Olive oil is sold in different bottle sizes. Compare the cost per litre carefully.
If the unit prices are equal, the products offer the same value.
At Higher tier GCSE Maths, best value questions are not always about finding a single cheapest option. In some cases, two or more products are priced in exact proportion to their size. When this happens, the products offer equal value, even though their total prices and volumes are different.
This type of question is designed to test whether students genuinely understand unit pricing. Many learners expect that either the smallest or largest bottle must be the best value, but this assumption is unreliable. The only correct approach is to calculate the unit price and compare results carefully.
For liquid products, the standard unit of comparison is the cost per litre.
If two or more options have the same cost per litre, they offer equal value for money.
A supermarket sells sunflower oil in the following bottles:
Convert volumes to litres and calculate cost per litre:
All bottles cost the same per litre, so none is better value than the others.
Cleaning liquid is sold as:
Each option gives the same cost per litre, even though the prices increase significantly.
Retailers often price products proportionally so customers can choose based on convenience rather than cost. For example, smaller bottles may suit occasional use, while larger bottles suit frequent use, even though both cost the same per litre.
Understanding equal value helps you avoid overthinking and recognise when there is no financial advantage to choosing a particular size.
Can more than one option be correct?
Yes. If the unit prices are the same, all those options offer equal value.
Why include questions like this?
They test understanding rather than pattern guessing.
Does this appear in GCSE Higher exams?
Yes. Multiple-answer best value questions appear regularly.
If unit prices match exactly, trust your calculations — equal unit cost means equal value.
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