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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

to think supermarkets should open longer on Sundays?

286 replies

ThisPlumCrab · 13/08/2025 18:02

By late Sunday morning my local supermarket is like a rugby scrum with trolleys. The car park is jammed, people are queueing before they even get inside, and once you are in the aisles it feels like an obstacle course just to reach the milk. It is easily the busiest day of the week here, yet we still have the six hour Sunday trading limit.

Because of Sunday trading laws, the big shops in England and Wales can only open for six hours. In practice that means everyone piles in at the same time. Late morning is rammed, early afternoon is even worse, and by the afternoon the place looks like a plague of locusts has been through, with only artichokes and beetroot left.

In Scotland there are no Sunday trading laws for large shops, so they can open as long as they like, and life seems to carry on perfectly fine.

If supermarkets here could open longer, like on a normal day, people could spread out their shopping and the whole thing would be calmer. Families who spend Saturday at kids sports or activities, and workers who do shifts at the weekend, would have more choice than the current six hour window. Smaller express or local stores are open all day anyway, but they are pricier and do not stock everything, so you end up doing several little shops.

I know the main argument for the current rules is that Sundays should be for people to spend time with their families. But not everyone lives in a family setup, and many people, especially students, part timers, and those looking for extra income, actually prefer to work on Sundays. For some, it is the best day to pick up extra hours without clashing with other commitments.

I just do not see how the current system helps when Sundays are already the busiest.

OP posts:
HostaCentral · 14/08/2025 09:37

We completely forgot last weekend and rocked up to M&S Food Hall at 10am. Closed. Opened at 10.30 for browsing, tills opened at 11am. The queues were immense.

As for "there are deliveries", yes, there are, but that's the reason why shops are all closing ..... Digital retail is 24/7 and has killed off physical shops due to antiquated rules like these.

Kibble19 · 14/08/2025 09:41

I don’t live in England or Wales so these 6 hour opening times are crazy to me. I take it for granted that I can go to the shops anytime on a Sunday, just like the rest of the week.

LifeOfAShowGirl · 14/08/2025 09:41

YANBU. The current system is based on a time when the housewife would be able to shop while her children were at school and her husband at work.

indoorplantqueen · 14/08/2025 09:43

I’m in NI and shops don’t open until 1pm, which is a bit annoying if you decide last minute to do a Sunday roast as it’s too late to get there and get what you need. Local corner shops are ok, but expensive and don’t have what I need. I’d like the shops here to open a bit earlier.

RimTimTagiDim · 14/08/2025 09:44

There's no problem in Scotland with retail workers being unable to see their families or keeling over from exhaustion. England and Wales should move into the 21st century.

beachwalkx · 14/08/2025 09:45

DeoHelp · 13/08/2025 18:12

I need fresh groceries for the week so Sunday is the ideal day to do this - unfortunately I then have to basically dedicate half of my day to going to Sainsbury’s as the opening hours are so short and it’s so busy. Don’t have time on Monday due to work and I’m often too exhausted afterwards to do the big shop.

Why half a day?
I get to Aldi for 9.30am every Sunday, am at the till by 10am and home by 10.15

Mumofyellows · 14/08/2025 09:45

Can people not just organise themselves to shop on a different day, plan ahead with what they might need if they can't go on a Sunday and use a co op or similar for unexpected emergency bits? I really don't see the need for longer Sunday hours, everyone knows it's a shorter shopping day, either plan better or know it might be busy!

MagpiePi · 14/08/2025 09:45

DeoHelp · 13/08/2025 18:12

I need fresh groceries for the week so Sunday is the ideal day to do this - unfortunately I then have to basically dedicate half of my day to going to Sainsbury’s as the opening hours are so short and it’s so busy. Don’t have time on Monday due to work and I’m often too exhausted afterwards to do the big shop.

Why not start your grocery week on a different day?

SprayWhiteDung · 14/08/2025 09:46

How novel or exciting are supermarkets in your town that people are fighting to get into them on one of the seven days a week that they open?!

I get that plenty of people work Monday-Saturday, but surely they don't work 8am-10pm 6 days a week - when the big supermarkets are usually open?

It reminds me of the people who queue round the block overnight outside the Apple store when there's a new iPhone being released - apparently unaware that there isn't any time limit or restriction, and that Apple will merrily keep on churning out just as many phones as people want to buy!

Fupoffyagrasshole · 14/08/2025 09:47

you can go the shops any other time though!

gamerchick · 14/08/2025 09:48

No. I think it was a mistake opening on a Sunday in the first place. Yes there are always some who want more hours, but often than not, people want a fucking life to actually see their family and enjoy the house they pay a fortune for.

Try maybe not shopping on a Sunday at the last minute. There are 6 other days to choose from.

SprayWhiteDung · 14/08/2025 09:48

LifeOfAShowGirl · 14/08/2025 09:41

YANBU. The current system is based on a time when the housewife would be able to shop while her children were at school and her husband at work.

Really? The kids are at school and husband is at work from 8am to 10pm, Monday to Saturday?!

LunchtimeNaps · 14/08/2025 09:49

Sunday hours are outdated, my shifts cover 365 24/7. It's not always easy to plan as some people suggest on here. I'm often running out of time on a Sunday and it's shut before I've managed to get to a shop.

