My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Join the discussion and meet other Mumsnetters on our free online chat forum.

Chat

250 pound weekly shopping/food

393 replies

Whome91 · 26/01/2020 17:37

Please try not to judge. We are a family of 5 two adults 7 4 and 7 months kids. Some of that is takeaways that me and dh have at night. I have a Diet Coke habit (20 for cans) I cook meat for the kids most nights. It’s including nappies for two kids in full term and baby milk. Help please

OP posts:
Report
Whome91 · 26/01/2020 17:37

I honestly don’t know why it’s that much I shop in Asda

OP posts:
Report
EssentialHummus · 26/01/2020 17:38

You need to post a week’s shop in full here really, otherwise we’re all just guessing.

Report
mrsbyers · 26/01/2020 17:39

Do you buy a lot of processed / convenience food ? Meat is expensive too - try switching to Lidl or Aldi for one shop and see the difference , I think ASDA can be expensive

Report
IHaveBrilloHair · 26/01/2020 17:40

Gosh, that's a lot.
Can you post a weekly shop?

Report
mrsbyers · 26/01/2020 17:40

For 8 people it’s high but not astonishingly so

Report
TriangleBingoBongo · 26/01/2020 17:42

I think we spend around £100 for two adults, a ten month old and a 10 year old.

That doesn’t include takeaways which we seldom have, I can see how it could be done.

Could you meal plan? I always do for the week ahead and that saves a lot of money.

Report
HollowTalk · 26/01/2020 17:42

But it's a family of 5, @mrsbyers!

Report
Whynosnowyet · 26/01/2020 17:45

5 dc and me and dh. Less than £100 including laundry products one week /pet food the other..
Aldi.

Report
MidsomerBurgers · 26/01/2020 17:45

It's only a problem if you can't afford it.

The Moneysavingexpert forum has lots of support on this subject.
forums.moneysavingexpert.com/forumdisplay.php?f=33

Report
JKScot4 · 26/01/2020 17:45

That’s beyond ridiculous! £20 on cola? Farm foods does 24 for £7, are you drinking 72 cans per week or similar?

Report
Heismyopendoor · 26/01/2020 17:46

You need to cut down on the takeaways, look at your juice habit and I’d imagine try and buy less packaged and convince foods.

Write a meal plan for breakfast lunch and dinner, even some snacks if that helps. Then write down everything you need to buy to make those things. Don’t buy anything that isn’t on your list. Try Lidl instead of Asda.

Report
MidsomerBurgers · 26/01/2020 17:46

Less judgy than this will end up too tbh.

Report
GorgeousLadyofWrestling · 26/01/2020 17:46

Hmmm that does seem a lot. For context, we’re also a family of five but our children are slightly older - 7, 4 and 2. We spend about £120. Maybe it’s the takeaways? How many do you have a week? Around here it’s about £40 a time so that could easily be bumping up your spending.

Our meals are a mix of meat and veggie - so a bean chilli for example, or shepherds pie - so not having all meat all the time helps reduce the cost. We also make a packed lunch for our two year old and the four and three year old love avocados which are £££. I dunno, it’s all swings and roundabouts probably. Would be interesting to see a weeks food shop.

Report
bsc · 26/01/2020 17:47

A lot of what you're paying for is convenience. However, do remember that your time is precious, and does have a value! If you order a deliveroo so that you can spend time you would have spent cooking doing something else, then it's not necessarily wasted.

But takeaways aren't healthy if you're having them regularly, and if you're wanting to economise, then you'll need to cut them down or out.

  1. meal plan. Sit down, plan what you'll have for the week, only buy what you need to make those dishes
  2. double-cook i.e. if you make Bolognese sauce or chili etc double-up your recipe and freeze half for another day. That means you have a quick meal later without needing a takeaway.
  3. go through what you already have in your store cupboard and try to plan meals that use that up fully (eg beans, pasta, rice whatever)

    That will save quite a bit in the immediate weeks to come.
Report
MidsomerBurgers · 26/01/2020 17:47

We'll also have the reappearance of the infamous MN roast chicken at some point.

Report
Starlight456 · 26/01/2020 17:47

What are you buying ?

I am a childminder feed different amount of children but probably spend £60 ish a week week . I am assuming you have nappies aswell.

Do you neal plan ?

Try the down brand challenge

Report
MrsL2016 · 26/01/2020 17:48

I echo what others have said and suggest shopping at aldi/Lidl. It really makes a difference. I used asda for convenience when my DS was on formula that Aldi didn't sell and I didn't want to go to 2 supermarkets. Once he went onto cows milk I swapped back to Aldi and it's so much cheaper. What nappies are you buying? Asda and aldis own are great. Cheaper cuts of meat can make a difference. Meal planning and choosing meals that feed a lot of people cheaply. Pasta bakes, cottage pie etc

Report
GorgeousLadyofWrestling · 26/01/2020 17:48

*two year old - she’s not there yet!

Report
lollybee1 · 26/01/2020 17:48

Buy as much as you can value, or at least own brands.
Buy spices and some tinned pulses from world foods section.
Shop around for any takeaways, there can be huge differences.
Never buy full price toiletries, cleaning and coffee. Bulk buy on offer.
Have a couple of veggie meals a week.
Frozen fish is cheaper than fresh.

Report
Apolloanddaphne · 26/01/2020 17:49

Gosh that is a lot. £1000 per month. Can you give us an idea of what you are buying on a weekly basis?

Report
JoJoSM2 · 26/01/2020 17:49

I’m baffled. I shop in Waitrose, some stuff comes from the local bakery or butcher etc and spend waaay less.

I think it must be the takeaways. To bring the cost down without much effort, you could for example:

  1. Just boil/steam some veg (Frozen is already chopped) and stick some potatoes and sausages/chicken/fish in the oven for a bit.
  2. Or get ready made sauces. Boil pasta, boil veg, add sauce and tinned beans or meat, grated cheese on top and you’ve got a healthy meal with minimu effort.
Report
coconuttelegraph · 26/01/2020 17:50

Without more detail it's impossible to say where you could cut back but it does sound like a crazy amount.

Report

Don’t want to miss threads like this?

Weekly

Sign up to our weekly round up and get all the best threads sent straight to your inbox!

Log in to update your newsletter preferences.

You've subscribed!

Thesearmsofmine · 26/01/2020 17:50

That is a lot of money! We are a family of five and I spent around £80 a week including lunches as dc aren’t at school. We eat pretty well, I meal plan, cook from scratch etc

When you say takeaway how much are spending because it soon adds up,

Report
Selfsettling3 · 26/01/2020 17:50

Are you cooking two separate meals a night? That can work out expensive.

Report
PineappleDanish · 26/01/2020 17:51

Easy. We are a family of 5 too, but two of mine are bottomless pit teenagers.

Ditch the takeaways, or swap to getting those bagged takeaways from Asda instead. Swap your cans of coke for the 2 litre bottles, or swap to fizzy water. Is there a reason the 4 year old is still in nappies? Agree with meal planning - there's no need for kids to eat meat every night. My kids love things like Spanish omelette and salad - and the omelette is eggs, potato and onion. Or jacket potatoes with beans and cheese. Or mac and cheese, or pasta with pesto.

Stop buying all branded stuff and switch to own brand.

Or if you're still struggling, give Eat Well for Less a ring - they'll sort you out!!

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.