The Cheapest Meal Delivery Services That Are Actually Worth Ordering

According to Bon Appétit editors and contributors who have tried them at home.
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Photo by Laura Murray, styling by Judy Mancini

Finding the cheapest meal delivery service isn’t always as straightforward as it should be. That’s because the low prices that keep popping up in your feed or on those giant mailers are usually based on some, er, fuzzy calculations.

For starters, those per-serving costs are typically introductory offers that expire after a few weeks or months. Or they might be based on a minimum weekly order that’s far more food than your household would actually consume, and most tack on an additional shipping cost. Also, how do they determine what counts as a portion size? Your six-foot-tall, athletic husband and a company’s consulting dietitian might have very different opinions on that subject. And let us not forget that time is money; if an entrée requires too much prep time, this particular home-cooked meal model might not be worth it for you in the end.

So if you found your way here in an attempt to figure out whether that seemingly affordable meal kit is actually, well, affordable, you’ve come to the right place. It’s literally my job to try these things and report back. And I’m not alone. Bon Appétit’s editors, writers, and recipe developers also test meal kits, and we have plenty of notes. Receipts too.


The cheapest meal delivery services

  • Lowest price per serving: EveryPlate, $5.99/serving
  • Best for intermediate cooks: Dinnerly, $7.99/serving
  • Best for families: HomeChef, $7.99–$9.99/serving
  • Best selection: Hello Fresh, $9.99/serving
  • Best for snackers and grazers: Hungryroot, $9–$11/serving

While it’s true that advertised meal kit pricing is often deliberately opaque, it’s still entirely possible to get delicious meals, organic produce, and even kid-friendly snacks at or below grocery store prices. Even some luxe and wellness-focused options are competitively priced.

It’s also worth noting that, even if they end up being a bit more than the grocery store, meal kits and prepared meal delivery services will still be cheaper than takeout, even after the introductory offer has expired. They also cater to a variety of dietary needs and restrictions to make meal planning around those factors simpler. Many are very generous with substitutions too. So if you’re on a specific diet or you want more options for quick-and-healthy meals at home—and you don’t want to blow your entire food budget on a pricey kit—keep reading to learn more about the cheapest meal delivery services Bon Appétit editors actually recommend.

Lowest price per serving: EveryPlate

Pros and cons

Pros:

  • Affordable pricing
  • Quick-and-easy recipes

Cons:

  • Somewhat limited options
  • Does not cater to specific dietary restrictions

Pricing details

Average cost per serving:$5.99
Additional shipping fee:$9.99 per box
Style:Meal kit delivery service
Add-ons available:Yes

Like most meal delivery services, the default order is two servings of any given meal, and if you’re looking for single-servings, there’s also a “meal kits for one” plan—but if you read the fine print, it’s just the plan for two with a suggestion to use the second serving as leftovers.

Discounts

EveryPlate offers a student discount, which is 75% off of your first box and 15% off of every box thereafter for a year. The same pricing is available for the “hero discount” (verified medical professionals, first responders, active military, and veterans).

Example meals

The 27 family-friendly weekly meal options offer a decent variety for such a budget-friendly service. Think: chicken sausage and kale soup, griddled onion burgers, ponzu chili steak bowl, sweet and spicy ponzu pork meatballs, or curry in a hurry chickpea flatbreads.

If you’re looking for a filling, budget-friendly meal kit and you don’t have too many dietary restrictions or preferences, EveryPlate is a good option. With meals priced at just $5.99 a serving, its the best cheap meal delivery service for busy, budget-minded home cooks and couples without too many dietary restrictions.

As I write this update in July, EveryPlate’s promotional offer boasts meals as low as $1.99 a serving, but even at full price, this is the most affordable meal kit service we recommend—and one of the most affordable meal delivery services out there.

Add-ons include proteins like steak, ground beef, bacon, and salmon, plus veggies like broccoli and sweet potatoes. You can also get rice, pasta, soups, sauces, and salad kits, plus a limited selection of desserts.

