Saving Tips

The Pantry Challenge: Eat What You Have and Save Hundreds

SYM

The pantry challenge (also called the freezer challenge or use-it-up challenge) is a simple but surprisingly effective savings strategy: for one to two weeks, you commit to cooking only from food that is already in your kitchen — your fridge, freezer, cupboards, and pantry — buying only fresh essentials like milk, bread, and eggs when genuinely needed. Most UK households have significantly more food stored than they realise. Tins of beans, pasta, rice, frozen vegetables, sauces, condiments, and long-forgotten freezer items accumulate over months of shopping. The average UK household wastes £730 worth of food per year according to WRAP. A pantry challenge directly addresses this by consuming food before it expires rather than discarding it. The financial saving comes from not doing a full weekly shop for one to two weeks — easily saving £50 to £100 per week depending on household size.

Start by doing a full inventory of what you have. Check every cupboard, the fridge, and the freezer. Write down or photograph everything. You will almost certainly be surprised. Common pantry challenge discoveries include: multiple packets of pasta or rice, several tinned tomatoes, various canned pulses, frozen meat that has been there for months, partial bags of flour or lentils, and numerous condiments and spice jars. Now plan meals around what you have. This is a great opportunity to explore recipes using ingredients you might not normally cook with. Websites like BBC Good Food, Allrecipes, and SuperCook (which lets you enter ingredients you have and suggests recipes) make this straightforward. Allow yourself to buy only genuine perishable essentials during the challenge period. The rule: if you already have a substitute, use it rather than buying a specific ingredient.

The pantry challenge is not just about saving money on groceries — it is also about understanding your household's food consumption patterns so you can shop more intentionally going forward. After completing the challenge, do a post-mortem: what did you discover? What ingredients did you have in excess? What meals did you enjoy making that you had not thought of before? Use these insights to reform your shopping habits. Buy ingredients rather than pre-made meals, plan weekly meals before shopping, and buy in smaller quantities more frequently to reduce waste. Transfer the money you saved from not doing a full grocery shop into savings immediately. If you normally spend £80 to £120 per week on food, a two-week pantry challenge saves £160 to £240. Repeating the challenge quarterly — using it as a household reset — generates meaningful annual savings and dramatically reduces the food waste that costs UK households so much each year.
#savings challenge#uk#pantry challenge#food#grocery savings#budgeting

Start Your Savings Journey Today

20+ savings challenges, daily tracking, and achievement badges -- all free.

Download on the App Store