The new June-July coupon book lands at warehouses through July 19, and a good chunk of the strongest pricing this cycle is on Kirkland Signature. The house brand has earned its reputation the long way, by quietly matching name brands on quality while staying $4 to $10 cheaper per unit. Below are 14 items that stand out this June, between coupon-book savings, recent price rollbacks, and a handful of everyday workhorses that almost always belong in the cart.
Contents
- 1 1. Kirkland Signature Farm-Raised Raw Shrimp, Tail-On, 21/25 ct, 2 lbs
- 2 2. Kirkland Signature Crispy Wings with Classic Buffalo Sauce, 64 oz
- 3 3. Kirkland Signature Parmesan Black Pepper Chicken Sausage, 3 lbs
- 4 4. Kirkland Signature Cookie Tray, 60-count
- 5 5. Kirkland Signature Tonkotsu Pork Ramen Broth, 32 fl oz, 4-count
- 6 6. Kirkland Signature Organic Extra Virgin Olive Oil, 2 L, $18.99
- 7 7. Kirkland Signature Organic Peanut Butter, 28 oz, 2-count
- 8 8. Kirkland Signature Balsamic Vinegar, 1 L, 2-pack
- 9 9. Kirkland Signature Milk Chocolate Covered Almonds, 48 oz
- 10 10. Kirkland Signature Decaffeinated Coffee, Dark Roast, 3 lbs
- 11 11. Kirkland Signature Aller-Tec, 365 Tablets
- 12 12. Kirkland Signature Daily Multi, 500 Tablets
- 13 13. Kirkland Signature Alkaline AA Batteries, 48-count
- 14 14. Kirkland Signature Create-A-Size Paper Towels, 12-count
1. Kirkland Signature Farm-Raised Raw Shrimp, Tail-On, 21/25 ct, 2 lbs
The new coupon book has head-on shrimp starting around $5.99 a pound, and the 2-pound tail-on bag is what most members are reaching for. At roughly 21 to 25 shrimp per pound, the size works for shrimp cocktail, scampi, and the grill without feeling fussy.
Costco’s seafood program is one of the few places where farmed shrimp consistently comes in clean, properly deveined, and ice-glazed in a way that doesn’t waterlog the bag. Bagged shrimp at Kroger or Publix in this size range routinely runs $13 to $15 a pound. Verdict: BUY.
2. Kirkland Signature Crispy Wings with Classic Buffalo Sauce, 64 oz
Costco dropped the price on this one from $16.99 to $14.99 in late May. Four pounds of fully cooked, sauced wings in a resealable bag, ready to crisp up in the air fryer in about 12 minutes.
Reviews are mixed (about 3 out of 5 across a small set of ratings), and the sauce skews mild for true Buffalo fans. But for a four-pound bag of finished wings at under $15, it’s genuinely tough to beat for a Friday night with grandkids over. Verdict: MAYBE — buy if you want the convenience, skip if you want restaurant-style heat.
3. Kirkland Signature Parmesan Black Pepper Chicken Sausage, 3 lbs
A new addition to the coupon book at $12.99 for 3 pounds — that works out to about $4.33 a pound for finished, fully cooked sausage. Eighteen links, individually sized, no fillers worth flagging on the ingredient list.
These slice well over pasta, hold up on the grill, and reheat without going rubbery. The peppercorn finish is real, not a dust coating, and the parmesan stays detectable after warming. Aidells does a similar link at Whole Foods for $7.99 per pound. Verdict: BUY.
4. Kirkland Signature Cookie Tray, 60-count
The 60-count cookie tray is a coupon-book regular at $22.99 — about 38 cents per cookie for a bakery-counter assortment that holds up for three or four days on the counter.
Useful for graduation parties, neighborhood gatherings, and the kind of family weekend where you need dessert ready without baking. The chocolate chunk and double chocolate are the strongest of the rotation; the sugar cookies are middling. Verdict: BUY for entertaining, MAYBE for a household of two.
5. Kirkland Signature Tonkotsu Pork Ramen Broth, 32 fl oz, 4-count
Brand new this spring at $18.99 for four 32-ounce cartons. Real pork bone broth, the cloudy white tonkotsu style you usually only find at a ramen shop or in a $9 frozen pouch at the Asian market.
Heats in five minutes, takes whatever noodles and toppings you have on hand, and freezes well in portions. Picky reviewers knock it for a little less depth than restaurant tonkotsu, but at about $4.75 a quart it’s a fair deal. Verdict: BUY if you cook noodles weekly, MAYBE if you don’t.
6. Kirkland Signature Organic Extra Virgin Olive Oil, 2 L, $18.99
Six thousand five-star reviews and counting. The organic 2-liter bottle has been the quiet hero of the pantry for years, and at $18.99 it’s about $2.80 per cup of cold-extracted EVOO.