While EveryPlate doesn’t cater to specific dietary restrictions or preferences, allergen and nutritional information is included with every recipe, so you’ll know exactly what ingredients are in each kit before you set your weekly order. Recipe cards come with each insulated kit, and they’re also available online.

Contributor April Benshosan tried EveryPlate this summer and was overall pleased with the meals, especially considering the low price. The recipes aren't the most exciting, and you do need to have basic staples on hand, but they're filling and easy to prepare.


Best for intermediate cooks: Dinnerly

  • Elise Portale
  • Elise Portale
  • Elise Portale

Dinnerly

Meal Kits

About Dinnerly: Dinnerly is Martha & Marley Spoon’s more affordable sister meal kit service, and while it doesn’t have Martha Stewart’s name attached to it, it does have more than 100 meals on its weekly menu, including a variety of tasty family-friendly vegetarian and vegan meals. Dinnerly is also comparatively more affordable than the popular plant-based meal delivery service Purple Carrot, which offers fewer (albeit delicious) meals to choose from each week.

Why it's great for families: In addition to the usual categories like low-calorie, quick-and-easy, and low-carb, Dinnerly gives you the option of setting your preferred menu to vegetarian and “picky eater approved.” According to the website, these are “crowd-pleasing recipes for eaters who avoid spicy food and prefer familiar ingredients.” The kind of recipes that might live in the middle of this Venn diagram are cheesy baked pastas, veggie burgers, vegetarian burrito bowls, quesadillas, and pizza.

In addition to the meal kits, you can also order from Dinnerly’s impressive add-on market for extras like Roberta’s pizza, heat-and-eat breakfast items, microwavable vegetarian meals, produce, plant-based proteins, sides, desserts, and some kid-friendly snacks.

What we love: When making Dinnerly meals for kids, we’ve found they enjoyed not only eating, but also helping prepare the family-friendly kit. And even when meals are not vegetarian, we appreciated that you can replace the protein in many of the meat-heavy recipes with Impossible Foods’ plant-based proteins.

What we’d leave: We did find that there were inconsistent expectations for effort, cleanup, and cookware, so you may need to budget more time than what the recipe card recommends.

Specs:

Type of meal delivery service: Meal kit delivery service
Typical prep and cooking time: 25 minutes
Gluten-free options: Yes
Plant-based options: Yes
Add-ons available: Yes
Average meal price: $7.99 per serving
Additional shipping fee: $11.99 per box

Pros and cons

Pros:

  • Easy recipe filtering,
  • Advance selection available
  • Great add-on selection

Cons:

  • Ingredients not divided by kit
  • Some staples required/not included in box

Pricing details

Average cost per serving:$7.99
Additional shipping fee:$11.99 per box
Style:Meal kit delivery service, oven-ready meals
Add-ons available:Yes

Choose “saver” recipes to save even more on your order.

Discounts

Dinnerly offers a community heroes discount program with eligibility determined via ID.me.

Dinnerly is the affordable sister brand to Marley Spoon (our favorite meal kit for people who like to cook). Where Marley Spoon meals average $10.99 per serving, Dinnerly’s come in at just $7.99—though selecting the “saver” recipes can reduce the price a bit more. It's the best cheap meal kit for intermediate home cooks who don’t mind chopping and prep, couples, and small households.

Each meal can supposedly be prepared in five steps or less. That said, as my colleague Wilder Davies and I have experienced, both Dinnerly’s and Marley Spoon’s steps often include quite a few separate tasks. These often aren’t one-dish dinners either, so if you’re hoping that part of the meal kit lifestyle is washing fewer dishes, be sure to peek at the recipe steps when selecting your weekly meals.

Dinnerly allows you to filter recipes by cuisine or dietary preference, and you can also view the attributes of each (low-calorie, kid-friendly, keto-friendly, low-carb, under 30 minutes, vegetarian, dairy-free, etc.) before clicking through to the recipe. When you do click through, you can peek at the ingredients and steps, nutrient and allergen information, and what staples you’ll need to have on hand before you make your weekly menu selections, which you can do up to three weeks in advance.

