If you want to buy property in Bulgaria for the purpose of further emigration and life here, then you are probably interested in knowing how much food and meal can cost in this sunny country.
In Bulgaria there are large chain supermarkets with a rich assortment (in the Burgas region - these are Lidl, Kaufland, Janet, etc.) and small shops with the most necessary things. Significantly inflated prices can only be near the most popular tourist places and areas, and in general they differ little..
So, the approximate cost of the most popular products in Bulgaria during the high season (prices are taken from several supermarkets and are averaged):
- Bread - from 1.2 to 2 levs
- Eggs – 4 lev/des
- Fresh fish – 20 lev/kg
- Chicken fillet – 12-20 lev/kg
- Cheese - 20 lv/kg
- Milk – 3 lev/l
- Yogurt (sour milk) – 1.5 lev/pack 400 gr
- Cottage cheese – 15 lev/kg
- Butter – 5 lev/pack
- Sunflower oil – 5 lv/bottle
- Tea – 4-5 lev/pack
- Dry coffee extract – 8-10 lev/100 gr
- Coffee beans – 15-30 lev/kg
- Potato – 1.5-2 lev/kg
- Onion – 1.5 lev/kg
- Carrot – 2 lev/kg
- Beet – 2 lev/kg
- Cabbage – 1.5 lev/kg
- Tomatoes – 4-5 lev/kg
- Cucumbers – 2-3 lev/kg
- Corn – 1-2 lev/piece
- Zucchini – 2 lev/kg
- Eggplants – 3.5 lev/kg
- Apples – 1.5-3 lev/kg
- Oranges – 3 lev/kg
- Bananas – 3-4 lev/kg
- Strawberries – 8-10 lev/kg
- Sweet cherry – 6-7 lev/kg
- Peaches – 3 lev/kg
- Apricots – 4 lev/kg
- Watermelon – 1.5 lev/kg
- Melon – 2.5-3 lev/kg
- Salt – 0.5 lev/kg
- Sugar – 2-3 lev/kg
- Flour – 2-3 lev/kg
- Pasta – 1.5-3 lev/kg
- Oatmeal – 3-5 lev/kg
- Buckwheat – 10-12 lev/kg
- Rice – 3-4 lev/kg
Prices are in local currency - lev (1 lev = 0.5 euros). To convert to the monetary units of your country, you can use the currency converter (run a search).
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