Pack Size
The 10-Gram Tax
Milka LU: same €3.00, 13% less chocolate — Germany's court called it Mogelpackung. Our data agrees.
Read story →Data Stories
Millions of real shelf prices, collected by everyday shoppers across Europe. These stories turn that raw data into patterns worth knowing — price swings, deal windows, and the products moving most in your market.
Product visuals
Pack Size
Milka LU: same €3.00, 13% less chocolate — Germany's court called it Mogelpackung. Our data agrees.
Read story →Pack Size
Slovenia's 3.96-L Persil is €6.06/L. The 2.25-L is €12/L — same brand, same shelf, double the price per litre for a smaller bottle.
Read story →Cross Border
Finland is famous for expensive food. Its butter costs half what Germany
Read story →Seasonal Prices
A kilogram of cucumbers costs €1.09 in June and €3.49 in February. In Slovenia, the harvest calendar is the price list.
Read story →Brand vs. Generic
Croatian-made detergent costs a quarter of imported Persil on the same shelf — buy local, pay a quarter.
Read story →Cross Border
Croatian shoppers pay a median €15.45 per litre — 2.6× more than Spanish shoppers pay for the same grade of oil.
Read story →Cross Border
Egg prices barely vary by country — what doubles your bill is how the hen was raised. A 27% geography gap vs a 92% organic premium in the same market.
Read story →Brand vs. Generic
Estonia tops Eurozone laundry prices — the discount brand that would pull the median down is missing from the shelf.
Read story →Brand vs. Generic
Flour prices vary 73% across Europe — but the brand premium on your shelf is an even bigger story. Own-brand flour costs the same everywhere. The median doesn
Read story →Brand vs. Generic
In Germany, drugstore-brand laundry powder costs half what the premium pods beside it do — same wash, half the till.
Read story →Brand vs. Generic
Palmolive costs €2.79 per litre in Germany. Switch to eco — same shelf, same look — and you pay up to €5.98.
Read story →Volatility
Premium detergent swings 106% a year. Own-label on the same shelf barely moves. That isn't a coincidence — it's the business model.
Read story →Cross Border
The same Ariel bottle costs €19.24 in Latvia and €10.75 in Lithuania — 80% more for crossing one border.
Read story →Pack Size
In Lithuania, a 2.7-litre Ariel costs 55% more per litre than the same brand
Read story →Pack Size
One jar of Nescafé tracks the sharpest grocery price climb Slovenian shoppers have felt in years.
Read story →Pack Size
Seven Milka bars in Slovenia shrank to 90 g but kept the €1.99 price tag — a silent 11% increase.
Read story →Category Spread
A litre of "orange juice" costs €0.70 or €4.20 depending on what
Read story →Category Spread
In Slovenian supermarkets, the cheapest olive oil costs €5.39 a bottle. The most expensive costs €17.48 — and gives you less oil.
Read story →Cross Border
Barilla pasta costs 83% more in Estonia than Slovenia. The euro is the same. The price is not.
Read story →Category Spread
Eating less meat costs 22% more per kilo — unless you know which shelf to look at.
Read story →Pack Size
Pods cost 2–3× more per cup than ground coffee in every European market. Over a year at three cups a day, that gap is €257. For the same caffeine.
Read story →Cross Border
The same bottle of Pril costs twice as much in Slovenia as in Germany. Dish soap has nowhere to hide.
Read story →Brand vs. Generic
Chocolate prices barely vary across Europe — but Milka to Lindt costs more than Spain to Germany.
Read story →Category Spread
Craft beer in Slovenia sells at nearly 3x the price of domestic lager, revealing a sharp three-tier beer market.
Read story →Inflation
Slovenia's cleaning-supply aisle moved twice as fast as the food basket — dishwasher tablets up 25%, softeners 17%, cleaners 16%.
Read story →Cross Border
The same Croatian olive oil brand costs €9.99 in Zagreb and €16.17 in Ljubljana — a €6.18 gap on a single bottle.
Read story →Brand vs. Generic
Slovenian own-label laundry gel costs a quarter of the branded bottle — same shelf, four times the money.
Read story →Inflation
Slovenia's pet aisle rose 13–18% in ten months — the dog's dinner inflated right alongside yours.
Read story →Inflation
A bag of rice in Slovenia costs a quarter more than last summer — a near-uniform rise across nearly every brand and grain on the shelf.
Read story →Pack Size
Every time you buy the 500ml bottle instead of the 1-litre, you spend €5.99 extra for the same amount of olive oil.
Read story →Pack Size
Pringles 165 g cans in Germany cost up to 37% more per gram than the 200 g XXL version.
Read story →Brand vs. Generic
Spanish cooperative-chain pods run at €0.17 a wash — the branded pods beside them can cost three times as much.
Read story →Brand vs. Generic
Branded shaving gel costs 80% more than own-label. Branded yoghurt costs 33% more. The brand tax is not one number.
Read story →Store Premium
The same beer costs 4x more depending on where you buy it — and the data proves it.
Read story →Cross Border
A jar of Rimi bruschetta costs €0.99 in Vilnius and €2.35 in Tallinn — same retailer, same label, 138% more expensive.
Read story →Category Spread
Tomato prices can swing from everyday commodity to premium specialty. Variety, farming method and positioning explain the gap.
Read story →Cross Border
Two Colgate toothpastes in the same Slovenian store: €3.05 and €13.98 per 100ml. The hygiene premium is a brand decision, not a geography one.
Read story →Volatility
Snacks and fresh produce swing 3× more in price than electronics. Here is what that means for your shop.
Read story →Category Spread
Scan products in-store, contribute real-world price data, and collect Points. Sivix is the crowdsourced price network built by everyday shoppers.
Read story →Cross Border
The same bottle of Mateus rosé costs €4.49 in Spain and €11.73 in Estonia — here is why.
Read story →Sivix is a crowdsourced price network built by everyday shoppers. Scan products, submit prices, and collect Points for every verified contribution. The more you contribute, the more the network grows — and the more accurate the data you can access. We're building the most accurate, real-time view of prices in the world. Those who join early and contribute consistently become the most established voices in the network.
From real shoppers scanning products on the shelf. Every price in these stories was submitted by a Sivix user or collected via integrated retail data feeds — no estimates, no scraping of ad prices.
Continuously. As new scans come in, the dataset refreshes. Interactive stories pull live from the Sivix API, so what you see reflects the most recent available data.
Coverage is deepest in Slovenia and Finland, with growing data across the EU and beyond. Country filters in each story let you explore the markets available to you.
Yes. Download the Sivix app, scan products in-store, and submit the shelf price. Every validated contribution goes directly into the dataset that powers these stories — and earns you Points.