Dinnerly subscribers can also choose from a wide variety of add-ons, which offer the same great variety as the Marley Spoon Market and include proteins, produce, pastries, pizza dough, shortcut meal kits, premade meals you can heat and eat, desserts, and goodies from brands like Roberta’s Pizza, Spicewalla, Mike’s Hot Honey, and more. Contributing social media manager Elise Portale recently tried Dinnerly and had mixed feelings about the recipes she selected, but she really enjoyed the Market selection.

Presumably, to make shipping more sustainable, ingredients are all packaged together and not divided by kit. You can opt out of printed recipe cards and cook from the online recipe or Dinnerly app if you want to reduce the materials that get shipped to you.


Best for families: Home Chef

  • Alexis Berger
  • Alexis Berger
  • Alexis Berger

Home Chef

Meal Kits

About Home Chef: Home Chef is a traditional meal kit service that sends pre-portioned ingredients and easy-to-follow, family-friendly recipes that make it easy to get a fresh meal on the table in 15 to 30 minutes. Meals are available in four categories: classic meal kits, Express kits that take 30 minutes or less, oven-ready Chopped & Ready options that you assemble in a provided tin and then pop in the oven, and Fast & Fresh microwavable recipes. You can pick a mix of all types for your weekly box. Home Chef also offers a selection of add-ons like extra protein, soups, salads, snacks, and desserts.

Why it's great for families: If you have a lot of mouths to feed, Home Chef is a great option, because the more meals you order, the more budget-friendly it becomes—especially if you order from the Family Menu. Home Chef’s standard meals are two servings each and, on average, cost $7.99 to $9.99 per serving; but when you order from the Family Menu, meals are just $6.99 per serving, no matter how many you get (customizations like swapping your protein may come with an upcharge).

What we love: The portion sizes are large, the meal plans are customizable, and you can select your meal kits based on dietary needs and preferences. We found the recipes simple and kid-friendly enough to please young critics. Meals weren’t too complex, but they were hearty and filling. Many of the recipes had a nostalgic feel (think meat wrapped in puff pastry) that reminded us of the dinners we ate as kids. We also liked the specific Family Plan option with categories like Express and Chopped & Ready which are designed to get food on the table in 30 minutes and under 20 minutes, respectively, along with traditional and oven-ready meal kits.

The flexibility of Home Chef can also come in clutch if your family has a busy schedule one week and a relaxing schedule the next. It’s easy to customize how many meals you want in each shipment; if you select three meals one week, you can still order five for the following.

What we’d leave: There’s quite a bit of plastic in each Home Chef kit. Contributor Alexis Berger acknowledged that this may be the norm for meal kits, but thinks there’s room for improvement. “Home Chef divides each meal into its own plastic bag and then within that bag, you’ll find individually bagged ingredients for each recipe. This organizational structure is great for knowing what items go with which meal, but the literal added layer is just more disposable packaging,” she says.

Specs:

Type of meal delivery service: Meal kit delivery service, prepared meal delivery service
Typical prep and cooking time: 15–30 minutes
Gluten-free options: Yes
Plant-based options: Yes
Add-ons available: Yes
Average meal price: $6.99 to $9.99 depending on the number of meals per order
Additional shipping fee: $10.99 per box

Pros and cons

Pros:

  • Very affordable, depending on the number of meals you order each week
  • Quick and easy prep

Cons:

  • Smaller orders get pricey
  • Standard meals are pretty basic
  • Weekly minimums

Pricing details

Average cost per serving:$7.99 to $9.99
Additional shipping fee:$10.99 per box
Style:Meal kit delivery service, prepared meal delivery service, discounted family menu option
Add-ons available:Yes

As of July 2025, the Family Menu meals are prepared in servings of four, and come to $7.99 a serving, whether you order two a week, six a week, or anything in between. Customizing your Home Chef selections by changing the protein or making other swaps may also cost you a few bucks more per serving. And if you want even more, there’s an option to double up your order.

