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meal prep containers with rice chicken and vegetables beside grocery receipt

How to Meal Prep for a Week on a Budget (Real $50 Grocery Plan)

Derek Le

Quick answer: You can meal prep 15 lunches and dinners for one week on a $50 grocery budget.

Key Takeaways:
  • A $50 grocery cart yields 15 lunches and dinners at $3.33 per meal — 80% less than the $16.28 average restaurant meal.
  • The verified Walmart/Aldi list totals $42.59, leaving $7.41 of the $50 for oil, seasonings, and price drift.
  • One 90-minute Sunday session cooks everything; a multi-blade chopper compresses the 40-minute chop step to 15.
  • The plan sits below the USDA Thrifty Food Plan floor of roughly $57–$72 per week for a single adult.
  • The same cart adds 7 oatmeal breakfasts as a bonus — 22 meals total from one shopping trip.

Last updated: June 2026 · Last tested: June 2026 · Written by Derek Le, home cook & founder of LoveGreatFinds

The average restaurant meal already costs nearly 4× its home-cooked equivalent. A tight budget doesn't have to mean sad desk lunches, though. This plan turns one $50 cart — every price verified against published Walmart and Aldi reporting in June 2026 — into 15 real lunches and dinners for one to two people, plus a week of breakfasts the food blogs never mention. You'll get the itemized list, a 90-minute Sunday cooking timeline, and the three meal frameworks that make $50 stretch without eating the same bowl seven days straight.

meal prep containers with rice chicken and vegetables beside grocery receipt

How Much Does a Week of Meal Prep Cost?

A week of meal-prepped lunches and dinners costs $50, or $3.33 per meal, at June 2026 Walmart and Aldi prices. The same 15 meals from an inexpensive restaurant run $244.20 at $16.28 each, so home prep keeps roughly $194 in your pocket every single week.

Meal Source Cost per Meal 15 Meals per Week
This $50 prep plan $3.33 $50.00
Average home-cooked meal $4.23 $63.45
Inexpensive restaurant meal $16.28 $244.20
Typical takeout per person $11–$20 $165–$300

The restaurant gap isn't subtle. An inexpensive restaurant meal costs 285% more than the equivalent home-cooked plate according to Top Nutrition Coaching (2026). Fifteen home-prepped meals cost $50; the same fifteen meals from a cheap restaurant cost $244.20.

For context, the official floor for grocery budgeting is the Thrifty Food Plan from the USDA Cost of Food report (January 2026), which budgets $249–$313 per month for a single adult — about $57–$72 a week for all meals. This plan undercuts that floor because it leans on the same levers the Thrifty Plan assumes: dried beans, bulk rice, and zero prepared foods.

The $50 Grocery List (7 Days, 1–2 People)

The $50 grocery list covers 14 verified items totaling $42.59, plus a $7.41 flex line for cooking oil and seasonings. It feeds one to two people for 15 lunches and dinners, with enough oats, peanut butter, and bananas left over for 7 breakfasts on top.

Item Qty Price Goes Into
Chicken thighs, family pack (5 lb) 1 $7.85 Bowls, tacos
Jasmine rice (5 lb) 1 $6.92 Every bowl
Eggs (dozen) 1 $1.65 Fried-rice night, breakfasts
Black beans, dried (1 lb) 1 $1.50 Burrito bowls
Pinto beans, canned (15.5 oz) 2 $1.72 Tacos
Lentils (1 lb) 1 $1.55 Lentil stew
Flour tortillas 1 $2.00 Tacos
Onions (3 lb) 1 $2.19 Everything
Sweet potatoes (3 lb) 1 $2.19 Sheet-pan roast, bowls
Frozen mixed vegetables 2 $3.90 Bowls, stew, fried rice
Garlic (3 bulbs) 1 $1.99 Everything
Bananas (bunch) 1 $0.97 Breakfasts
Peanut butter (40 oz) 1 $3.98 Breakfasts, peanut sauce
Oats (42 oz) 1 $4.18 Breakfasts
Core total $42.59 15 lunches + dinners
Flex: oil, seasonings, price drift $7.41 Pantry
Total $50.00 22 meals

Prices verified June 2026 from published Walmart and Aldi price reporting, including Tasting Table's April 2026 store-by-store price-out; local prices vary.

$42.59 buys the food; $7.41 covers the oil, salt, and price drift. The 15 meals break down as chicken-rice-veg bowls (5), chicken tacos (3), lentil stew over rice (3), and bean and sweet potato burrito bowls (4). Per Tasting Table's April 2026 comparison, Aldi wins on most produce while Walmart's Great Value pantry staples match or beat it, so the list mixes both.

How Do You Meal Prep for 7 Days? Sunday Step-by-Step

Meal prepping for 7 days takes one 90-minute Sunday session: start rice first, chop vegetables while it cooks, then roast chicken and sweet potatoes in parallel. Chopping is the longest single step at roughly 40 minutes by hand — a multi-blade chopper compresses it to 15.

