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    1. WhoAmIEven2 on

      Lidl has the reputation of a store only poor people go to, and with bad quality of food, here in Sweden.

      Good news for me, because then I can visit their meat section and have more of the excellent sausages for myself.

    2. it’s also coming to North Macedonia🙌🏼 but apparently they take YEARS to actually open up the markets. It’s so weird to see the markets built, literal LIDL teams running marathons in Skopje, constant advertising for jobs at LIDL, and all this for maybe three years now, yet no markets open yet

    3. PowerfulMango5799 on

      In NL this used to be a “poor people supermarket”, but something has shifted a few years ago. I know quite some people who are quite rich that go there to shop now

    4. In Poland Lidl is so embedded into the society that we have a „war“ between Lidl, the second largest store chain, and Biedronka, the first largest store chain, where both stores frequently engage in negative marketing towards the other (and occasionally get fined for it) which is in my opinion very likely coordinated between them to generate publicity and boost both stores. So we have Biedronka and Lidl at war and other chains just kinda exist. It happens often that Biedronka and Lidl are built right next to each other. The most comical example I’ve seen had them share a parking lot with entrances exactly opposite of each other

    5. argbargerino on

      Norwegian here. Lidl was considered too weird, for poor people and with low quality foreign products that we don’t trust. We might not have great variety in our stores, but it’s generally pretty good quality with many Norwegian brands we are familiar with. Had they tried a year or two ago when food prices/inflation went crazy, then they might’ve had a chance.

    6. Lithuanian Lidls are my favourite shops – we have just five grocery chains and three of them sell the same stuff, while Lidl sells a lot of its own stuff, plus some local stuff.

    7. Lidl has about 100 stores in the United States. I think Lidl is an upmarket Aldi, at least here (only European version I’ve been to is in Vienna). Lidl in the US has a fresh bakery, but everything else is packaged, and their prices are quite good compared to full function grocery stores here in North Carolina. Cary, NC is the grocery capital of the US – and there is one intersection (Maynard Parkway and Harrison Ave) with Lidl, Aldi, Harris Teeter (premium Kroger brand), and Wal-Mart, with Food Lion 2 blocks away. Cary has Publix and Wegman’s on the same street.

    8. I can still remember the Lidle store we had in Ålesund – Norway. It’s now a Rema1000

    9. I remember when Lidl came to Norway around 2004. There was one right next to the school I was studying at in 2006-2008. It was also close to the area of the city where the more unfortunate people live. This particular store sold a lot of beer, but the other products did not seem to sell that well. The chain did not last long here. It was bought out by Reitan AS in 2008. Their store chain is called Rema 1000, and at the moment they have about 1/4 of the grocery market.

    10. HaugerTheHunter on

      They failed in Norway bc it was just bad quality. I remember one close to me, everything was halfway done. Just, not on par with anything else we had.

      They had beer in plastic bottles… that alone is enough to fail.

    11. Neat-Equipment5908 on

      We dont have it in norway because there is no competition, corperations stick together and agree on set prices and make it impossible for Lidl to get in. It has just gotten worse and prices are going up. But then again its only going up because they know we can afford it

    12. Terrible-Bad-9002 on

      If you’re a riff and you smell like piddle,
      Your mam can’t afford Aldi she shops at Lidl 😂

    13. giocondasmiles on

      We have Lidl in Northeast US. Love the variety of European foods available.

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