Chocolate theft is on the rise in the UK. Some shops are now locking chocolate bars in special boxes after thieves began stealing them to sell illegally.
Sainsbury’s has started using these protective boxes for popular items like £2.60 Cadbury Dairy Milk bars in certain London stores. Tesco, Co-Op, and other chains have also added transparent lockable boxes that staff must open for customers.
Shops Fight Back
The Heart of England Co-Op, which runs 38 stores, lost £250,000 to chocolate theft last year. CEO Steve Browne said a single thief could take thousands of pounds’ worth in just one week. To combat this, the chain has spent £3 million on security.
Store owners are taking other measures too. Sunita Aggarwal, who runs stores in Leicester and Sheffield, has installed more than 30 CCTV cameras and uses AI to spot thieves. She only fills shelves halfway now and avoids putting chocolate in easy-access spots.
In Tenby, Wales, shop owner Fiona Avenal Malone says she loses £200–£300 each week to chocolate theft. CCTV often shows entire shelves disappearing in minutes, leaving staff frustrated.
The Bigger Picture
Shop theft remains a serious issue in the UK. Last year, there were 5.5 million detected theft incidents, including 1,600 cases of violence or abuse against retail workers every day.
Retailers are improving security and training staff to reduce losses, but chocolate theft shows how organized shoplifting has become—and how seriously stores must take it.
