Forum search & shortcuts

How much do you spe...
 

[Closed] How much do you spend a week on food?

 Joe
Posts: 1728
Free Member
Topic starter
 
[#9664629]

I seem to spend a fortune; i was inspired by another thread on here asking if he could get by on £5 a day for 2000 calories. I had always thought that £35 a week seemed like a decent amount of money if you were mindful about where you shopped and what you ate, but that thread seems to think otherwise.

I seem to constantly eat out, impulse purchase and buy shit i don't need. I am not in that category (although I would love to be...)


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 6:53 pm
Posts: 348
Free Member
 

£200 per week 😯

To be fair - it's a family of 5. So £40 per head, although 3 of those heads are children.


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 6:58 pm
Posts: 36
Free Member
 

excluding household goods (i,e, washing powders, soaps, booze, & bits) roughly:
£20-25 meat
£6-10 veg
£4-6 fruit
£5-8 dairy
£3-5 bread-making and bread
£3-4 drinks
£5-15 other ingredients (like spices, grains, pastas, rice, nuts, sauces etc)

so anywhere between £50 and £75 for family of 4. No ready meals, all prepared and cooked at home from scratch except occasionally for lazy chicken kievs.

Average shop cost is closer to £100-120 per week, but that includes my lunches (work from home), loads of booze and maybe a DVD for the boys.


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 7:00 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Two of us.
Excluding booze and 1 takeaway £45 on average
Including booze and 1 Takeaway £80

All food is cooked from Scratch.


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 7:00 pm
Posts: 3052
Free Member
 

I find food in uk q expensive, sainsburys, its hard to avoid all the packaged rubbish. I always cook so end up chasing aroumd the store looking for individual items. I reckon 100 pw for 2, including wine.


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 7:00 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Just me at home so no hungry kids to feed. Easily spend less than £30 each week, sometimes less. But then I'm not a food lover (I eat to ride) so no fancy stuff for me. Treat myself to a chippie every Friday and the odd cake, the rest is just easy to cook meat etc. Does help that I don't really have an appetite, can go a few days without eating sometimes if I'm out of my normal routine!!


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 7:08 pm
Posts: 30656
Free Member
 

£20-25.

Just me.

Don't drink, but do have a penchant for biscuits and go for convenience (tinned beans & veg/frozen veg etc) over cooking from scratch/buying raw staples.


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 7:12 pm
Posts: 40432
Free Member
 

About £75 for a family of four. Including non foods from the supermarket.

Cook most meals from scratch and we have an Aldi and Lidl as our local shops.

I think we eat pretty well.


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 7:14 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Easily £100.00..but that's not just food ..its all household shopping


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 7:21 pm
Posts: 4621
Free Member
 

About £90 per week for food and drink for 3 people.


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 7:21 pm
Posts: 9870
Free Member
 

Jamie - Member
£20-25.

Just me.

Sorry. I'm calling bullshit. Nobody can spend that little a week on food...

Can they?

Blimey


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 7:23 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Two adults, two teenagers (with hollow legs), just food is about 100-115 a week.

Edit: cook from scratch


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 7:23 pm
Posts: 28712
Full Member
 

£0

I send Mrs Weeksy, I have no idea how much it costs her

I may spend £6 on a couple of lattes though


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 7:27 pm
Posts: 1030
Full Member
 

£60 ish per week all in for the shopping (food, cleaning, bog roll etc.) two hungry adults! Might have a takeaway at the weekend (£15) no booze.

Mostly processed/packaged crap though, need to cook from scratch more, although looking at the above it's gonna cost more!


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 7:39 pm
Posts: 0
Full Member
 

Just me most of the time so £70 a week (maybe one bottle of wine included, but not normally) I love food, cook as fresh as I can and when I can’t I’m hooked on Charlie Binghams fish pies/lasagne/meatballs.
When the Mrs’s is around it’s normally £80-90.

Oh, seems some are including takeaways/eating out in thier costings... I’m not.. so I normally eat out once a week with a pint so add another £20 to my total.


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 8:00 pm
Posts: 13594
Free Member
 

Sorry. I'm calling bullshit. Nobody can spend that little a week on food...

I spend about that just on lunches, £5/day at the local coop..


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 8:04 pm
 Joe
Posts: 1728
Free Member
Topic starter
 

Sorry. I'm calling bullshit. Nobody can spend that little a week on food...
I spend about that just on lunches, £5/day at the local coop..

Sadly so do i. Maybe even more. And normally buy lunch out; maybe eat out twice a week as well. What a lunatic I am. I don't even enjoy it very much.


