The average UK household spends around £65 per person per week on food and drink. If you're trying to save — whether for a house deposit, an emergency fund, or just breathing room — cutting that in half feels transformative. And yes, it's genuinely doable without surviving on beans and toast. Here's the realistic, tried-and-tested playbook for getting your weekly food shop down to £30.
Start With a Meal Plan (Non-Negotiable)
Every person who successfully shops on a tight budget does this. Spend 15 minutes on Sunday planning your meals for the week — breakfast, lunch, dinner, and snacks. Write down exactly what ingredients you need and buy nothing else. Meal planning eliminates three expensive habits: impulse buying, mid-week top-up shops, and food waste. The average UK household throws away £700 of food per year. When every meal is planned, every ingredient gets used. Start simple: pick 5 dinners, make enough for leftover lunches, and batch your breakfasts. You don't need to be a chef — you need to be organised.
Shop at the Right Stores
Store choice alone can cut your bill by 30–40%. Aldi and Lidl consistently come out cheapest in UK supermarket comparisons, typically 20–30% cheaper than Tesco or Sainsbury's for equivalent baskets.
- •Aldi/Lidl for your main weekly shop — staples, meat, dairy, fresh veg are all significantly cheaper
- •Farmfoods or Iceland for frozen veg and bulk protein — frozen is often more nutritious than 'fresh' that's been sitting on shelves
- •Market stalls for fruit and veg, especially towards closing time when prices drop
- •Avoid M&S, Waitrose, and Co-op for regular shopping — they're 30–50% more expensive on basics
- •Skip online delivery if possible — you spend more when you can't see prices side by side, plus delivery fees add up
The £30 Weekly Meal Plan Template
Here's a realistic week of meals for around £30 at Aldi or Lidl prices. This feeds one person three meals a day with snacks.
- •Breakfasts (7 days): Porridge oats with banana (£1.50 total) or eggs on toast (£2.00 total for the week)
- •Lunches (5 weekdays): Batch-cooked soup with bread, or leftover dinner portions — total cost around £5–£7
- •Dinner 1: Chicken stir-fry with rice and frozen veg — £2.50
- •Dinner 2: Pasta with tinned tomatoes, onion, and garlic — £1.20
- •Dinner 3: Bean chilli with rice — £1.80
- •Dinner 4: Jacket potatoes with cheese and beans — £1.50
- •Dinner 5: Egg fried rice with frozen peas and soy sauce — £1.00
- •Weekend meals: Use leftovers, or make a big batch of curry (£3.00 for 4 portions)
- •Snacks: Bananas, apples, own-brand biscuits, popcorn kernels — £3.00 for the week
Master the Art of Batch Cooking
Batch cooking is the single biggest money-saving habit in the kitchen. Cook large portions of 2–3 meals on Sunday, portion them into containers, and you've got lunches and quick dinners sorted for the week. Chilli, curry, soup, bolognese, and stew all freeze brilliantly. A big pot of chilli costs around £4–£5 in ingredients and yields 6–8 portions — that's 60–80p per meal. Compare that to a £3.50 meal deal or a £7 Deliveroo order. Invest in a set of reusable containers and label everything with the date. Most batch-cooked meals last 3–4 days in the fridge or 3 months in the freezer.
Yellow Sticker Shopping and Reduced Sections
Every UK supermarket reduces items approaching their best-before date, typically by 25–75%. The timing varies by store, but most do their final reductions between 7–8 PM. Learn your local store's schedule. Reduced meat can be frozen immediately and used within 3 months. Reduced bread freezes perfectly. Reduced fruit goes into smoothies or banana bread. Some dedicated yellow-sticker shoppers build their entire weekly meal plan around what they find in the reduced section, which can bring a weekly shop below £20. Combine this with your planned shop: buy your staples at full price and let reduced items fill the gaps.
Swap Expensive Habits for Cheap Ones
Small daily spending adds up to shocking annual totals. Swapping just a few habits can free up a huge portion of your food budget.
- •Coffee at home instead of Costa: Save £3–£4 per day = £780–£1,040/year
- •Tap water instead of bottled or fizzy drinks: Save £5–£10/week
- •Own-brand everything: Aldi's own range is often identical to branded products at 40–60% less
- •Buy whole chickens instead of breasts: A whole chicken (£3–£4) gives you roast dinner + sandwiches + stock for soup
- •Dried beans and lentils instead of tinned: 3x cheaper and tastier if you soak overnight
- •Frozen veg instead of fresh: Cheaper, no waste, and flash-frozen at peak nutrition
- •Season with spices instead of buying sauces: A £1 bag of cumin lasts months; a £2.50 jar of sauce lasts one meal
Use Apps and Tools to Track Spending
If you're not tracking your food spending, you're guessing — and guesses are always optimistic. Use SYM to set a weekly grocery budget and log what you actually spend. Seeing the real numbers is often the wake-up call people need. Other useful tools include Too Good To Go (surprise bags of reduced food from local shops for £3–£4), Olio (free surplus food from neighbours and local businesses), and supermarket loyalty apps like Lidl Plus and Aldi's Specialbuys alerts. The combination of tracking your spending and using surplus food apps can bring your weekly cost well below £30.
What About Eating Out and Takeaways?
Let's be realistic — most people aren't going to completely stop eating out. But the key is making it intentional rather than habitual. If your £30 budget is for groceries only, set a separate (small) eating-out budget. Even £20 a month gives you one nice meal out or two takeaway coffees a week. The trap is when eating out becomes the default: a Monday Deliveroo because you're tired, a Wednesday Nando's because someone suggested it, a Friday Uber Eats because it's the weekend. Each one costs £10–£20. That's potentially £40–£80 a week on top of your grocery bill. Plan one treat meal per week and make it count — you'll enjoy it more when it's intentional.
The Bottom Line
Cutting your weekly food shop to £30 isn't about deprivation — it's about intention. Plan your meals, shop at the right stores, batch cook, embrace own-brand products, and track what you spend. The average person can save £150–£200 per month just by being deliberate about food shopping. That's £1,800–£2,400 a year — enough for a holiday, a chunk of a house deposit, or a serious emergency fund. Start this week: plan 5 meals, write a shopping list, and stick to it. You'll be surprised how quickly £30 starts feeling like more than enough.
#budgeting#groceries#meal planning#saving money#food shopping
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