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Fresh Chicken Delivery in Meerut: Is It Worth ₹310 When the Market Charges ₹220?
I'll be upfront with you: I run a fresh chicken delivery business in Meerut. So you might expect this post to be biased in favour of delivery. But before I started Alizo Foods, I spent years in the meat trade — and I personally visited Meerut's local chicken markets to understand exactly how they work.
What I saw is what pushed me to build something different. And I think you deserve to know all of it — the good and the bad — before deciding where to buy your chicken.
Is ₹310 delivery worth more than ₹220 at the market?
For most Meerut families — yes. The ₹90 difference shrinks considerably once you count the auto fare, the water weight you're already paying for, and the 70–100 grams short on the scale. What you gain — honest weight, hygienic processing, and delivery in under 90 minutes — is a real difference, not a marketing claim. Here's exactly what I saw at local markets and what we do differently.
What I Personally Saw at Meerut's Chicken Markets
I didn't hear this from customers or read it online. I went myself — to multiple shops across different areas of Meerut — and observed what actually happens. Some of what I saw I expected. Some of it genuinely surprised me.
Most shops I visited had open cutting counters with no cover. Flies were present in almost every shop. The smell inside many of these shops was strong and unpleasant — not the smell of fresh meat, but of blood and waste that builds up through the day.
The knives and choppers used to cut chicken are covered in dried and fresh blood from the first cut of the morning to the last. They are not washed between customers. The same blade that cut the previous bird cuts yours — whatever bacteria was on that bird transfers directly.
I watched it happen at multiple shops. Cut chicken is splashed or dipped in water before being placed on the scale. This adds 50–100 grams of water weight that you pay for. The water cooks off immediately — you're left with less actual chicken than you bought.
This one shocked me the most. Many shops use scales that are subtly adjusted to show more weight than what's actually there. From my experience, customers are routinely receiving 70–100 grams less per kilogram than what the scale shows and what they paid for.
"To be fair — most shops in Meerut do slaughter the bird fresh in front of you. That part is good. The problem is everything that happens after the slaughter."
— Mohd Furqan, Founder, Alizo FoodsI want to be clear: I'm not saying every market shop in Meerut is like this. There are good shops run by honest people. But from everything I personally observed across multiple visits, these practices were common — not exceptions.
The Bird Health Issue That Concerns Me Most — Especially in Summer
There's one more thing I saw that I think deserves its own section, because it's about something most people never think to check: the health of the bird itself, before it's even slaughtered.
🐔 What I observed about cage conditions
- Overcrowded cages — birds are packed tightly together. There is some ventilation, but nowhere near enough for the number of birds inside.
- Cages rarely cleaned through the day — birds sit in their own waste for hours, sometimes the entire day, before being sold.
- Visible signs of illness in some birds — lethargy, ruffled feathers, and laboured breathing, sitting in the same cage as healthy-looking birds, with no separation between them.
This isn't only an animal welfare concern — it connects directly to the meat that reaches your kitchen. Poultry industry research on heat stress in India supports what I observed: overcrowded, poorly ventilated cages in hot weather weaken a bird's immune system, while waste buildup creates ammonia and damp conditions that let bacterial and respiratory illness spread more easily between birds packed closely together. Flies — already common in these shops — are also known to carry disease between birds in exactly these crowded conditions, and the risk increases as temperatures climb through Meerut's summer.
⚠️ What concerned me the most: birds that were visibly unwell — moving slowly, breathing heavily, feathers ruffled — were not separated or treated any differently. They were slaughtered and sold exactly like the healthy-looking birds next to them. I didn't see any inspection step or separation process for sick-looking birds at the shops I visited.
I want to be fair here — I'm not a veterinarian, and I can't diagnose what illness these birds had just by looking at them. This also isn't true of every single shop in Meerut. But seeing visibly unwell birds slaughtered and sold without any distinction, more than once, is one of the clearest reasons I decided sourcing needed to work differently for Alizo Foods.
This is exactly why we source from a farm with proper ventilation and lower-density housing, and why birds are checked for health before processing — not after they've already been cut.
The #1 Reason Our Customers Switched From the Market
When people first order from Alizo Foods, I always ask them what made them try us. The most common answer I hear is not about hygiene or delivery convenience.
🗣️ The most common complaint: "I was paying for 1 kg but clearly not getting 1 kg."
