Lidl is increasing staff wages for the second time this year in a £39.5m investment that propels it to the top of the supermarket pay league table.
Entry-level hourly rates will increase from £10.10 to £10.90 outside London and from £11.30 to £11.95 within the M25 that circles the capital.
The hourly rate tops the current highest level paid by its rival Aldi – of £10.50 and hour – which was introduced last month. The difference amounts to less than 50p for an eight-hour shift as Aldi’s rate includes pay for the 20-minute legally required break for someone working six hours or more.
Lidl said the latest pay rise for all store and warehouse workers, which will be introduced next week, represents an increase of between 10% and 14.5% in hourly wages since this time last year.
It said the increase would benefit 23,500 employees at its 935 stores and 13 warehouses across the country, with a full-time worker set to earn about £2,000 more annually.
The supermarket chain said the rise meant 40% of staff on hourly wages would be earning £12 an hour as a result of their length of service.
Ryan McDonnell, the chief executive of Lidl GB, said: “This is the second increase to pay rates that Lidl has introduced this year and is in recognition of the ongoing hard work and dedication of our store and warehouse colleagues.” Lidl said the two pay rises in eight months would cost it £50m.
The company’s latest investment, its highest ever in staff rates, puts it at the top of the pay league among the UK’s supermarkets and is the latest in a wave of wage rises and cost of living support to be given to workers across the sector.
On Wednesday, Marks & Spencer increased hourly pay for the second time this year, so that 40,000 staff are now on a minimum of £10.20.
Earlier this month, Sainsbury’s said its 127,000 hourly paid workers would get a 25p an hour increase to £10.25 from October, with the rate for staff in London stores increasing from £11.05 to £11.30.
skip past newsletter promotion
Sign up to Business Today
Free daily newsletter
Get set for the working day – we’ll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morning
Enter your email address Enter your email address Sign upPrivacy Notice: Newsletters may contain info about charities, online ads, and content funded by outside parties. For more information see our Privacy Policy. We use Google reCaptcha to protect our website and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
after newsletter promotion
In July, Aldi said it was putting up hourly pay for the second time in a year, with an increase of 40p to a minimum of £10.50 outside the M25 and to £11.95 in London. This represented an increase of at least 3.5%.
Tesco and the sandwich chain Pret a Manger have also increased pay twice for workers in the past year. Asda raised its pay to £10.10 an hour in July after unions criticised it for lagging behind rival chains, with a rate of £9.66 introduced in April.
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.