Discounts

Home Chef offers limited discounts to military, first responders, health care professionals, and teachers verified through ID.me. And as of July 2025 there’s also a promotional offer for AAA members.

Example meals

Cooking for a crowd and looking for a variety of meals including traditional meal kits and fully prepared meals? Then Home Chef’s Family Menu might be the best affordable meal delivery service for you. With a price of $6.99 per serving, this is a great cheap meal delivery service for families or households of 4 who want a kit a few nights a week, as well as for beginner home cooks.

Of course, price is only part of the equation when it comes to finding the best affordable meal delivery services. So to get a better sense of Home Chef’s value, contributor Adam Campbell-Schmitt tried it at home for two weeks.

Overall, he liked the service and found that the dishes were simple and kid-friendly, though they sometimes bordered on too simple. While picky eaters might prefer more basic presentations and flavor profiles, more experienced home cooks might want something more. The premium and “Culinary Collection” offerings like brown butter sage gnocchi and maple-glazed trout were more exciting to cook and eat, but they also cost up to $4 more per serving.

The standard meal kits can often be prepared in 15 or 30 minutes and include preportioned ingredients. You can also choose from fully cooked meal options that are oven-ready and grill-ready, and add-ons include proteins, snacks, soups, salad kits, desserts, and more.


Best selection: HelloFresh

  • Jaia Clingham-David
  • Jaia Clingham-David
  • Jaia Clingham-David

HelloFresh

Meal Kits

About HelloFresh: HelloFresh, one of the first meal kit delivery services to hit the market, has an impressively large weekly menu. It’s aimed at a wide audience but allows you to choose plans geared toward different requirements: meat and veggie/carb-conscious meals, veggie and plant-based meals, quick-and-easy meals, family-friendly meals, and pescatarian meals. Unless you’re focused on specific dietary needs, it’s a great go-to.

Why it's great for families: Every week, you can choose your family meals from more than 100 options—which means that no matter what your household does or doesn’t like to eat, there’s almost sure to be a recipe or three you can all agree on. And, importantly for our considerations here, HelloFresh offers family-friendly meals, which are “kid-tested” and “picky eater approved” (citations to which kids and picky eaters are testing and approving not included). Additionally, HelloFresh offers “Big Batch” dinners (with an upcharge), which offer double portions for up to eight people or the option of leftovers.

What we love: Multiple Bon Appétit staff and contributors have tried HelloFresh over the years, and our testers have all been happy with the large portion sizes, fresh ingredients, and the add-on options, which include stand-alone proteins (chicken breasts, steaks, etc), smoothies, snacks, and desserts. Most recently, we tried Hello Fresh in a home with two adults and two kids, including some Big Batch options for families. The recipes were crowd-pleasing and satisfying for every age.

What we’d leave: Our one flag had to do with preparation and cooking time with the larger meals, which was often noted around 45 minutes on the recipe card and took even longer in practice, especially when batch cooking was necessary.

Specs:

Type of meal delivery service: Meal kit delivery service
Typical prep and cooking time: 30–40 minutes
Gluten-free options: Yes
Plant-based options: Yes
Add-ons available: Yes
Average meal price: $9.99
Additional shipping fee: $10.99 per box

Pros and cons

Pros:

  • More than 100 menu options each week
  • Pricing (mostly) not dependent on quantity

Cons:

  • At $9.99 per serving, barely meets our “affordable” threshold
  • Meals are heavy on carbs, light on fresh produce

Pricing details

Average cost per serving:$9.99
Additional shipping fee:$10.99 per box
Style:Meal kit delivery service, quick-and-easy kits
Add-ons available:Yes

HelloFresh doesn’t have a minimum order value, but you must order at least two servings of two meals a week. At that minimum level it comes out to $11.49 per serving. Beyond that, standard meals cost $9.99 per serving, whether you’re cooking for four or six people anywhere from two to six times a week.

Discounts

HelloFresh’s Hero Discount Program provides verified medical providers, nurses, hospital employees, teachers, first responders, active duty military, and veterans with 55% off of their first box, plus 15% off for 51 more weeks.

