About Get Unit Price

Get Unit Price is a simple shopping calculator built to answer one practical question fast: which option is actually the better deal?

Instead of relying on shelf labels or doing mental math in the aisle, you can compare multiple products by weight, volume, or item count and see the lowest unit cost immediately.

Who created Get Unit Price

Get Unit Price was built by Jamie Wan, an independent developer with a passion for grocery shopping and smart savings.

I built this calculator to make grocery and household price comparisons easier when stores use mixed units. If you have ever stood in a supermarket aisle using your phone calculator to work out the better deal, this site is built for that exact moment.

I maintain the site myself and update the calculator and content from time to time.

Contact: hello@getunitprice.com

Who this site helps

This site is made for everyday shoppers who want clearer value comparisons when pack sizes differ. It is useful for groceries, household supplies, toiletries, refill packs, pantry staples, and bulk purchases.

It is especially handy when stores mix units such as grams and ounces, or when a larger pack looks cheaper but may not be the better value per unit.

How the calculator works

You enter the shelf price, quantity, and unit for each product. The calculator converts supported values into a common base unit and then compares the cost per unit side by side.

  • Weight comparisons in grams, kilograms, pounds, and ounces
  • Volume comparisons in milliliters, liters, fluid ounces, quarts, pints, and gallons
  • Length comparisons in inches, feet, yards, meters, and centimeters
  • Per-item comparisons for packs, bundles, and unit counts

The goal is speed and clarity. The tool is designed to make routine shopping decisions easier, not more complicated.

What this site does not do

Get Unit Price does not provide financial, nutritional, or product quality advice. It only helps compare listed prices and sizes based on the information entered by the user.

Always double-check labels, taxes, coupons, and store-specific promotions if they affect your final buying decision.