitrose supermarke­ts.

I fancy a cappuccino so go to Starbucks where I pay £3.75 for a ‘ tall’. It would have cost me £ 4.15 for a ‘ g rande’ and £4.45 for a ‘venti’. Yet the same cappuccino at a Starbucks in Bishop’s Stortford is £3.45 for a ‘tall’, £3.95 for a ‘grande’ and £4.15 for a ‘venti’. This is a difference of 30p, 20p and 30p respective­ly.

I’m tempted by a bottle of Cava Brut but I balk at the cost — £13 at the service station.

PRICE HIKES ARE GOING BANANAS

THERE is a Little Waitrose at the Welcome Break, a smaller version of the supermarke­t, aimed at those in need of essentials returning home after a long trip or holiday. And it is fine to expect to pay a bit extra for this convenienc­e.

I am a bit peckish and decide to buy a banana until I see that small loose bananas are being sold individual­ly for 70p each. Waitrose in town, a mile away, sells the same fruit for 18p, while Marks & Spencer charges 17p and the nearby Tesco 16p. This amounted to a price hike of up to 338 pc.

I choose a prawn sandwich at £4.40. If I’d been clever and bought it at the Waitrose in town it would have cost £3.60 — a saving of 80p.

The Little Waitrose also has the cheek to put a yellow reduced sticker on six free-range ‘essential’ eggs — dropping a £4 price to £3.60 as they could only be displayed a further week before they would be thrown out. We know the price of eggs has gone through the roof but the same supermarke­t chain in town charged just £1.25, for fresher eggs. It seems a rotten trick.

Waitrose says its branch at the service station is operated as a franchise so Welcome Break sets prices. The model works much the same at other service stations, such as those run by Moto or BP with a Marks & Spencer food outlet where prices may be double that of nearby shops. A Welcome Break spokesman says: ‘As a motorway services operator we provide a wide range of facilities — from refuelling, toilets and rest stops to meals, drinks and shower facilities.

‘Offering 24-hour-a- day access every day of the year means operating costs are higher compared to local shops and supermarke­ts.’

I vow never to spend a penny in a service station again unless for a comfort break. How much longer before they charge to use the loo?

 ?? ?? * - Welcome Break at Birchanger Green Services, Essex ** - Supermarke­t in Bishop’s Stortford, Hertfordsh­ire
* - Welcome Break at Birchanger Green Services, Essex ** - Supermarke­t in Bishop’s Stortford, Hertfordsh­ire
 ?? ?? Price isn’t right: Reporter Toby with some of his shopping
Price isn’t right: Reporter Toby with some of his shopping

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom