The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Off-brand batteries for savings

- Clark Howard

The two behemoths of the battery industry—Duracell and Energizer — are riding higher prices to greater profitabil­ity even at a time when demand is down for traditiona­l disposable batteries thanks to rechargeab­les.

In fact, the price pressure all but means the days of discounts on batteries are over, according to The Wall Street Journal.

Fortunatel­y, I’m always out there looking for deals and know it’s still possible to save money at a time when the big guys are jacking up prices — just look at the no-name brand batteries!

A few of the off-brands you may want to check out are Rayovac, Amazon Basics and Tenergy batteries.

But if you really want rockbottom prices, check out Dollar Tree’s everyday deal on four Sunbeam batteries for just a buck. That’s just 25 cents per battery!

Meanwhile, you may know that Duracell makes the batteries for Costco Wholesale under the warehouse club’s private label. But they’re no longer the deal they once were.

That’s because as Duracell has driven up the price on its own branded batteries, they’re passing that increase along to Costco. And that means the price increase is trickling down to you as a consumer.

Which batteries are best? While Consumer Reports no longer tests batteries, their last extensive tests indicated that battery reliabilit­y has nothing to do with brand names.

In fact, the only battery with the vaunted Best Buy checkmark in the Consumer Reports tally is Costco’s Kirkland Signature (alkaline) — despite the aforementi­oned pricing issues.

A couple of Duracell batteries scored between 80 and 89 on the tally, but their prices are more than twice and almost three times as much as the survey’s last reported cost of the Kirkland Signature batteries.

The highest rated of all AA batteries was the Energizer Ultimate Lithium, which is most lyf or cameras. But at $2.45 for a pair, that’s almost five times the cost of the Kirkland Signature!

Consumer Reports tested a few other store brands too, including Walgreens, CVS, Rite Aid and Best Buy.

The lowest-rated of them all was the Best Buy offering — the Dynex High Capacity AA Alkaline. The Dynex is cheap at 31 cents per pair, but it only scored a 60. Now that is a private label you should probably not buy.

Know that when you goto look at batteries, most store brands will perform virtually identical to the name brand. That’s because the store brands are made by the same name brand manufactur­ers.

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