HelloFresh is one of the OG meal delivery services (despite any claims you might see to the contrary, it’s been around longer than Blue Apron), and though its price tag is on the higher end of what I consider “cheap,” it offers far more meal options than its comparably priced competitors. It's good for smaller households who want at least three kits a week. And in addition to the different meal kits, you can order a variety of add-ons like proteins, snacks, desserts, and smoothies from the HelloFresh Market.

Bon Appétit staffers who have tried HelloFresh at home have reported that the portions are large and plentiful; they’ve praised the fresh ingredients, including the meat. But Maria Paz Mendez Hodes, former director of creative development who tested HelloFresh earlier this year, found that the kits were light on produce and heavy on carbs.

Contributor Betty Gold Kider tried Hello Fresh this summer and was overall impressed with the recipe selection and quality, though the meals took a little longer to prepare than the advertised 30 minutes.


Best for snackers and grazers: Hungryroot

  • Olivia Tarantino
  • Olivia Tarantino
  • Olivia Tarantino

Hungryroot

Meal Kits

About Hungryroot: More of a grocery delivery service store than a traditional meal kit service, Hungryroot offers a large selection of ingredients (often semi- or fully-cooked) and packaged items that can be thrown together for super-quick, satisfying dinners for two or four people. In addition to the ingredients intended for meals, you can also get many of your other groceries from Hungryroot, including meat, fish, eggs, dairy, poultry, pantry staples, and snacks—so many great snacks!

There’s a pretty lengthy survey at sign-up to help the system learn your preferences. Then, you can narrow down your options by using Hungryroot’s massive number of filters for cuisines and dietary restrictions, including pescatarian, high-protein, carb-conscious, dairy-free, tree nut–free, and even diabetes-friendly. And if you or your kids hate something, you can add it to your “never send” list. In recent years, Hungryroot has also leaned into its AI and algorithmic capabilities to recommend products and autofill your shopping cart.

Why it's great for families: Hungryroot replaces an essential and often hassle-filled experience (when done with kids in tow): grocery shopping. But unlike other online grocers, the convenience extends to its meal prep options as well. It’s not uncommon to enjoy your first bite within 10 or 15 minutes of beginning your cook thanks to simple recipes, often with pre-trimmed and washed produce or precooked ingredients.

What we love: The ingredients are high-quality and many of the condiments, salad mixes, and other packaged foods are Hungryroot’s own brand (we liked their unique offerings such as chickpea-based edible cookie dough). But you’ll also find brands you see in the grocery store, too, blending the best of shopping at, say, Trader Joe’s or Aldi with a trip to Whole Foods.

What we’d leave: Setting your preferences and selecting your groceries is a little tedious at first, but once you get rolling with this service, it’s great.

Specs:

Type of meal delivery service: Virtual grocery store with quick-and-easy meal prep options
Typical prep and cooking time: 10–15 minutes
Gluten-free options: Yes
Plant-based options: Yes
Add-ons available: Yes
Average meal price: $9 to $11
Additional shipping fee: $6.99 for orders under $70, Free for orders over $70

Pros and cons

Pros:

  • Large selection of high-quality grocery items
  • Organic ingredients
  • Throw-together meal options
  • Prepared options
  • Lots of snack options

Cons:

  • Not really a meal kit service
  • Credit system can be confusing at first

Pricing details

Average cost per serving:$9 to $11
Additional shipping fee:$6.99 for orders under $70, Free for orders over $70
Style:Virtual grocery store with suggested recipes for quick-and-easy meals, high-quality ingredients, plus fully cooked microwavable meals
Add-ons available:Yes

Due to the structure of this service (a collection of ingredients versus a prepped and portioned meal kit), there isn’t a typical price per meal. Every item, whether it’s part of a “recipe” or a grocery add-on, has a credit value instead of a price. The number of credits you get each week depends on the meal plan you choose (how many dinners, breakfasts, snacks, etc., per box).