Denim4ever · 14/08/2025 09:50

On the whole I can cope with the hours being reduced on a Sunday. We don't have a small open all hours Tesco near us, but there is one near my Dad's house and a few within a reasonable radius.

I've hardly ever gone to big supermarkets on Sundays. I'd never plan for it. I believe the big Sainsbury near us is open for very long hours in the week, so I think people can manage for Sundays

FluffyWabbit · 14/08/2025 09:51

I wish shops would be closed all of Sunday.

We need to get back to a place where family time means something and that includes making this available for people who have to currently work outside of regular hours.

gamerchick · 14/08/2025 09:52

Charlthg · 13/08/2025 18:57

Who is forcing you to work? Supermarket jobs are voluntary.

Doesn't that apply to all jobs?

mumtoadhdadult · 14/08/2025 09:53

Drivingthevengabus · 13/08/2025 18:12

It's an antiquated law, IMO. We no longer live in a world where everyone works 9-5 and Sundays are a sacred day for religion and family. People live and work more flexibly on the whole and I think opening hours should reflect that.

Antiquated??? 1994 it came in. Hardly bloody antiquated!

My local supermarkets (and we have them all) open from 7am to 9pm 6 days a week.

OP why do you HAVE to shop on a Sunday? You cannot really expect us to believe that there is no other time? Our local Aldi closes at 10pm and by 9pm it is empty apart from staff restocking for the following morning.

MrsSkylerWhite · 14/08/2025 09:54

Clearinguptheclutter · 13/08/2025 19:02

I agree but we’re well ahead of lots of European countries where all shops are closed completely on Sundays

Is that necessarily “ahead”?

SprayWhiteDung · 14/08/2025 09:56

LunchtimeNaps · 14/08/2025 09:49

Sunday hours are outdated, my shifts cover 365 24/7. It's not always easy to plan as some people suggest on here. I'm often running out of time on a Sunday and it's shut before I've managed to get to a shop.

It's not like supermarkets are the only places that sell food, though. There are lots of smaller shops - Spar, Co-op, little versions of the big supermarkets, corner shops - that hardly close at all.

Yes, the prices may be a bit higher, but it's just like anything else in life where you either plan ahead or pay extra for last-minute decisions.

What about shift workers - or just early risers - who decide at 5am that they desperately need some foodstuff or other provisions? What do they do?

It's not realistic to expect every single consumer item to be available at every minute of the day, without ever spending a little time yourself planning in advance what important items you might need and when.

MagpiePi · 14/08/2025 09:56

SprayWhiteDung · 14/08/2025 09:48

Really? The kids are at school and husband is at work from 8am to 10pm, Monday to Saturday?!

Ah, this magical time in the past when all women were housewives...

I can remember in the late 60s/early 70s when big supermarkets weren't at all common, let alone open on Sundays, and all the shops closed at lunchtime on Wednesdays. My full time working mum would go to the market on Saturday mornings. Mind you, we did have a milkman and a greengrocer van would come round on Saturday afternoons.

Fupoffyagrasshole · 14/08/2025 09:58

SprayWhiteDung · 14/08/2025 09:48

Really? The kids are at school and husband is at work from 8am to 10pm, Monday to Saturday?!

shops open til 9pm or 10pm some of them! i can easily go to the supermarket when the kids are in bed.

or I can get a delivery to arrive on a weekend morning at 7am if i wanted.

There are heaps of other options

giving up precious weekend time to go to a supermarket sounds like hell on earth and i wouldn't ever do it unless i was really stuck.

LadyGaGasPokerFace · 14/08/2025 09:59

I’ve just got back from Hungary on holiday and the supermarkets there are open til 7pm on a Sunday. Was handy. We’re so behind in England on this. I remember when supermarkets closed on Wednesdays or Mondays. Never open on a Sunday.

Badbadbunny · 14/08/2025 09:59

FluffyWabbit · 14/08/2025 09:51

I wish shops would be closed all of Sunday.

We need to get back to a place where family time means something and that includes making this available for people who have to currently work outside of regular hours.

Why only shops? Surely you'd want everything to be closed so everyone can have this utopian family Sunday, so no cafes, no restaurants, no attractions, no museums, no theme parks, no parks/gardens, etc? How about no call centres so you won't be able to phone your bank or utility firm? Presumably no online shopping deliveries either as the delivery drivers also deserve Sunday's off. But that also means empty shelves in the shops on Monday morning if the warehouse staff and delivery staff in the major distribution centres are off on Sundays! You've really not thought it through! Loads of people work on Sundays, in fact shop workers are probably a small minority!

GertrudePerkinsPaperyThing · 14/08/2025 10:00

I think we can cope without supermarkets open for a few hours. And you just know they would force people to work who didn’t want to.

It’s quite good for us as a society not to have everything available all the time - we’re too used to having everything available to us instantly and at all times.

1apenny2apenny · 14/08/2025 10:01

HRTFT - I would like supermarkets to now shut on Sundays (or any random day) to give workers one day off. John Lewis used to shut on Mondays and back in the day many shops did half day on a Wednesday. People have plenty of time to shop.