Whole Foods 365 Organic comes in around $5 per cup. The Kirkland passes the basic taste test — peppery on the finish, no rancid notes, USDA Organic and kosher certified. If you fry, sauté, and dress salads with the same bottle, this is your bottle. Verdict: BUY.
7. Kirkland Signature Organic Peanut Butter, 28 oz, 2-count
Around $9.79 for two 28-ounce jars of organic, no-stir peanut butter. Two ingredients on the label: peanuts and salt.
The texture is creamy without being oily, and there’s no added sugar or palm oil. Smucker’s Organic in the same size runs about $7 per jar at Kroger. The “no-stir” claim does hold up — the oil binds cleanly. Verdict: BUY.
8. Kirkland Signature Balsamic Vinegar, 1 L, 2-pack
Two full liters of balsamic for the price most grocery stores want for a single 500-milliliter bottle of the same grade. Aged-style finish, sweet enough to use as a reduction without adding sugar.
Per-cup, it lands at roughly half what Whole Foods asks for its 365 Aged Balsamic. Works for vinaigrettes, glazes, even drizzled over strawberries. Verdict: BUY.
9. Kirkland Signature Milk Chocolate Covered Almonds, 48 oz
Costco rolled the price back from $19.99 to $18.99 in May. Three pounds of real milk chocolate over whole roasted almonds, in a resealable bag.
The chocolate doesn’t bloom or chalk if stored in a cool pantry, and the almonds taste freshly roasted. Blue Diamond does a 14-ounce bag at Target for about $7. Kirkland comes out roughly 30 percent cheaper per pound. Verdict: BUY (and hide one bag).
10. Kirkland Signature Decaffeinated Coffee, Dark Roast, 3 lbs
The 3-pound can has been quietly marked down recently — the most commonly cited recent price is $15.97 in many markets, off a regular price closer to $23. That’s a 30-plus percent cut on a tin that lasts the average two-cup-a-day household roughly two months.
Roasted by a major specialty house in a Swiss water-decaffeination process. Smooth, balanced, no sour notes. The reusable steel canister has uses long after the coffee runs out. Verdict: BUY at the marked-down price.
11. Kirkland Signature Aller-Tec, 365 Tablets
Cetirizine 10 mg, the same active ingredient as Zyrtec, at $13.49 for a full year’s supply. That’s about 4 cents per dose against the CVS-brand 30-count at $22.99 (roughly 77 cents per dose).
This is one of the items that pays back a Costco membership in a single trip if anyone in the household takes a daily antihistamine. Over eleven thousand reviews and a 4.8-star average. Verdict: BUY.
12. Kirkland Signature Daily Multi, 500 Tablets
Five hundred multivitamin tablets for under $13 at most warehouses. Covers all the standard B-complex, A, C, D, E, plus zinc, selenium, and chromium. USP-verified ingredient sourcing.
Centrum Adult in a comparable count runs roughly three to four times the per-tablet price at any chain pharmacy. Not glamorous, but if a once-a-day multi is part of the morning routine, this is the cost-effective choice. Verdict: BUY.
13. Kirkland Signature Alkaline AA Batteries, 48-count
Holding at $16.99 for 48 alkaline AAs — about 35 cents per battery. Duracell Coppertop runs roughly 70 cents per battery at Target in the same pack size.
The performance gap to Duracell is small enough that for remotes, keyboards, smoke-detector backups, and toys, the savings make the choice obvious. The 10-year shelf life on the package isn’t marketing fluff either. Verdict: BUY.
14. Kirkland Signature Create-A-Size Paper Towels, 12-count
Twelve big rolls for one of the lowest per-sheet costs in the warehouse. Two-ply, 160 sheets per roll, with the perforated half-sheet option that actually tears clean.
Nearly forty thousand reviews on costco.com with a 4.8-star average. The pulp is heavier than Bounty Select-A-Size and lifts a wet spill in one swipe instead of two. Workhorse household pickup — the kind of buy that quietly saves $80 a year. Verdict: BUY.
A note on timing: coupon-book deals run through July 19, but the deli, bakery, and fresh-meat items in this cycle tend to sell through within the first ten days. The everyday pantry and household items above (olive oil, peanut butter, batteries, paper towels) hold their price year-round and are safe to wait on. The wings, almonds, and decaf coffee are part of Costco’s ongoing rollback push, so those prices should stick around through the summer.
If a single trip covers the olive oil, peanut butter, aller-tec, multivitamin, batteries, and paper towels, that’s six items running roughly $85 that would land closer to $200 at a regular grocery store. That gap, line by line, is what keeps the membership paying for itself.
















