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Here We Shrink Again – Winter 2026 – Part 1

We kick off the new year with some more products that were downsized over the past six months or so. Shrinkflation is alive and well and will continue in 2026.

Viva Paper Towels

Like other brands of paper towels, Viva shortened their rolls last year, going from 94 sheets on the old double rolls to just 86 sheets. Thanks to Richard G. for this submission.

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Viva 94-86


Mary’s Gone Crackers

Gregg Z. was very unhappy to see that his favorite crackers that he has been eating for 17 years was hit by shrinkflation. It survived in its original size until the current owner recently reduced the contents by over 25%.

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Mary's Gone Crackers


Atkins Protein Bars

Ace product investigator Richard G. found another shrinking product. This time it is Atkins protein bars that seem to have gone on a diet. The old five pack is now a four pack. Now if only losing 20% of your own weight was that simple…

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Atkins protein bars


Charmin Mega Rolls

Continuing its downward trend, Charmin Ultra Soft mega size packages dropped 16 sheets from each roll, going from 224 sheets to just 208. Thanks to Brendan B. and Richard G. for this find.

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Charmin ultra soft


Finish Ultimate Dishwashing Pods

At a visit to Target, MrConsumer did a double-take when he saw identical size boxes of Finish dishwashing detergents but one had 76 pods and the other just 62. And the larger package was cheaper!

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Finish dishwashing pods


Scotts Turf Builder

Shrinkflation is not limited to grocery products. Christopher D. discovered that fall weed and feed fertilizer from Scotts made a major change to his product. The bags decreased by three pounds making it only cover 4,000 square feet instead of the old 5,000 square feet. He also noticed that the percentage of nitrogen decreased. Even with all these decreases, the price did not go down at his store.

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Scotts Turfbuilder


If you find a product that has recently been downsized, please take a picture of the old and new version side-by-side if possible and send it to: Edgar(at symbol)MousePrint.org . Thanks.

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Hey, Jose Cuervo, Where’s the Booze?

A regular Mouse Print* reader from Kansas told us about an experience she had after purchasing a four-pack of Jose Cuervo Sparkling Margarita cocktails in cans.

While the box indicated the drinks were 8-percent alcohol by volume the cans themselves inside told a different story.

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Cuervo margarita

The cans indicated the content was only 5-percent alcohol! And note that the cans are in English and French. This fact will play a part in our investigation.

What’s going on here? Is this a case of skimpflation where the company decided to cheapen the product? Is it a packaging mix-up? Is it just outright misrepresentation? Or is it something else?

We asked the company that distributes Jose Cuervo in the United States, Proximo Spirits, for an explanation. After multiple requests, they responded:

After investigating this matter, we identified the issue to a packaging error made by our co-packing partner in July 2022, during which the wrong 5% ABV can was inadvertently placed into a limited number of 8% ABV variety pack boxes. Once identified, we immediately placed all potentially affected cases on hold for quality inspection and destroyed what we believed to be the full inventory of impacted product.

We have had no indication over the last three years that any affected product reached the market, and we have not received a single similar consumer complaint since the issue was resolved in 2022. Given this absence, and that nearly all 2022 product will have already moved through the retail market, we believe this was an isolated incident with no ongoing risk of recurrence.

We take accurate labeling and consumer trust very seriously. We are happy to issue a full refund and can be placed in contact with the affected consumer to address this matter directly with them.

Their response to our initial and subsequent emails was troubling in a number of respects. They never inquired about where and when our consumer purchased the product, nor did they ask for the manufacturing codes on the carton and cans. How can you trace a possible problem without that information?

The company’s 2022 product mix-up involved a variety pack, while the present problem is about the regular lime margarita product. So this is seemingly not a package left over from that earlier incident.

Lastly, they said they hadn’t received a single complaint about this issue. Our consumer told me she complained three times on the Jose Cuervo Facebook page but never got a reply.

But there is a twist in the story. While trying to figure out why the cans inside the box were in French as well as English, we learned this product along with others was banned in Canada back in March at least in some provinces in retaliation for the tariffs the U.S. placed on Canadian goods.

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Margarita store listing

This official Ontario government liquor store’s website still says the product is banned there. This means that Proximo might be stuck with a lot of French language cans of Margarita cocktails that they needed to liquidate.

Over a month and a half, we made over a dozen inquiries of the product’s distributor trying to understand what happened here and asking for help in understanding how to decode the manufacturing code printed on their boxes. With that information, if provided, we could figure out if the box our consumer bought was manufactured recently or back in 2022 when they acknowledged a mixup. We never got a straight answer nor the technique to decode their box codes. So the mystery continues.

If you spot a discrepancy in the alcohol content of this product in your locale, please send us the details.

And we invite you to comment below about this story.

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Groupon’s Excessive Emails Amount to Spam

For months, MrConsumer’s email box has been flooded with emails from Groupon.

Groupon sells discount certificates to various restaurants and local service establishments. I usually buy my twice-a-year oil changes through Groupon for my car repair shop. The price unfortunately has crept up, so I did not buy it from them in November for my December servicing.

That did not stop Groupon, or perhaps even encouraged it, to literally deluge me with emails — often multiple emails an hour for oil changes and more.

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Here is a list of the emails that Groupon sent to me this past November alone — 209 of them, if you can believe it.

Hertz

Scroll down the list.

Sometimes they are minutes apart, and up to a dozen a day. And emails from Groupon in December was even worse — 313 in total!

Congress passed the CAN-SPAM law in 2003. Contrary to popular belief, it does not ban unsolicited commercial email (spam) or limit how much an advertiser can send you. What it does is set up various requirements including having to have a simple way for the recipient to opt-out of getting more such emails from that advertiser.

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Groupon goes a step further and says they allow you to adjust how often you hear from them.

Groupon opt-out and adjust frequency

Great… but there is no such option when you click their link.

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No way to adjust email frequency

I don’t want to opt-out altogether because I want to know of a great deal on oil changes at my repair shop or membership discounts at Costco, but I don’t want minute-to-minute updates.

So, we asked the PR folks at Groupon why they send so many emails a day to customers, and whether they honestly believe that up to a dozen emails a day is appropriate. We also wanted to know what happened to their promised option to reduce the frequency of emails.

The company’s customer service department responded, and in a moment of candor said:

We sincerely apologize for the volume of emails you have been receiving and for the frustration this has caused.

You are absolutely right that receiving numerous emails in a single day is not a positive customer experience. While we intend to share relevant offers, it is clear that in this case, our frequency did not align with your preferences, and we take responsibility for that.

We would like to inform you that you have the option to limit the number of emails you receive from us on a daily basis.

In fact, the option to limit the number of emails is an all or nothing option rather than providing the ability to select a number.

So to end Groupon’s seeming inability to sensibly limit the number of emails it sends to customers, I opted out on January 1.

This whole experience suggests that the federal law needs to be amended to ban excessive emailing to consumers. What do you think?

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