A good grocery budget for two adults typically lands between $500 and $900 per month in the U.S., with many couples clustering around $600–$750. The “right” number depends on where you live, how often you cook at home, and whether you include nonfood household items (like paper goods and cleaning supplies) in your grocery total.
If you want a quick starting point, aim for $175–$225 per week for two adults who cook most meals at home and keep restaurant meals separate. If your current spending is higher, it doesn’t automatically mean you’re overspending—higher-cost cities, specialty diets, and frequent fresh-produce purchases can raise totals fast.
Start by picking one of these tiers, then adjust after two to four weeks of tracking:
Budget-focused: $125–$165/week ($500–$660/month). Best for meal planning, fewer convenience foods, and more store brands.
Moderate/typical: $165–$225/week ($660–$900/month). Fits a mix of fresh foods, some snacks, and occasional convenience items.
Flexible/high-cost areas: $225–$300+/week ($900–$1,200+/month). Common in expensive metros, for premium proteins, organic-only preferences, or frequent hosting.
Protein choices: Rotating chicken, beans, eggs, and occasional beef/seafood can noticeably lower weekly totals.
Convenience foods: Pre-cut produce, single-serve items, and prepared meals add up quickly.
Waste and “extra trips”: Unplanned midweek runs often lead to impulse buys and duplicate items.
First, build meals around what’s already on sale and compare options with unit pricing (price per ounce/pound) instead of sticker price. Second, use a flexible meal plan: pick a few interchangeable dinners and keep pantry/freezer staples on hand so you can swap meals based on markdowns and seasonal prices.
For more practical ways to stretch your grocery dollars without sacrificing variety, see the full guide: beat grocery inflation with unit pricing and flexible meal plans.
Prioritize unit pricing, buy the same items in the most cost-effective size, and shift purchases to store brands where you don’t notice a difference. Planning two to three “flex” dinners that use similar ingredients also reduces waste and last-minute add-ons.
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