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 8:07 pm
Posts: 30656
Free Member
 

I spend about that just on lunches, £5/day at the local coop..

Well, that's cause you're such a high roller, mate 8)


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 8:10 pm
Posts: 13594
Free Member
 

Well, that's cause you're such a high roller, mate

Yes I often leave the local Coop, clutching my chicken salad sandwich, thinking 'Yes, I've finally made it' 🙂

We live the high life on the Cambridge Business Park.....


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 8:11 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I guess somewhere around £7/day for me.
Breakfast usually effectively free (loaf bought for lunches becomes toast)
Lunch usually around £2
Dinner usually around £3.50
+Snacks and drinks.


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 8:16 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I have no idea


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 8:17 pm
Posts: 15555
Free Member
 

Sorry. I'm calling bullshit. Nobody can spend that little a week on food...

Can they?

It can be done, when I got laid off I was unemployed for a few months things got pretty dire for a week or two waiting for the paycheck for my new job to come through.

Weekly shop.
4 x 50p loafs of value bread.
2 x tins of corned beef
Value Ketchup
4 x 25p jars of chicken /salmon paste
Large block of cheese
Large pack of reformed ham
Some really cheap pasta n sauce packs
Some 10p noodle packs
Chilli sauce
6 litres of milk


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 8:20 pm
 ton
Posts: 24307
Full Member
 

£100 for 3 adults and a big greedy labby.

so not far off my £5 a day target. 8)


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 8:24 pm
Posts: 398
Free Member
 

About £125 a week for two adults and a baby. However, that includes nappies and other household purchases. We don't really drink much so expenditure in booze is neglible. We do however buy quite a lot of meat and fresh fruit/veg. No ready meals or takeaways, all meals are cooked from scratch. Oh, and I take lunch to work with me so there are no additional costs there. Still seems steep in my opinion but the missus insists she can't/won't go lower.

I'm quite sad in that I itemise our monthly expenditure against a monthly budget and forecast against big ticket items in the future...needs must when you're on just the one salary. However, it's staggering how much money gets frittered away when you look into it - I recommend doing so if you don't already as the exercise saved us well over £150 per month at the start.


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 8:25 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

About 150/week. Family of 4. I find it shocking how much we spend and I do try and reduce it but then end up going again and spending more!


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 8:27 pm
 ctk
Posts: 1811
Free Member
 

I guess about £75. Big shop usually comes to £60 plus a couple of little shops. 2 adults, 2 kids (6&4) Most meals home cooked but kids (and me!) like the odd supermarket pizza and fish fingers obvz!

Recently I've been trying to cook 2 meals, one for today and one for the freezer.

Edit: I've forgotten we pay for school meals so more like £85.


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 8:31 pm
Posts: 34585
Full Member
 

We have 4 kids, my food bills are bonkers

Personally do try and be frugal, but 4 kids also = tired can easily spend £5 a day on lunch, loads of really nice places to buy food near work too!


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 8:40 pm
 km79
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I had always thought that £35 a week seemed like a decent amount of money if you were mindful about where you shopped and what you ate, but that thread seems to think otherwise.
You can feed yourself in a decent healthy and nutritious manner for £35 a week. Over your 5 a day and all the protein you need as well. If anyone cannot do this this it's down to their own incompetence.

Buy your staples (lentils, beans, rice, flour etc) in bulk, buy your fruit and vegetables fresh and in season, and buy cheaper but still tasty cuts of meat from your butcher. Take the time to plan in advance and make use of your freezer. Make your meals from scratch. It's not difficult, just needs some discipline.


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 8:53 pm
Posts: 7296
Full Member
 

I live alone and spend £40 -£45 every week in Tesco . Now , this does include monthly purchaces like washing powder , dishwaher tablets etc
I also go out approx one night a week with my mate and thats £25 so I spend £65 a week as an average on feeding myself
btw .- I am 5ft 11 and weigh 76kg , so not exactly a tubber


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 8:58 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Not good here, both not keen on preparing and cooking so it’s pretty much take away or cafe or bar lunch Thursday tea through to Sunday, 5 in family then usually a boyfriend or two of the daughters averaged out last year at about £200 a week on the above , then there’s usually 3 or 4 £25-£35 debits for the local Tesco express each week , obviously cleaning stuff and toiletries in that so if we said £75-£100 out of that then it’s £275-£300 a week, doesn’t look good but we have a great family time so more than happy to roll with it!!


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 9:04 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I only eat breakfast (cereal) and one other meal a day about 3-4pm so that makes it cheaper.Probably 30ish a week.


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 9:05 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

It is possible to eat very well for not that much.

