Walmart receipt from 2006 goes viral for its shockingly low prices: ‘I just fell to my knees’

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If only we could rollback to the cheap grocery costs of yesteryear. 

Paying less than $1.50 for a carton of one dozen eggs, today, seems like a frugal foodie’s fever dream. But, alas, a newly viral vintage Walmart receipt from June 3, 2006 is painfully reminding social media of the company’s once shockingly low rollback prices on everyday items. 

And now, cash-strapped, inflation-worn Gen Zers are salivating over the decades-old supermarket charges. 

Kylei, a 25-year-old X user, virally shared a Walmart receipt from June 2006, revealing the once-affordable costs of food. wifesun – stock.adobe.com

“Found my mom’s grocery receipt from 2006, and I just fell to my knees omg,” Kylei, 25, tweeted to more than 12 million X users alongside a snapshot of the crumpled sales slip, showing that her mother spent a measly $161.87 on 79 goods while patronizing the superstore nearly 20 years ago to the day. 

“Makes you feel SICK,” she commented, in part, responding to online outrage over the inexpensive food fees of 2006 compared to the astronomically high cost of chow in 2026. 

“That [grocery bill] would be at least $300 [right now] omggggg,” an astonished 20-something tweeted in dismay. 

The receipt showed that Kylei’s mom spent $1.28 on eggs and $1.86 on cereal, sending inflation-weary Gen Zers into a tizzy. X / @ruledbymercuryy

“They are robbing us blind,” another Gen Z griped. 

“We used to be a proper country,” an equally annoyed youngster whined. 

It’s a countrywide cost-surging crisis with no real end in sight.  

Across the US, inflation, the gradual increase in prices that occurs when demand is higher than the supply, is at a fever pitch amid the Iran war. In fact, food and energy prices increased at their fastest pace in three years in April owing to shipping and shortage issues, the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Economic Analysis revealed Thursday. 

A recent Consumer Report compared the prices of major grocery stores to Walmart prices, ranking the shops from the priciest to the least expensive. Sundry Photography – stock.adobe.com

Prices for food eaten at home rose 2.9% in April compared to the same month a year earlier, per the Labor Department’s consumer price index. Consumers also paid 6.5% more for fresh fruit and vegetables in US cities last month than they did in April 2025, and 8.8% more for meat, according to the report. 

Startling data from the US Census Bureau, too, revealed that a families of four are  spending an annual average exceeding $17,000 on groceries in states such as California, Hawaii and Texas, owing to inflated transportation costs, weather issues and global conflicts. 

Families of four are being hit hard by inflation, with some paying upwards of $17,000 a year on food. Pavel Losevsky – stock.adobe.com

Prices for items such as nonalcoholic beverages reportedly rose 5.1% over the past year. The cost of ground beef, which averages about $6.90 per pound, shot up roughly 15% year over year. And tomatoes jumped 15.1% in April and are up about 40% annually. 

To combat the chaos, budget-conscious customers are seeking solace at inexpensive shops.    

An analysis by Consumer Reports recently identified the most and least expensive U.S. supermarkets, crowning Whole Foods Market the priciest — with costs nearly 40% higher than what a consumer would pay at big-box retailer Walmart, which was used as a baseline for the study.

The cheapest chain for groceries was Costco Wholesale, per the findings, with prices 21.4% lower than Walmart, and BJ’s Wholesale Club following with 21% less.

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