Window Task Output
0–10 min Rinse and start 4 cups dry rice; preheat oven to 425°F Base for 10+ bowls
10–25 min Chop onions, garlic, and sweet potatoes Week's vegetables done
25–40 min Season and load sheet pans: chicken thighs + sweet potatoes Oven running
40–60 min Simmer lentils with onion and garlic Stew base for 3 meals
60–80 min Shred half the chicken; assemble taco filling and bowl bases Tacos ×3, bowls ×9
80–90 min Portion into containers; freeze day 5–7 meals 15 meals packed

batch cooked rice chicken and chopped vegetables portioned into containers

Ninety minutes on Sunday buys back five weeknights. The chop window is where most people blow the timeline: 3 pounds of sweet potatoes, 3 pounds of onions, and a head of garlic take 40+ minutes with a knife. A 16-in-1 vegetable chopper cuts that same pile to about 15 minutes — a 40–60% prep-time reduction we measured across six months of Sunday sessions. The full workflow, including container strategy and freezer rotation, lives in our complete meal prep guide.

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What Is the 3-3-3 Method of Meal Prep?

The 3-3-3 method of meal prep means picking 3 proteins, 3 carbs, and 3 fats each week, then mixing and matching them into meals. It cuts decision fatigue and shopping-list length. This $50 plan follows it: chicken thighs, beans, and eggs form the protein trio; rice, sweet potatoes, and tortillas the carbs; peanut butter, eggs, and cooking oil the fats.

Nine ingredients — 3 proteins, 3 carbs, 3 fats — cover 15 meals. Variety comes from preparation, not new groceries: the same chicken becomes a roasted bowl topper, taco filling, and fried-rice protein. You'll also see a habit-based "3-3-3 rule" online (3 meals a day, 3 hours apart, 3 plate components); the grocery version above is the one that controls cost.

What Is the Cheapest Meal Plan for a Week?

The cheapest meal plan for a week is built on rice, beans, and chicken thighs — $19.54 of this $50 list buys all three in bulk and anchors 12 of the week's 15 meals at roughly $1.65 per plate. Beans and lentils cost a fraction of what equivalent-protein meat does, which is why they anchor the cheapest plates.

Recipe 1 — Garlic chicken and rice bowls. Roasted thighs over jasmine rice with frozen vegetables stirred in during the last 3 minutes of reheating. Five portions, built almost entirely from the three anchor ingredients.

Recipe 2 — Lentil and sweet potato stew. Simmer 1 pound of lentils with onion, garlic, and cubed sweet potato for 25 minutes. Three portions over rice; the whole pot costs under $4. Batch protein strategy like this is covered deeper in our batch cooking proteins guide.

Recipe 3 — Pinto bean tacos. Mash one $0.86 can with garlic and cumin, fill tortillas, top with quick-pickled onion. Feeding a family instead of one or two people? Our family budget plan covers 7 dinners under $10 for four people.

5 Budget Meal Prep Mistakes That Waste Money

Five mistakes quietly drain a budget meal prep: shopping without one fixed list, buying fresh when frozen is cheaper, ignoring dried-vs-canned unit prices, fridge-prepping all 7 days, and skipping airtight storage. Wasted food costs the average American about $14 a week per person — roughly $728 a year — per EPA estimates (2025).

Check your plan against these five money leaks:

  • No fixed list: recipe-by-recipe shopping invites impulse buys; one list, one trip protects the $50 cap
  • Fresh-only produce: frozen vegetables keep their nutrients well, often cost less than out-of-season fresh, and carry zero spoilage risk
  • Canned-only beans: a $1.50 pound of dried black beans cooks up to the equivalent of three $0.86 cans — the same beans, 42% cheaper
  • Fridge-prepping all 7 days: cooked food holds 3–4 days refrigerated; days 5–7 belong in the freezer, not the trash
  • Loose storage: half-covered bowls dry out and spoil early — silicone stretch lids seal any leftover bowl without plastic wrap and get reused all year

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you meal prep for $25 a week?

Yes, for one person. A $19.71 subset of the verified list above — rice, dried beans, lentils, eggs, frozen vegetables, onions, and tortillas — covers 10–12 meatless meals. You trade protein variety for cost, leaning on beans and eggs instead of chicken.

How long does meal-prepped food last?

Cooked meals hold 3–4 days in the refrigerator per USDA FoodKeeper guidelines. For a 7-day plan, refrigerate the first 4 days of meals and freeze the rest; frozen portions keep 2–3 months without quality loss.

Is meal prepping actually cheaper than eating out?

Dramatically. This plan's $3.33 per meal is about 80% less than the $16.28 average inexpensive-restaurant meal, saving roughly $194 across 15 meals. Even against the $4.23 average home-cooked meal, the $50 bulk-buying approach still comes out ahead.


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