What Happens to Greggs Unsold Food? (2026) – Outlets, Too Good To Go & FareShare Explained
What Happens to Greggs Unsold Food?
The Full 2026 Breakdown
Every day thousands of sausage rolls, bakes and doughnuts don’t get sold. Here’s exactly where they all end up — and it’s actually pretty impressive.
redistributed (2025)
Too Good To Go
shops (2026)
via FareShare
Let me be honest — I used to assume that any unsold food at a big chain like Greggs just quietly got binned at closing time. I was wrong, and frankly a bit embarrassed when I found out just how much work goes into making sure that doesn’t happen. Greggs has built a genuinely impressive system to tackle food waste, and in 2026 it’s only getting more ambitious.
So if you’ve ever wondered what happens to Greggs food at the end of the day, this is the complete, honest answer.
The 5 Ways Greggs Tackles Food Waste
Think of it as a priority ladder. Greggs tries to feed people first, then community good, then energy recovery. Here’s how each channel works:
📊 Where Does Greggs Unsold Food Go? (2024 Data)
to people
Source: Greggs Pledge 2024 Sustainability Report. In 2025, overall redistribution rose to 45% of unsold food.
Too Good To Go: The Magic Bag Explained
What’s in a Greggs Magic Bag?
As closing time approaches, Greggs staff fill a bag with whatever unsold food is left that day. You don’t know exactly what you’ll get — that’s the magic! But you can expect a mix of savoury and sweet items worth around £8 for under £3. The variety is part of the fun. You collect it in person from the shop at a set time.
Greggs and Too Good To Go first teamed up in early 2021. By May 2025, they’d saved over five million meals from going to waste — the equivalent CO₂ saved is roughly the same as taking over 1,600 flights around the world. To get a Magic Bag, just download the free Too Good To Go app, search for your nearest participating Greggs, and book your slot.
Greggs Outlet Shops: Cheap Food, Big Heart
This is the one that surprises most people. Greggs has been running discount “seconds” shops since 1972 — long before food waste was trendy. Today they’re called Greggs Outlet shops, and there are now 45 of them across the UK, deliberately placed in areas facing the highest levels of deprivation.
🏪 Greggs Outlet Shops at a Glance
Outlet shops sell day-old food from Greggs’ manufacturing sites and shops at significantly reduced prices. They also receive “mis-shapes” and factory rejects that look a bit wonky but taste just as good. A portion of every Outlet’s profit goes back into the local community via the Greggs Foundation Community Grants programme.
FareShare: Feeding Communities Since 2014
While Too Good To Go lets customers buy surplus food cheaply, and Outlet shops sell it at a discount, the FareShare partnership takes things a step further — it’s a straight-up donation. Greggs has been working with FareShare, the UK’s biggest food redistribution charity, since 2014.
The partnership has evolved from end-of-day collections at individual Greggs shops into a far more efficient system where surplus food is collected directly from Greggs’ manufacturing and distribution sites. In 2024 alone, Greggs donated 50 tonnes of food to FareShare, supporting over 1,500 charities — including food banks, homeless shelters, women’s refuges, and after-school clubs across the country. The total since 2014 has reached 420 tonnes, equivalent to over one million meals.
Key Milestones: Greggs Food Waste Journey
Quick Comparison: All 5 Channels
| Channel | Who Benefits | Cost to You | How to Access | Share of Waste |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 🛍️ Too Good To Go | Bargain hunters | Under £3 | Download app, book slot | 12.3% |
| 🏪 Outlet Shops | Budget shoppers & local community | Up to 75% off | Find local outlet store | 21.5% |
| 🤝 FareShare | Charities & food banks | Free (donation) | n/a — Greggs donates directly | 8.7% |
| 💛 Charity donations | ~1,000 local charities | Free (donation) | Via local charity collections | Included in 8.7% |
| 👩💼 Colleague Bags | Greggs staff | Staff benefit | Internal only | 1.3% |
| ⚡ Anaerobic Digestion | Grid energy (biogas) | n/a | n/a — last resort only | 54.9% |
The Bottom Line 🌿
Greggs’ approach to food waste is genuinely one of the better ones in UK retail. Going from just 12% redistribution in 2018 to 45% in 2025 is a real improvement, and the 2030 goal of 50%+ shows they’re not letting up. The combination of Outlet shops that help people on tight budgets, Too Good To Go that makes saving food feel fun, and the FareShare partnership that reaches those most in need is a smart, layered strategy.
Could more be done? Absolutely — 54.9% still going to anaerobic digestion means there’s room to grow. But they’re clearly moving in the right direction, and zero food going to landfill is a genuine commitment.
What does Greggs do with leftover food at the end of the day?
Greggs uses five channels: Outlet shops (selling day-old food at up to 75% off), Too Good To Go Magic Bags (£8 worth of food for under £3), FareShare donations to 1,500+ charities, direct end-of-day charity collections, and Colleague Magic Bags for staff. Any food that genuinely can’t be redistributed goes to anaerobic digestion — never landfill.
How do I get a Greggs Magic Bag on Too Good To Go?
Download the free Too Good To Go app, search for Greggs near you (1,200+ shops are signed up), select a collection time slot near closing, pay under £3, and collect your bag. You’ll typically receive a mystery assortment of sausage rolls, sandwiches, bakes, doughnuts, and sweet treats worth around £8.
Where are Greggs Outlet shops and what do they sell?
There are 45 Greggs Outlet shops across the UK (as of 2026), largely in the Midlands and North of England, Scotland, and Wales. They sell day-old food — savouries, sandwiches, sweet treats, and factory mis-shapes — at up to 75% off regular prices. A share of profits is donated to local community organisations via the Greggs Foundation.
How long has Greggs worked with FareShare?
The FareShare partnership began in 2014. It’s grown from ad-hoc end-of-day collections at individual shops into a structured system where surplus food is collected directly from Greggs’ manufacturing and distribution centres. By November 2024, the partnership had provided the equivalent of over one million meals — 420 tonnes of food.
Does Greggs throw food away or put it in landfill?
No. Greggs has a zero-landfill policy for food waste. The priority is always to redistribute food to people in need, and anything genuinely left over goes to anaerobic digestion, which converts it into biogas and compost. In 2025, 45% was successfully redistributed — a huge jump from just 12% in 2018.
What is Greggs’ 2030 food waste target?
Greggs’ Pledge commits it to redistributing at least 50% of all unsold food by 2030 (up from 45% in 2025), supporting 150 local organisations, and reaching net zero on Scope 2 (power-related) emissions. The 2026 interim target includes introducing a new food waste KPI and supporting 100 local organisations.
Can I donate to Greggs Foundation at the till?
Yes! You can donate 25p in any Greggs store to provide a free school breakfast via the Feeding Brighter Futures programme (relaunched in 2025). The programme runs over 1,000 Breakfast Clubs across the UK, providing free breakfasts to around 75,000 school children every school day.





