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Eating in the UK on £40–60/Week: Grocery Budget Breakdown

UK groceries cost £40–60/week for a student buying budget brands (Tesco Value, Asda Smart Price, Sainsbury’s Basics) and cooking at home. Eating out or buying meal kits adds £20–40/week. Knowing which supermarket to use, meal planning, and buying own-brand products save 30–50% versus eating out or buying branded products. Most students can eat well for £30–50/week with discipline.

Supermarket Chains Ranked by Price (2025)

SupermarketAverage Basket*Best ForLoyalty Program
Aldi£35–42Budget; German/European staplesNo loyalty; weekly deals
Lidl£35–45Budget; own-brand quality goodNo loyalty; weekly deals
Iceland£38–48Frozen veg, bulk dealsIceland Rewards (cashback)
Tesco£42–55Value ranges; widest locationsClubcard (points/discounts)
Sainsbury’s£45–60Mid-range; good quality own-brandNectar Card (points)
Asda£40–52Mid-range; budget range goodAsda Rewards (points)
Morrisons£45–58Mid-range; fresh produceMore Card (points)
Waitrose£55–75Premium; most expensiveWaitrose Rewards (points)
Marks & Spencer Food£50–70Premium; ready-meals priceyM&S Bank loyalty

*Average basket = 40 items: bread, milk, eggs, pasta, rice, chicken, veg, fruit, basics

Student verdict: Shop at Aldi or Lidl if you have one nearby. Own-brand budget ranges rival Tesco Value but often better quality. Avoid Waitrose and M&S unless splurging on special meals.

A Unilink survey of 2,634 international students (Jan–Mar 2025) found students shopped primarily at Tesco (34%), Aldi (28%), and Sainsbury’s (22%). Those shopping at Aldi spent an average of £38/week, compared to £52/week at Sainsbury’s—a £14/week saving (£728/year).

Weekly Budget Meal Plan (£40–50)

Example week for one person (7 breakfasts, 7 lunches, 7 dinners):

ItemQuantityCostServesCost per serving
Bread2 loaves£1.2014 pieces£0.09
Pasta500g£0.456 portions£0.08
Rice1kg£0.8010 portions£0.08
Eggs1 dozen£1.4012 eggs£0.12
Milk2L£1.6016 cups£0.10
Chicken breasts1kg£5.504 meals£1.38
Tinned beans4 cans£1.008 meals£0.13
Cheddar cheese250g£1.808 portions£0.23
Butter250g£1.0020 servings£0.05
Tinned tomatoes3 cans£0.756 meals£0.13
Onions2kg bag£1.0020 servings£0.05
Potatoes2kg bag£1.2016 servings£0.08
Carrots1kg£0.6012 servings£0.05
Cabbage1 head£0.806 servings£0.13
Apples1kg (6 apples)£1.506 servings£0.25
Bananas6£0.906 servings£0.15
Peanut butter400g£1.2024 servings£0.05
Oats500g£0.5010 servings£0.05
Olive oil1L£2.5040 servings£0.06
Salt, pepper, spicesAlready stocked
TOTAL£4721 meals£2.24/meal

Meal examples:

This plan is basic but nutritionally sound and costs ~£6.70/day for all three meals.

How to Save Another £10–15/Week

  1. Buy discount cards: Sainsbury’s Clubcard gives 10% off own-brand staples (saves ~£5/week)
  2. Cheap-brand loyalty: Tesco Value, Asda Smart Price, Sainsbury’s Basics are 20–40% cheaper than branded; quality is nearly identical
  3. Frozen vegetables: Frozen broccoli, peas, carrots cost 30–50% less than fresh and last longer (no waste)
  4. Batch cooking: Make 4 portions of curry/stew on Sunday, eat 4 meals from it (~£0.80/portion vs £3–4 eating out)
  5. Eggs for protein: £0.12 per egg vs £1.50+ per chicken breast; scrambled eggs on toast is a £0.40 meal
  6. Rice & pasta over fresh: Brown rice (£0.08/portion) beats expensive salads; fill with tinned beans for protein
  7. Seasonal produce: Carrots (winter), courgettes (summer), apples (autumn) are cheapest and most nutritious when in season
  8. Discount codes: Download the Too Good To Go app (surplus food from supermarkets at 50% off); food expires today but is safe to eat (saves £5–10/week)

Eating Out Costs: Why It’s So Expensive

LocationAverage Costvs Cooking
University cafeteria£6–8 per meal3x cooking cost
Meal deal (sandwich + drink)£5–75–10x cooking cost
Casual restaurant£10–155–8x cooking cost
Takeaway (pizza, kebab)£8–124–6x cooking cost
Coffee shop lunch£10–147–10x cooking cost

Eating out 3x per week adds £30–40 to your weekly budget. Stop this habit if you want to save money; it’s the easiest place to cut costs.

Student Discount Cards: Worth It?

UNiDAYS: 10–20% off select supermarkets (Tesco, Sainsbury’s, occasionally). Free; check monthly for updated codes. Saves ~£2–3/week.

TOTUM (NUS Extra): £20/year; 10% off food shops and eating out. Breaks even after 2 weeks if you use it regularly.

Sainsbury’s Clubcard: Free; gives points (convert to vouchers) and Clubcard Prices (10% off own-brand items). Best free option.

Don’t overpay for student discount cards unless you’re shopping multiple times/week or eating out regularly. Free cards (Clubcard, UNiDAYS) are sufficient.

Cooking at Home: Time Investment

Many students skip cooking because they’re too busy or tired. Reality:

None of these are complicated. Practice once, and you’ll be fast.

Dietary Restrictions & Costs

Vegetarian: Beans, lentils, eggs, and chickpeas are protein-rich and cheaper than meat. ~£30–40/week if you eat primarily beans/lentils.

Vegan: Lentils, chickpeas, tofu, and oat milk cost more but are doable on budget. ~£35–45/week if you’re mindful.

Gluten-free: GF bread and pasta are 50–100% more expensive. Budget ~£50–65/week.

Dairy-free: Oat milk (£1.20) and fortified alternatives available at all supermarkets. Slightly more than regular milk (~£0.40/extra per week).

Halal/Kosher: Some supermarkets have dedicated sections (Tesco, Asda, Sainsbury’s); prices are similar to regular meat but selection is limited. Plan ahead or order from specialist retailers.

Meal Prep & Avoiding Waste

Sunday meal prep ritual:

  1. Buy ingredients for the week
  2. Spend 1–2 hours cooking batch meals
  3. Portion into containers; refrigerate (3–4 days) or freeze (2–3 weeks)
  4. Grab a container each day; no time or decision-making needed

Waste prevention:

International Ingredients & Specialist Shops

If you’re craving home-country food:

Budget travel: Eat mostly supermarket staples; reserve specialist shops for occasional treats or missing ingredients.

Lunch at Uni: The Pitfall

Many students spend £5–7 on lunch daily at university (sandwich + coffee). This alone costs £25–35/week.

Better strategy:

Saves: £15–25/week

Alcohol on a Budget

If you drink:

Budget drinkers: Buy from supermarkets and drink at home or student union. Avoid rounds in pubs; that’s where budgets die.

Sources

Last updated: 2025-04.


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