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Food Budget Guide UK — How to Feed Your Family for Less

Practical strategies for reducing your food spending in the UK. Weekly budgets by household size, meal planning tips, cheap recipe ideas, and how to cut food waste.

Food is one of the largest controllable expenses in any UK household budget. While you cannot avoid eating, you have significant control over what you spend — and with the right strategies, you can eat well on a fraction of the average spend without sacrificing nutrition or enjoyment.

Average UK Food Spending

Household Size Average Weekly Spend Budget-Friendly Target
1 person £35–£45 £20–£30
Couple £55–£75 £35–£50
Family of 3 £70–£95 £50–£70
Family of 4 £85–£120 £60–£85

The ONS estimates the average UK household spends about £65–£75/week on food and non-alcoholic drinks. With planning, most households can reduce this by 20–40%.

Meal Planning

The single most effective strategy for reducing food costs:

How to Meal Plan

  1. Check your fridge and cupboards — use what you already have first
  2. Plan 5-7 dinners for the week (leave a night or two for leftovers)
  3. Write a shopping list based only on what you need for those meals
  4. Stick to the list — avoid impulse purchases
  5. Prep ingredients when you get home (saves time during the week)

Sample Budget Meal Plan (Family of 4, ~£60/Week)

Day Dinner Approx Cost
Monday Chicken stir-fry with rice £4.50
Tuesday Pasta with homemade tomato sauce £2.50
Wednesday Jacket potatoes with beans and cheese £3.00
Thursday Lentil dhal with naan bread £2.00
Friday Fish fingers, chips, and peas £4.00
Saturday Spaghetti bolognese £4.00
Sunday Roast chicken with vegetables £6.00

Total dinners: ~£26/week (leaving £34 for breakfasts, lunches, and snacks)

Where to Shop

Price Comparison

Store Typical Basket Cost (vs Tesco)
Aldi 20–30% cheaper
Lidl 20–30% cheaper
Asda 5–15% cheaper
Tesco Baseline
Sainsbury’s 0–5% more
M&S 20–40% more
Waitrose 15–30% more

Smart Shopping Tips

  • Do your main shop at Aldi/Lidl — biggest saving for lowest effort
  • Use Tesco Clubcard/Nectar prices for specific items on offer
  • Shop in the evening for yellow sticker reductions (typically 30-75% off)
  • Buy frozen vegetables — as nutritious as fresh, cheaper, and last longer
  • Check the world foods aisle — spices, rice, and staples are often cheaper here

Budget Staples

These cheap ingredients form the base of hundreds of meals:

Ingredient Approximate Price Meals It Makes
Rice (1kg) £0.45–£1.00 8+ servings
Pasta (500g) £0.30–£0.80 4+ servings
Tinned tomatoes (4-pack) £1.50 4+ meals
Dried lentils (500g) £0.70–£1.20 6+ servings
Onions (1kg) £0.60–£0.90 Used in most meals
Frozen vegetables (1kg) £1.00–£1.50 6+ servings
Eggs (10) £1.50–£2.50 5+ meals
Bread (800g) £0.45–£1.00 Breakfasts and lunches
Tinned beans/chickpeas £0.30–£0.60 2+ servings
Potatoes (2.5kg) £1.00–£1.50 8+ servings

Reducing Food Waste

UK households waste approximately £500–£700 per year on food. Reducing waste is effectively the same as earning more money.

Practical Tips

  • Understand date labels: “Best before” = quality (often fine after), “Use by” = safety (do not eat after)
  • First in, first out: Move older items to the front of the fridge
  • Freeze everything: Bread, milk, cheese, cooked meals, bananas, herbs — most things freeze well
  • Leftover night: Dedicate one evening per week to using up leftovers
  • Vegetable stock: Freeze vegetable peelings and offcuts, then simmer for stock

Batch Cooking

Cooking large quantities and freezing portions:

  • Saves time — cook once, eat three times
  • Saves money — buying ingredients in bulk is cheaper per portion
  • Reduces waste — everything gets used
  • Reduces takeaway temptation — a home-cooked meal is always in the freezer

Best Batch Cook Meals

  • Chilli con carne / bean chilli
  • Bolognese sauce
  • Curries (chicken tikka, lentil dhal, chickpea curry)
  • Soups (carrot and coriander, minestrone, leek and potato)
  • Stews and casseroles
  • Pasta bakes

Most batch-cooked meals freeze for 3 months and taste just as good reheated.

Eating Out and Takeaways

The average UK household spends £100+/month on eating out and takeaways. To reduce this:

  • Set a monthly eating out budget — and stick to it
  • Use restaurant offers — Tastecard, Meerkat Meals (from Compare the Market), Too Good To Go
  • Cook “fakeaway” versions at home — a homemade curry costs £2–£4 instead of £15–£25 delivered
  • Meal prep lunches — bringing lunch to work saves £5–£10/day vs buying

Monthly Food Budget Template

Category Budget Amount Actual
Groceries £_____ £_____
Eating out / takeaways £_____ £_____
Coffee / snacks £_____ £_____
Total £_____ £_____

Track your food spending for one month to see where money goes, then set realistic targets. For a full budget template, see our budget planner guide and apply the 50/30/20 rule to your overall spending.