We do around £100-£120/week, family of four with two 17 year old boys. That includes stuff like washing powder but NOT beer and wine. We could pretty easily knock 20% off that with a few sacrifices (fresh orange juice being top of the list at ~£8/week)

Everything cooked from scratch apart from the odd pizza to keep in the freezer for that quick, easy 'emergency meal.

Key to keeping cost down is menu-planning and bulk purchase of 'dry' foods. And never go to the supermarket hungry.


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 9:05 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

£75-125 for 2, everything not just food (that includes very little booze/wine as that’s mostly bought in bulk in France). We usually spend quite a lot less on food when in France as despite 5% VAT food is much cheaper there (our weekly cheese record was €38 though 🙂 )

We eat mostly vegetarian, some fish (which is expensive). Almost everything cooked from fresh, eg exception twice a month or so microwave curry. We often cook 2-3 days worth and freeze some

OP Eat Well for Less is compulsive viewing

https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/group/b0520lz9


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 9:08 pm
Posts: 11
Free Member
 

I transfer the Mrs £700 a month to cover the shopping etc. I have no idea how that breaks down but the fridge is usually full and my favorite crisps and biscuts are in the cupboard, so I don't ask...


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 9:13 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

2 adults, 2 kids (6+12) . We spend about £85 a week , Mrs Carlos is allergic to loads of things so we tend to cook from scratch rather than ready meals.

Most of the shop is done at Aldi , I'd hate to think how much the same shop would be at Asda/Morison's.


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 9:17 pm
 beej
Posts: 4225
Full Member
 

For 14 breakfasts, 12 dinners and about 6 lunches, £60 a week - two of us. Cooking almost always from fresh, mix of Aldi and Sainsburys.

Lunch when I'm out/at work is about £5.

One evening out/takeaway a week on average.


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 9:19 pm
Posts: 4954
Free Member
 

Take the time to plan in advance and make use of your freezer. Make your meals from scratch. It's not difficult, just needs some discipline

This is definitely true as a new graduate my partner and I were good like this but now food s more of a afterthought, (not so much for other half but for me). Lazy I know. Food is still not massive. About £80 per week all supermarket shopping. Two adults and one baby. Eat really well imo.

£200 per week sounds massive! Even for 5 grown ups, where do you think the bulk is spent.


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 9:28 pm
Posts: 12809
Free Member
 

£125

That’s £60 a week in Sainsburys.
£15 school dinners for the eldest.
£5 a day each for my Wife and I.

Used to be a lot more, I’m trying to get back into the habit of making myself lunch at home, if nothing else I’m bored shitless of the co-op meal deals.


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 9:46 pm
 DrJ
Posts: 14106
Full Member
 

100 quid a week for 2. Plus my lunches. Feels extravagant but I'm not sure what I'd cut out - we eat zero ready meals or stuff like that.


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 9:55 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Jamie - Member
£20-25.
Just me.

Sorry. I'm calling bullshit. Nobody can spend that little a week on food...

Can they?

Blimey

Just gone through my last 4 shopping bills from Morrisons:

£23.64
£19.88
£26.12
£17.94

You can add about £1 for extra milk during the week onto all of that and the £26.12 was inflated by buying a new pack of razor blades at £10. So I'd say Jamie's figures tally up with mine for a similar situation.

It's amazing how quickly those extra little snacks or big portions add up!


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 10:16 pm
Posts: 5868
Full Member
 

£90-£100 a week at Tesco for 2 adults. But these days that includes alcoholic beverages, home stuff (wife loves candles) as well as toiletries, massive tescos sells just about everything!

We do eat quite a lot of meat, but we cook must things from scratch. I just like food, lots of food!


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 10:18 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Not 100% sure but I’d guess somewhere around £80-90 per week for one person


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 10:36 pm
Posts: 19558
Free Member
 

£30 to £35 per week including junk food. 😛


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 10:57 pm
Posts: 4593
Free Member
 

i reckon £75 a week between the two of us. Lunches at work add another £15ish. Booze adds a bit more again!

the £20 a week thing is easily doable (for one) though - did this for years while skint. Sometimes used to manage on £10. You just have to substitute out a lot of meat and cheese etc...


 
Posted : 13/11/2017 11:08 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Tend to grab at least one meal a day in a greasy spoon/ cob shop or fancy cafe something which combines breakfast and lunch, so that can be anything from about £4-12, then about £10-20 a day in home food (fresh meat or fish, veggies and sundries) and I tend to graze on fruit from waking to sleeping. Add booze to that, and nights out booze and weekend eating, I really dread to think.


 
Posted : 14/11/2017 1:18 am
Page 1 / 3