Meal Prep Savings Calculator
See exactly how much you save each week, month, and year by cooking at home.
Cumulative Cost Comparison — 12 Months
Strategies Ranked by Annual Savings
Month-by-Month Savings Projection
| Month | Eating Out | Meal Prep | Monthly Savings | Cumulative |
|---|
12-month projection. All figures based on your inputs above.
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Section 1 · Informational
Last Updated: April 2026
What Is a Meal Prep Savings Calculator?
A meal prep savings calculator is a free personal finance tool that converts your household's cooking and dining habits into a precise annual dollar figure. It computes the difference between what you spend eating out and what you spend buying ingredients for the same meals cooked at home — and projects that gap forward in time so you can see what consistent home cooking is worth over a year, five years, and beyond.
Meal prep savings = (restaurant cost per meal − ingredient cost per meal) × meals per week × people in household × 52. The calculator runs this formula in real time as you type, then compounds the result into monthly, annual, and 5-year projections. An optional time-cost adjustment subtracts the monetary value of hours spent cooking to show your true net benefit.
The first problem this tool solves is food spending blindness. Most households have no idea how much eating out costs on an annualized basis because restaurant spending is distributed across dozens of small transactions. A $14 lunch doesn't feel significant. But five $14 lunches per week for one person adds up to $3,640 per year — versus $1,040 spent on equivalent home-cooked meals at $4 per serving. The calculator makes that $2,600 annual gap concrete and visible before you spend another dollar.
The second problem is the time-cost objection. Many people resist meal prepping because they believe the hours spent cooking offset the financial gains. This tool resolves that question with actual math. Enter your hourly rate and weekly prep time; the calculator deducts the opportunity cost and shows you the net benefit. For the vast majority of households, even at $35 per hour with 3 hours of weekly prep, the net savings remain strongly positive.
The third problem is scaling uncertainty. Households often wonder: does it make more sense to prep 5 meals or 10? Is adding one more meal per week worth the extra effort? The calculator answers this directly — because savings are linear, every additional meal prepped adds the same fixed dollar amount to your weekly total. That makes the math straightforward and allows you to find the prep volume that fits your schedule and your savings goal simultaneously.
This tool is most useful for working adults who eat out regularly during the week, families trying to identify where food spending is going, budget planners setting grocery targets for the year, and anyone who has considered meal prepping but has never quantified the financial benefit. The numbers are often larger than expected. On a family of four prepping 7 dinners per week at $15 restaurant cost versus $5 ingredient cost, the calculator reveals a $14,560 annual gap — the equivalent of a modest vacation, a year of college savings contributions, or a significant emergency fund build.
Section 2 · Educational
How the Meal Prep Savings Math Works
The Core Formula
Weekly food savings (gross): Sw = (E − H) × M × P, where E is average restaurant cost per meal per person, H is average ingredient cost per meal per person, M is meals prepped per week, and P is number of people. Annual savings = Sw × 52.
Net savings with time cost: Snet = Sw − (W × T), where W is your hourly rate and T is weekly prep hours. This deducts the monetary value of time spent cooking to show your true net financial position. If Snet is still positive — which it is for almost all common scenarios — meal prepping generates a real financial return.
Worked Example
Scenario Comparison
The table below shows annual savings across common household configurations. All rows assume a $4 home-cook cost per meal per person, no time cost deducted.
| Scenario | Eat-Out Cost | Meals/Week | Annual Meal Prep Cost | Annual Savings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 person, 5 meals/wk | $13/meal | 5 | $1,040 | $2,340 |
| 2 people, 7 meals/wk | $14/meal | 7 | $2,912 | $7,280 |
| Family of 4, 7 meals/wk | $16/meal | 7 | $5,824 | $16,016 |
| Family of 4, 14 meals/wk | $15/meal | 14 | $11,648 | $29,432 |
Why the Numbers Are So Large
The figures seem surprising until you see how compounding meal frequency works. A family of four eats three meals a day — 21 meal-events per day, 147 per week. Swapping even 7 of those 147 from restaurant to home-cooked generates a $16,000 annual shift on a $10 per-meal cost difference. Restaurants price in labor, rent, utilities, marketing, and profit margin on top of food cost. A restaurant meal that costs $15 typically contains $3 to $5 in food. The remaining $10 is overhead and margin — which home cooking entirely eliminates.
Section 3 · Transactional
How to Use This Meal Prep Savings Calculator
Field-by-Field Guide
People in Household: Enter the number of people who will eat the meals you prep. If you cook for yourself and a partner, enter 2. If you pack your own lunch but not your partner's, enter 1. The calculator multiplies ingredient cost and restaurant cost by this number, so accuracy here is important — a common mistake is entering the total household size even when only some members eat the prepped meals.
Meals Prepped per Week: Enter how many individual meal occasions per week you plan to cook at home instead of eating out or buying prepared food. Start with what is realistic — 5 weekday dinners is a common baseline. If you also pack lunch, add another 5. The calculator handles any number from 1 to 21 (three meals per day for seven days). You can run it at multiple values to find the prep volume that produces your savings target.
Cost Eating Out (per meal / per person): Enter the average amount one person spends on a single restaurant or takeout meal, including tax and tip. The most accurate method is to divide your total food-away-from-home spending over the last 30 days by the number of restaurant meals consumed. Fast food averages $10 to $14 per person; casual sit-down dining averages $18 to $28 with tip; coffee-shop lunches average $12 to $16. If you mix types, use a blended average.
Ingredient Cost (per meal / per person): Enter your actual grocery cost per serving when cooking at home. To find this, divide a week of grocery receipts by the number of home-cooked servings those groceries produce. Most efficient meal preppers land between $3 and $5 per serving. Budget-focused strategies (dried beans, grains, seasonal produce, whole chickens broken down at home) can push this below $2.50. Premium organic ingredients may push it toward $7.
