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Kroger joins 4th of July grocery fight with new deals

The 4th of July grocery run is one of the most important shopping trips of the summer.

Most customers know the basics before they even walk into the store: meat for the grill, drinks for the cooler, chips and dips for the table, something sweet for later, and a few last-minute items they always seem to forget.

Retailers know the list, too.

That is why Independence Day has become a crowded fight for grocery chains, big-box retailers, warehouse clubs, and delivery apps. 

The holiday basket is bigger than a normal grocery trip, and shoppers are already in a buying mood.

This year, the opportunity is even larger.

The National Retail Federation says 87% of consumers plan to celebrate the Fourth of July in 2026 and spend a record average of $94.41 on food items.

And adding to this celebration is the ongoing craze for the FIFA World Cup 2026, which the US is hosting.

That gives retailers more reasons to compete harder for cookout spending.

Kroger is now making its own holiday pitch, combining food inspiration, digital savings, rewards points, and last-minute delivery options.

But the most noticeable part of the push is not another discount on hot dogs or soda.

It is the way Kroger is trying to turn familiar Fourth of July foods into something more shareable.

Kroger turns cookout staples into food flights

Kroger announced June 26 that it is promoting customizable Fourth of July “flight” food experiences built around hot dogs, s’mores, tomatoes, and mocktails.

The idea borrows from restaurant and bar menus, where customers are used to seeing beer flights, dessert flights, or appetizer samplers.

Kroger is applying that same idea to backyard cookout foods.

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For shoppers, that means offering several smaller versions of the same item instead of just one standard option.

“Fourth of July is a time to come together in celebration of our nation’s traditions, while creating new memories with family and friends,” said Kate Meyer, Vice President of Grocery.

Further noting, “Kroger is here to make those moments easy and affordable, with fresh inspiration, quality ingredients and simple ways to bring something new to the table.”

A hot dog flight can include a classic ketchup-and-mustard version, a barbecue version with coleslaw and crispy onions, a chili cheese version, and a street-dog-style option with avocado, pico de gallo, crema, and cilantro.

A s’mores flight gives shoppers a reason to move beyond the usual graham cracker, chocolate, and marshmallow combination. 

Kroger suggests versions with pretzels, peanut butter cups, cookies, berries, and different chocolate bars.

The grocer is also highlighting tomato flights with heirloom, roma, and cherry tomatoes, along with caprese-style pairings using mozzarella, basil, and balsamic glaze.

For drinks, Kroger is promoting mocktail flights, including a Stars and Stripes Spritzer made with Kroger Blue Raspberry Pop Sparkling Water, lemonade, and a red, white, and blue ice pop.

The foods themselves are not new, but presentation is the point.

Kroger is taking ordinary holiday items and giving shoppers a way to make the table feel fuller, more customizable, and more social-media-ready without turning the cookout into a complicated meal.

For many consumers who want a holiday to feel special, without having to watch how much they spend or spending a lot of time in the kitchen, these “flights” might be the key.

A food flight can make a gathering feel more creative without requiring shoppers to buy an expensive prepared meal or trade up to premium items across the whole basket.

It also gives Kroger a reason to sell more toppings, sauces, produce, desserts, drinks, and private-label products in a single trip.

Kroger brings flight food and deals for 4th of July.

Brandon Bell / Getty Images

Kroger adds rewards to 4th of July shopping

The food-flight idea gives Kroger a trendier hook, but the larger message is still value.

Kroger is using the holiday to promote its enhanced rewards program, which lets members earn 1 point per $1 spent and redeem points for dollars off groceries in stores and online, as well as for fuel savings.

Kroger is also tying the holiday to its rewards program, offering 4X points during the July 1-to-July 4 shopping period and on Fridays through July 24.

That timing matters.

A Fourth of July host may make one large planned grocery run, then return for shorter trips for ice, buns, soda, paper plates, extra dessert, or another pack of hot dogs.

Kroger wants those trips to stay inside its stores, website, and app.

The grocer is also advertising July 4 deals beginning July 1, including:

  • mix-and-match buy two, 
  • Get three free offers on Coca-Cola, Pepsi, and Canada Dry 12-pack cans, 
  • Buy one, get one free or $2.99-per-pound pork back ribs, depending on location, 
  • 3 for $5 Kroger sour cream, cottage cheese, or dip, 
  • 4 for $5 Kroger pasta
  • Johnsonville dinner sausage for $3.99.

Meanwhile, Kroger is also emphasizing convenience, offering delivery in 30 minutes or less through DoorDash and Uber Eats.

Fourth of July is a crowded retail fight

Kroger is not the only retailer trying to turn the holiday into a bigger basket.

The competition is getting more specific than a weekly ad.

Amazon is tying its holiday pitch to the road trip as much as the grill. The company is offering Prime members 50 cents off per gallon on one fuel purchase from July 2 to July 5 at more than 7,500 BP, Amoco, participating ampm, and Thorntons locations.

It is also promoting same-day delivery on barbecue staples, including grilling meats under $10, summer produce under $4, and party-size snacks and frozen treats starting at $2.

Meijer, a major Midwest grocer, is adopting a more traditional grocery pricing approach. 

The retailer said it is cutting prices on more than 100 Meijer-brand summer staples by up to 50% through July 7, including hot dog buns, 89-cent pasta salad kits, $1 marshmallows, $1.79 potato chips, and $1.99 lemonade. 

It is also using its mPerks program to direct shoppers to fuel savings, including rewards redeemable for up to $1 off per gallon at Meijer Express stations.

Target is treating Independence Day as more than a grocery trip. 

It’s Fourth of July shop mixes food, party supplies, and patriotic impulse items, including $3 Spritz cutlery and snack plates, Jet-Puffed Jumbo White Star Marshmallows, and Ore-Ida Star Tater Tots.

Costco is using a warehouse-club version of the same seasonal play, with a July 4 hub built around grills, meat and seafood, outdoor games, appliances, mattresses, and apparel. 

This is the fight Kroger is entering.

Retailers are not just discounting hot dogs. They are trying to own the full holiday mission: the cookout, the road trip, the fuel stop, the patio setup, the dessert table, and the last-minute items.

The timing fits in Kroger’s broader need to keep shoppers engaged.

Grocery customers have become more selective. Many still want fresh food, convenient pickup, fast delivery, and digital coupons, but they are also comparing prices more carefully.

Which makes holiday shopping a useful test.

If Kroger can give customers enough value, inspiration, and convenience during a high-traffic week, it has a better chance of keeping those shoppers connected after the holiday ends.

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