For example, the beef short ribs and steamed broccoli “recipe” includes two servings and requires two ingredients: prepackaged Church Brothers broccoli florets (2 credits) and Hungryroot’s fully cooked beef short ribs (5 points). It makes more sense once you get into the system and start clicking around—which is a little tricky because you have to sign up first. But to give you an idea of pricing, I tried a weekly plan that had 60 credits and cost $135.

Discounts

Hungryroot is so serious about low prices, it offers price matching through its Best Price Program. So if you order an item from the brand and then you find it for a lower price at another retailer, Hungryroot will credit the difference to your account.

Example meals

  • Garlicky Chicken Caesar Lettuce Wrap
  • Grilled Teriyaki Salmon + Simple Slaw
  • Grilled Chimichurri Steak + Mexican Rice
  • More Hungryroot sample menus

If you don’t like grocery shopping and don’t want to do much in the way of meal prep, Hungryroot may be the meal delivery service for you. Well, except for the fact that it isn’t technically a meal delivery service; it’s more of a high-end grocery delivery service that comes with suggestions for how to easily combine its items into quick-and-easy meals. It's great for home cooks in small households, snackers, and grazers.

Because it’s an online grocery store, Hungryroot has plenty of options for your dietary restrictions (dairy-free, gluten-free, soy-free, tree-nut-free, peanut-free, egg-free, shellfish-free, vegan meals, vegetarian meals, pescatarian meals, high-protein and paleo options, diabetes-friendly meals, etc.) and dietary preferences (sweets or no sweets? That is the question! Or at least one of them). Your answers are logged at sign-up via a thorough survey, though you’ll always have the option to adjust your weekly selections.

Even if you don’t end up making the suggested recipes, you’ll still be stocking your kitchen with a variety of prepared foods, packaged staples, nutritious snacks, produce, and fresh meat (if you choose—there are plenty of meatless options too). I tend to lean on the service for quick-and-easy breakfast items and snacks for my kids, but the beauty of Hungryroot is you can mix and match whatever you need any given week.

If you love the ritual of chopping and prepping, this may not be the meal kit for you. But if you’re more of a snacker and you have a hard time getting yourself to the grocery store, you’ll probably love it.


How we test meal kits

Our editors and contributors are constantly ordering and preparing a wide variety of meal kits and prepared meals to stay current on the best meal delivery services in general. When considering any meal kit company, our testers look at the menu and dietary preference variety, quality of the ingredients inside the boxes and their sourcing, portion sizes, the clarity of the instructions, the overall value, and, of course, the taste of the meals.


What we mean by “cheap”

For this list of the cheapest meal kits, I looked at the average price per serving and selected only the options that are available for $10 or less per serving.

But I didn’t stop there.

Some companies are very transparent with their pricing. For example, the vegan meal kit service Purple Carrot makes it easy to figure out that their lowest price per serving is $11 (without any introductory discounts) before you hand over your email address, so they didn’t make the cut for this list. That kind of transparency has historically been the exception, not the rule, though. So when I first put together this list of the cheapest meal kits, I had to at least begin the subscription process to get real numbers.

In addition to relying on my own experiences ordering these meal kits—and the thorough testing and reporting my colleagues do year-round—I signed up or reactivated my account at each service to understand how the numbers really add up. If a service promoted $8.99 meals but I couldn’t get a standard order to reflect that number, you won’t see that company on this list. At Blue Apron, for instance, you have to order at least four meals a week for two or four people to get the price per serving below $9.99, and four kits a week feels like…a lot.

I’m pleased to report that as I write this update in July 2025, I’ve noticed more and more meal kit companies being equally transparent with their pricing. It’s not yet an industry standard, but it’s a start.

What else you won’t find on this list: Services that come in under the $10 per serving threshold only during the promotional period. Many brands offer deep discounts or free meals on your first order or a certain percentage off of your first few boxes. GreenChef, for example, is currently offering new customers 50% off the first box (taking the price per standard serving down to $5.99), and then 20% off for two months. But after the end of the promotional period, you’d be paying $11.99 for each serving.

For this list, I only included kits with consistently low prices.