This claim appears to be unfounded, with no additional sources or data supporting it.
My First finding was from the USDA, which uses the Consumer Price Index to measure inflation throughout the United States economy. According to their article, "The CPI for all food increased 0.4 percent from July 2025 to August 2025. Food prices in August 2025 were 3.2 percent higher than in August 2024." 3.2 percent is a decent-sized jump from only one year. The Article later speaks about prices during the 70's and early 2000s's stayed relatively the same. This points to increased inflation throughout the last one to two years, where grocery prices have skyrocketed. Furthermore, the article alludes slower rise in inflation for at-home grocery prices (which just means grocery prices, not take-out and restaurants and such.)
https://www.ers.usda.gov/data-products/food-price-outlook/summary-findings
My second findings were from NPR. The article I chose decides to focus on why grocery prices have skyrocketed. According to the article, global disputes, pandemics, and supply chain issues have directly affected grocery stores. First, COVID-19 and lockdown had a huge impact on stores, as most families now had to stay indoors and prepare three meals a day for multiple people, which increased demand. Secondly, we saw the invasion of Ukraine by Russia, which disrupted the supply chain., Third, we saw the Avian Flu infect our poultry. Lastly, our current administration is pushing tariffs on our neighboring countries, impacting foods like bananas and coffee beans.
https://www.npr.org/2025/09/19/nx-s1-5539547/grocery-prices-tariffs-food-inflation
Although bias may arise, both of these articles speak on factual data regarding world events. They take into consideration how each event correlates to the other, which has no room for opinion, rather only fact.