The average household grocery bill keeps rising. Getting a filling, nutritious, actually tasty dinner on the table for four people at or under $15 is achievable, but it requires knowing which ingredients stretch furthest and which techniques make cheap food taste like it cost more.
All 15 dinners below are built around pantry staples, seasonal produce, and proteins with the lowest cost per serving. Prices are estimates based on 2026 grocery averages and will vary by location and store.
The Cheapest Proteins Per Serving
| Protein | Approx Cost | Why It Works |
| Eggs (dozen) | $3-4 | Cheapest protein per gram; incredibly versatile |
| Dried lentils (1kg) | $3-5 | Cook down to 8 portions; no soaking needed for red lentils |
| Canned chickpeas (400g) | $0.80-1.20 | 2-3 portions; no cooking required |
| Chicken thighs (bone-in) | $4-6 for 4 pieces | Far cheaper than breast; stays moist under high heat |
| Canned tuna (multiple cans) | $1-2 per can | Fast, versatile; 2 portions per can |
| Ground beef (500g) | $4-6 | Stretches well with lentils, beans, or rice |
The 15 Dinners
1. Red Lentil Dal (~$5)
Fry onion, garlic, and ginger in oil until soft. Add cumin, coriander, turmeric. Add rinsed red lentils and stock or water. Simmer 20 minutes until thick. Serve with rice or flatbread. Red lentils are one of the most nutritionally dense foods available at this price point, with protein, fiber, and iron in every bowl.
2. Egg Fried Rice (~$4)
Cold cooked rice (ideally day-old), 4 eggs, soy sauce, sesame oil, whatever vegetables need using. High heat, keep it moving. Five minutes from start to plate. This is the dinner for when time and budget are both at zero.
3. Black Bean Tacos (~$8)
Canned black beans seasoned with cumin, chili, and garlic, served in warm tortillas with shredded cabbage, lime, and Greek yogurt instead of sour cream. High protein, high fiber, genuinely filling, and customizable for picky eaters.
4. Pasta e Fagioli (~$6)
The Italian ‘pasta and beans’: olive oil, garlic, canned tomatoes, canned borlotti or cannellini beans, small pasta shapes, and parmesan rind if you have one. The bean starch thickens the broth as everything cooks together. Deeply satisfying, extremely cheap.
5. Baked Chicken Thighs with Roasted Vegetables (~$12)
Season bone-in chicken thighs with whatever spices you have. Add chopped root vegetables (potato, carrot, sweet potato, whatever is cheapest this week) to the same pan. Roast at 200C for 40 minutes. Sheet-pan simplicity, minimal washing up.
6. Shakshuka (~$7)
Eggs poached in a spiced tomato sauce. The sauce is canned tomatoes, onion, bell pepper, garlic, cumin, and smoked paprika. Six eggs for four people, with bread for dipping. Twenty minutes from start to table.
7. Chickpea Curry (~$9)
Two cans of chickpeas in a sauce of canned tomatoes, onion, garlic, ginger, and curry powder. Finish with a swirl of yogurt. Serve with rice. This is the curry that proves you do not need a long spice list to make something that tastes genuinely good.
8. Tuna Pasta Bake (~$10)
Cooked pasta, two cans of tuna, a simple white sauce (butter, flour, milk), peas, and breadcrumbs on top. Bake 20 minutes. Classic, filling, and beloved by most children.
9. Vegetable Soup with Bread (~$7)
A large soup using whatever vegetables are cheapest: leeks, potatoes, carrots, celery, courgette. Stock from a cube, a tin of tomatoes, and whatever dried herbs you have. Make a large batch. This is the meal that costs almost nothing and yields two to three dinners.
10. Sausage and Bean Stew (~$12)
Four sausages, one can of white beans, one can of tomatoes, onion, garlic, and a splash of Worcestershire sauce. Simmer 25 minutes. Serve with crusty bread. The beans make four sausages stretch comfortably to feed four adults.
11. Fried Rice with Egg and Soy (~$5)
Similar to egg fried rice but with a simple sauce: soy sauce, oyster sauce (optional), and a touch of sugar. The sauce is what makes plain rice taste like a proper dinner. Frozen vegetables keep cost low.
12. Lentil Soup (~$6)
Green or brown lentils (they hold their shape better than red), carrots, celery, onion, stock, cumin, and smoked paprika. Add a squeeze of lemon at the end. Blends beautifully or eats well as a textured soup.
13. Omelette with Salad (~$6)
Four-egg omelette with whatever filling you have (cheese and herbs if nothing else), a simple green salad with vinaigrette. Dinner in 10 minutes. When the budget is truly at its limit, this always delivers.
14. Oven-Baked Fish with Chips (~$14)
Pollock or other white fish fillets are significantly cheaper than cod or haddock and cook identically. Season with lemon, olive oil, and herbs. Oven chips alongside. The most classic family dinner at this price point.
15. Bean and Cheese Quesadillas (~$8)
Canned refried beans or mashed black beans, shredded cheese, inside flour tortillas. Griddle 2 minutes per side until golden. Serve with salsa and sour cream or yogurt. Children eat these without complaint.
The Pantry That Makes All of This Work
- Dried pasta, rice, and lentils: the cheapest calories and the most flexible base
- Canned tomatoes, canned beans, canned chickpeas: protein and sauce in one
- Onions, garlic, carrots: the cheapest fresh vegetables per meal served
- Eggs: the most versatile protein at the lowest price
- Dried spices (cumin, smoked paprika, coriander, turmeric): what makes cheap food taste good
FAQ
How do I feed a family of 4 cheaply?
Build around dried legumes, eggs, canned beans, and bone-in chicken as your proteins. These have the lowest cost per gram of protein available. Use dried pasta and rice as carbohydrate bases. Flavor with inexpensive spices, which are the difference between a meal that tastes good and one that does not.
Can budget meals actually taste good?
Yes, with two conditions: proper seasoning and technique. Underseasoned cheap ingredients taste cheap. Properly seasoned cheap ingredients taste like a meal someone made with care. The spice rack is the most important budget tool in the kitchen.
What are the absolute cheapest meals to make?
Egg fried rice, red lentil dal, and pasta e fagioli are the three lowest-cost per-serving dinners on this list, all coming in under $6 for four people. All three are also nutritionally complete with protein, carbohydrate, and fiber.
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