Woolworths shopper caught using bizarre hack on bananas at check-out

Woolworths shopper is caught using a bizarre supermarket hack when weighing bananas at the checkout

  • Man peels his bananas before he pays for them
  • His embarrassed girlfriend shared his hack online
  • Millions of Aussies play the self-service system

A woman has shared her boyfriend’s bizarre money-saving hack he uses when buying bananas at Woolworths.

Her friend was caught in a strange trick while shopping at one of the locations in Australia.

His shocked and embarrassed girlfriend shared footage of the hack in a TikTok video.

“How my frugal friend saves money on his bananas,” the caption read.

A frugal shopper’s girlfriend has revealed her partner’s bizarre money-saving hack at Woolies that saves him more than 10 percent at the checkout

A TikTok shows the man peeling his banana before throwing the peel away and weighing it at the checkout

In the video, the woman’s boyfriend can be seen picking a banana from the fresh produce department, peeling it off and putting the fruit in a plastic bag.

The couple then walks to the self-service checkouts where the boyfriend puts the banana on the scale.

Social media users attacked the friend, saying it was a major red flag.

“That’s not frugal, that’s a Penny pincher,” one wrote.

“Real frugal people weigh them without a bag,” a second added.

“Break up with him and call the police,” a third wrote.

“I’d be less embarrassed if he stole it,” another wrote.

A study of the New Mexico State University found that a banana peel accounts for about 12.5 percent of the fruit’s total weight.

A Finder National Survey conducted last year found that at least 10 percent of shoppers admitted to scanning the wrong items at the checkout to save money.

In a 2022 survey, millions of customers admitted they even scanned items like avocados and passed them off as cheaper veggies like onions

One in five Australians admitted to simply stealing things.

Coles and Woolworths have introduced surveillance cameras and high-tech scanning systems to reduce the number of mis-scanned items.

Coles loses an estimated $891 million a year to theft and Woolworths loses up to $1 billion a year, the Global Retail Theft Barometer reported.

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