Customers noticed it when they started cooking — the portion looked smaller than what they paid for. Some had started weighing at home and found they were consistently 70–100 grams short. Over a month of buying chicken twice a week, that adds up to nearly half a kilogram of chicken they paid for and never received.
At ₹220/kg, losing 80 grams per purchase means you're paying approximately ₹17.60 extra every time — for nothing. Over 8 purchases in a month, that's around ₹140 lost to the scale alone, before you've even counted the auto fare.
The Real Cost of 1 kg: Market vs Alizo Foods
Let's put actual Meerut numbers to this and calculate honestly:
Based on verified June 2026 Meerut market price of ₹220/kg. Scale shortage and water weight figures from personal observation of Meerut market practices over 3–5 years. Auto fare range for typical 2–4km neighbourhood trips within Meerut.
When you count everything, the market is not actually cheaper for most Meerut households. The sticker price is lower — but what you pay in auto fare, lost weight from the scale, and water added before weighing often brings the true cost to the same level or higher than Alizo's ₹310 all-inclusive price.
What We Do Differently at Alizo Foods
I built Alizo Foods specifically to solve the problems I saw at the market. Here is our actual process — not what sounds good, but what we genuinely do:
We don't buy from a middleman or wholesale market. Our chicken comes from a local farm with proper ventilation and lower-density housing, where birds are checked for health before processing — fewer hands between the bird and your kitchen, and healthier stock to begin with.
Nothing is pre-cut and sitting out. When your order comes in, that's when the cutting happens — not hours before. The same principle as a good market shop, but without the open-counter wait time.
Every bird is thoroughly cleaned before packaging. No leftover feathers, no internal organs, no blood pooling. The cleaning is done with proper tools — not the same blood-stained knife used all day.
We weigh after cleaning, with no water added. What you order is exactly what you receive. If you ever feel the weight is short, I want to hear about it personally.
Once cut and cleaned, the chicken is vacuum sealed immediately to lock in freshness. In most cases across Meerut, we deliver within 90 minutes of your order — straight to your door.
When the Local Market Still Makes Sense
I wouldn't be honest if I didn't say this: there are situations where buying from the market is perfectly reasonable.
Go to the market if:
- You live within walking distance of a shop you genuinely trust — no auto needed, no scale games, and you've bought from them for years
- You're buying a very large quantity for a wedding or gathering — at 5kg+, even a ₹90/kg difference adds up significantly
- You want to personally inspect and choose the bird before it's cut — that's something delivery can't replicate
- You enjoy the market experience — for many families it's a weekly ritual, and there's nothing wrong with that
My goal with Alizo Foods was never to replace the market for everyone. It was to give Meerut families a reliable, hygienic, honestly-weighted alternative — especially for households where the market trip is a hassle, or where getting short-weighed has become frustrating.
What About Licious and Other National Apps?
Licious charges ₹355/kg for the same chicken you can get at the Meerut market for ₹220/kg — that's a 61% premium. I understand why Meerut residents don't use them regularly. They run large cold chain operations, warehouses, and national marketing campaigns across multiple cities. Their costs are completely different from a local Meerut operation like ours.
At ₹310/kg with delivery included, Alizo Foods sits between the two — closer to market price than any national app, but with the hygiene, honest weight, and convenience that the market often can't offer.
Try One Order and Weigh It Yourself
The best way to know if this is true is to try it once. Order 1 kg from us and weigh it at home when it arrives. If it's short — even by 50 grams — message me directly and I'll make it right. That's how confident I am in our weight.
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One Order Is All It Takes to Know the Difference
Fresh chicken from a local farm, cut after your order, honestly weighed, vacuum sealed, and delivered to your door in Meerut in under 90 minutes.
About Mohd Furquan
Mohd Furquan is the founder of Alizo Foods, Meerut's fresh meat delivery service. With over 10 years of hands-on experience in the fresh poultry and meat trade, he personally oversees sourcing, cutting, and cold-chain delivery for every order that leaves the facility. Since 2019, Alizo Foods has served hundreds of families across Meerut with hygienically vacuum-sealed chicken, mutton, and fish — delivered fresh to their door. Mohd writes on food safety, meat hygiene standards, and practical healthy eating guidance for Indian households.
View all posts by Mohd Furquan