We all know eating out is more expensive than cooking at home. But just how big is the difference? And more importantly—does it always make sense to cook every single meal?
I tracked my food spending for six months, and the numbers might surprise you.
The Numbers Don’t Lie
Let’s compare a typical week. Cooking at home: about $80 for a couple, including groceries. Eating out at casual restaurants: $150-200 for the same week. That’s a difference of $70-120 per week, or roughly $300-500 per month.
Over a year? That’s $3,600-6,000 saved by cooking at home most nights.
But Here’s What Nobody Talks About
The raw food cost isn’t the whole story. Time has value too. When I calculated the actual cost of cooking—including grocery shopping, prep time, and cleanup—my per-meal cost was higher than I thought.
The Hidden Costs of Home Cooking
- Time spent shopping
- Prep and cooking time
- Cleanup
- Food waste
- Mental energy deciding what to make
The Hidden Costs of Eating Out
- Tipping
- Transportation
- Alcohol markups
- The temptation to order more
The Sweet Spot
After my experiment, I’ve found a middle path:
- Cook at home for weeknight dinners—this is where the biggest savings are
- Meal prep on Sundays—batch cooking saves time during the week
- Eat out for connections—the social value is worth it, just don’t do it every day
- Get takeout, not dine-in—skip the restaurant markup when you want convenience
The Bottom Line
Yes, cooking at home saves money. But it’s not always the right choice. The goal isn’t to never eat out—it’s to be intentional about when you do, so you can enjoy it without the financial stress.