Meal Plan Under $30/Week That Actually Keeps You Full

Thirty dollars a week sounds impossible until you break it down: a 5lb bag of rice ($3), a pound of dried beans ($1.50), a dozen eggs ($3), a bag of frozen vegetables ($2). That's $9.50 and you've already covered half your meals. Our ultra-budget plans build every week around these anchor ingredients and add variety with seasonal produce, canned goods, and loss-leader proteins. You'll eat three real meals a day without relying on ramen or fast food dollar menus.

Como Funciona

1

Defina suas preferências

Diga-nos sua dieta, tamanho da família, orçamento e alergias.

2

Receba seu plano

Receba um plano de refeição personalizado com receitas e lista de compras.

3

Cozinhe e aproveite

Siga receitas simples. Sem estresse, sem desperdício.

Por Que Escolher Este Plano

Built on $1-per-meal math

Every recipe is costed at grocery store prices. Rice and beans form the caloric base, eggs and canned fish add protein, and frozen or seasonal vegetables round out nutrition — all within $4.30/day.

Strategic grocery shopping

Your grocery list prioritizes store-brand staples, bulk bins, and loss-leader deals. We tell you exactly what to buy and what to skip so every dollar stretches further.

No special ingredients

Everything comes from a regular grocery store. No specialty health food items, no exotic grains, no $8 bottles of sauce. Just everyday ingredients cooked well.

Refeições Exemplo

breakfast10 min

Egg & Rice Scramble

Two eggs scrambled with leftover rice, a splash of soy sauce, and frozen peas. Filling, high-protein, and costs about $0.60.

budgethigh-protein
lunch10 min

Black Bean Quesadilla

Mashed black beans with shredded cheese and salsa pressed in a flour tortilla until crispy. Under $1 per serving.

budgetquick
dinner35 min

Chicken Thigh & Rice Bowl

Bone-in chicken thighs (the cheapest cut at ~$1.50/lb) roasted with garlic and paprika, served over rice with steamed broccoli.

budgetbatch-cook
dinner25 min

Pasta e Fagioli

A hearty Italian soup of white beans, diced tomatoes, small pasta, and garlic in broth. A full pot costs under $4 and feeds you for two days.

budgetbatch-cook
snack3 min

Peanut Butter Banana Toast

A slice of bread with peanut butter and half a banana. Simple, filling, and about $0.35 per serving.

budgetno-cook

Perguntas Frequentes

Can you really eat well on $30 a week?
Yes, if you build meals around staples. Rice, dried beans, eggs, oats, frozen vegetables, and bananas form a nutritionally complete base for under $15/week. The remaining $15 buys proteins like chicken thighs, canned tuna, and extras like cheese, tortillas, and cooking oil. It requires planning — which is exactly what this meal plan does for you.
What if I don't have a fully stocked pantry?
Your first week might run $35-40 as you buy cooking oil, salt, pepper, and basic spices. After that initial investment, weekly groceries drop to $25-30 because those pantry staples last months. We flag which items are one-time purchases versus weekly buys.
Will I be eating the same thing every day?
No. Budget cooking gets repetitive when you don't plan. Our plans rotate through different cuisines and cooking methods — stir-fries, soups, baked dishes, bowls — using the same affordable base ingredients prepared differently each time. Rice shows up in a scramble, a bowl, a stir-fry, and fried rice across one week.
Is this plan nutritionally balanced?
Yes. Rice and beans together form a complete protein. Eggs add B12 and healthy fats. Frozen vegetables retain the same nutrients as fresh. We track macros across the week to ensure you're getting adequate protein, fiber, and micronutrients even at this price point.

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