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A Sainsbury's spokesman said: "We have a coin system in place at our Biddulph store for customers who wish to use a trolley. Safety is our highest priority, we provide hand sanitiser for customers ...
Will I still be able to use my £1 supermarket trolley token after the round ... and have confirmed that they will continue to accept the tokens in stores. We also asked Sainsbury's and Asda ...
It's happened to us all - we've gone shopping without a £1 coin or a token and have been unable to unlock the trolleys.  But now there's a simple way of getting round the ...
The UK's biggest supermarket will keep trolleys unlocked while it converts them to the new £1 coin. BBC ... Morrisons and Sainsbury's have said their ... coins as well as existing trolley tokens.
Sainsbury's was £33.52 more expensive than Asda, coming in at £359.23 for the same trolley of comparable goods - this is the first time it has overtaken Waitrose to come out as the most expensive.
The next cheapest option was Sainsbury's where the same size trolley would have cost you £358.77. Waitrose was the most expensive retailer , charging £396.58 for the 139 items - over £41 more ...
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