5 Pro Tips
4 Pitfall Warnings
Section 4 · Investigational
Real-World Meal Prep Savings Examples
Priya — Scenario 1: Single Professional, City Apartment
UX designer, buys lunch near the office most weekdays and orders dinner delivery 4 times a week
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| People | 1 |
| Meals prepped/week | 9 (5 lunches + 4 dinners) |
| Average eat-out cost | $16/meal (mix of delivery + office lunch) |
| Ingredient cost | $4.50/meal |
| Prep time | 2 hours/week at $35/hr |
Marcus & Danielle — Scenario 2: Couple, Suburban Home
Both work full time; currently eating out 5 evenings per week and buying lunch individually each weekday
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| People | 2 |
| Meals prepped/week | 7 (5 dinners + 2 packed lunches each) |
| Average eat-out cost | $18/meal/person |
| Ingredient cost | $4.75/meal/person |
| Prep time | 3 hours/week at $28/hr combined |
The Hendersons — Scenario 3: Family of 4, High-Stakes Financial Planning
Two parents, two kids (ages 8 and 11); currently eating out 3 times per week and buying school lunches daily for the kids ($6/day each)
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| People | 4 |
| Meals prepped/week | 13 (3 dinners + 5 packed school lunches × 2 kids) |
| Average eat-out cost | $15/meal/person (family restaurants + school lunch) |
| Ingredient cost | $3.50/meal/person |
| Prep time | 3.5 hours/week at $30/hr |
Section 5 · Conversational
Frequently Asked Questions
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The average American spends $13 to $20 per meal eating out versus $4 to $6 per home-cooked meal per person. A single adult prepping 7 dinners per week instead of eating out saves roughly $4,700 to $7,300 per year. A family of four prepping the same 7 meals saves $13,000 to $20,000 annually. The exact number depends on your household size, how many meals you prep, your local restaurant prices, and your grocery shopping habits. Use the calculator above to compute your specific savings in about 30 seconds.
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For most households, yes — by a wide margin. A typical meal prep session takes 2 to 3 hours per week. At a $25 hourly rate, that represents $50 to $75 in opportunity cost. Against $200 to $500 in weekly food savings for a family, the net benefit remains strongly positive. The calculator's Advanced section lets you enter your hourly rate and prep time so you can see your personal net-savings figure after accounting for the time you spend in the kitchen.
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Home-cooked meals cost between $1.50 and $6 per person depending on the recipe, proteins used, and shopping strategy. Pasta dishes, rice bowls, bean-based meals, and soups typically come in under $2 per person. Chicken or turkey dishes average $3 to $4. Beef or seafood dishes run $4 to $7. Buying proteins in bulk, choosing seasonal produce, and planning meals around store sales consistently brings ingredient cost below $4 per person per meal — which is the default value in this calculator.
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The savings are roughly linear: every additional meal you prep instead of buying out adds the same fixed dollar amount to your weekly savings total. However, practical limits exist. Most nutritionists and meal preppers recommend 5 to 7 meals per week as a sustainable starting point. That covers most weekday dinners. Prepping lunches as well — adding 5 more meals for a total of 10 to 12 per week — roughly doubles savings without proportionally increasing prep time, because batch cooking is more efficient at scale.
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This calculator does not model food waste directly. The ingredient cost field you enter per meal should reflect your realistic spend including a waste factor. If you buy $60 of groceries but throw away $12 worth each week, your effective ingredient cost per meal is based on the $60, not just the food you ate. A practical way to account for waste is to add 10% to 20% to your ingredient cost per meal — enter $4.80 instead of $4.00 if you estimate 20% waste. Good meal prep practice — portioning immediately, using airtight containers, and freezing extras — reduces waste to under 5% for most households.
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Yes. Set your Meals Prepped per Week to cover any combination of meal types. A common full-prep approach is 5 lunches plus 7 dinners, entered as 12 meals per week. Use a blended average for the eat-out and ingredient cost fields if your lunch and dinner prices differ significantly, or run the calculator twice — once for lunches and once for dinners — and add the results together for a combined annual savings figure.
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Restaurant prices historically rise faster than grocery prices during inflationary periods, because restaurants carry additional labor, rent, and energy costs that amplify raw ingredient increases. From 2020 to 2024, food-away-from-home prices increased approximately 27% while grocery prices rose 21%, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. This means the gap between eating out and cooking at home tends to widen over time, making meal prep more valuable — not less — as years pass. Recalculate annually with updated prices to track your current savings.
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The highest-savings meal prep foods are those with a large gap between their restaurant price and home-cooking cost. Grain bowls (rice, quinoa, or farro bases) cost $1.50 to $2 per person at home but sell for $12 to $16 at fast-casual restaurants. Pasta dishes cost $2 to $3 per person to make and sell for $14 to $18 at sit-down restaurants. Bean and lentil soups cost under $1.50 per serving and are rarely eaten at restaurants. Rotisserie chicken repurposed across three meals — tacos, salads, and soup — delivers exceptional cost-per-serving ratios. Eggs remain among the cheapest complete-protein options at under $0.50 per serving.
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About The Author
Shakeel Muzaffar is the Founder and Editor-in-Chief of MultiCalculators.com, bringing over 15 years of experience in digital publishing, product strategy, and online tool development. He leads the platform's editorial vision, ensuring every calculator meets strict standards for accuracy, usability, and real-world value. Shakeel personally oversees content quality, formula verification workflows, and the platform's commitment to publishing tools that are genuinely useful for students, professionals, and everyday users worldwide.
Areas of Expertise: Editorial Leadership, Digital Publishing, Product Strategy, Online Calculators, Web Standards
- Shakeel Muzaffar
