Meal Prep vs Eating Out Cost Calculator

Stephanie Ben-Joseph headshot Stephanie Ben-Joseph

How this meal prep vs eating out calculator works

Cooking at home often feels cheaper than eating out, but the true comparison is more nuanced. You pay for ingredients, but you also invest your time planning, shopping, cooking, and cleaning. Eating out skips most of that effort, but restaurant prices and tips add up quickly. This calculator brings those pieces together so you can estimate which option actually costs you more over a typical week.

The tool focuses on a simple scenario: the same number of meals either cooked at home (meal prep) or eaten out. By entering a few key inputs, it calculates the total weekly cost for each option and the difference between them. That difference tells you how much you are effectively paying (or saving) for the convenience of restaurant meals compared with doing your own meal prep.

Who this calculator is for

This calculator is designed for people who want to understand the financial trade-off between cooking and dining out. Typical use cases include:

You can revisit the calculator whenever your situation changes—if your hourly wage increases, ingredient prices rise, or your favorite restaurant adjusts its menu prices. A small change in any of these numbers can shift which option is cheaper.

Formulas used in the calculator

The calculator builds two totals:

  1. The weekly cost of cooking at home (meal prep).
  2. The weekly cost of eating out (restaurant or takeout meals).

It then compares the two and reports the difference. Here is how each total is calculated.

Home cooking (meal prep) cost

Inputs:

First, convert prep time from minutes to hours:

tp ' = tp 60

Then calculate:

The total weekly cost of meal prep is:

Ch = nci + n tp v 60

Dining out cost

Inputs:

The tip is treated as a percentage added on top of the base meal price. The cost of one restaurant meal including tip is:

co × ( 1 + rt 100 )

The total weekly dining out cost is:

Co = n co ( 1 + rt 100 )

Comparing the two options

The calculator compares the two totals and shows the difference:

Δ = Co Ch

Interpretation:

Worked example

Suppose you enter the following values:

Step 1: Home cooking cost

Weekly ingredient cost = 14 × $4 = $56

Prep time per meal in hours = 30 ÷ 60 = 0.5 hours

Time cost per meal = 0.5 × $15 = $7.50

Weekly time cost = 14 × $7.50 = $105

Total weekly meal prep cost, Ch = $56 + $105 = $161

Step 2: Dining out cost

Multiplier for tip = 1 + 15 ÷ 100 = 1.15

Cost per restaurant meal with tip = $15 × 1.15 = $17.25

Total weekly dining out cost, Co = 14 × $17.25 = $241.50

Step 3: Difference

Δ = Co − Ch = $241.50 − $161 = $80.50

Under these assumptions, cooking at home saves about $80.50 per week compared with eating out for the same number of meals. Over a full year, that is more than $4,000 in potential savings. You can adjust the inputs to see how sensitive that savings is to your time value, ingredient costs, or dining-out habits.

How to interpret your results

When you use the calculator, focus on these ideas:

You can also use the results to explore “what if” questions:

Choosing realistic input values

Your results are only as accurate as the numbers you enter. A few tips for choosing realistic values:

Comparison summary

The table below summarizes how the calculator treats each option.

Aspect Meal Prep (Cooking at Home) Eating Out (Restaurant/Takeout)
Base cost per meal Ingredient cost per meal you enter Restaurant menu price per meal you enter
Time cost Prep time per meal × your hourly time value Assumed to be zero in the calculator (time spent at the restaurant is not monetized)
Tips Not included Calculated as a percentage added to the base meal price
Number of meals Same meals per week as eating out Same meals per week as meal prep
Typical cost drivers Ingredient prices, recipe choices, prep time, and your time value Restaurant type, menu prices, tip rate, and how often you eat out
What result means Lower weekly total suggests financial savings from cooking at home Higher weekly total suggests you are paying extra for convenience

Limitations and assumptions

This calculator is a simplified model of a complex real-world decision. Keep these assumptions and limitations in mind when you interpret your results:

Because of these limitations, use the calculator as a guide rather than a precise prediction. It can show you the order of magnitude of the trade-off and highlight which levers—time, ingredient costs, or restaurant habits—have the biggest impact on your budget.

Using the results to take action

Once you understand how costs compare, you can decide what to adjust:

Experiment with different scenarios until you find a balance of cost, time, and lifestyle that feels right for you.

Fill in your details to compare meal costs.

Embed this calculator

Copy and paste the HTML below to add the Meal Prep vs Eating Out Cost Calculator to your website.