How To Live (Comfortably) on $36 A Month For Food

I was having a nice lunch with my friend Chris the other day.  The bill came, and I laughed, it was around $40 with tip, which was more than my entire food budget for a month in college.  I told this to Chris how I did it, and  he said I should write about the process of living off of next to nothing.

This isn’t a post that resembles a call to action.  It is a (poor) diary of how I lived off of a $36 food budget for a month.  One of the most humbling experiences I have ever had was shopping for two weeks worth of food with a twenty dollar bill.  I learned to get by with some tricks.  I was in college for this, and was deathly fearful of graduating with debt, so I did all I could to stick to my budget I earned on a 20 hour a week university job.

Try Eating

Hacking your food budget is one of those things that I am surprised more people don’t do. My current budget is around $380/m (it was $180/m until I started training for half Ironman distance triathlons), with my favorite recipes coming from when I didn’t have the money to splurge.

So if you are interested in lowering your monthly food budget, but still eat good food, remember these as a starter:

  • If you are $ poor you might not be time poor.  Use this to your advantage.
  • Everything you buy should be at least 50% off retail.  Every. Single. Thing.
  • Realize that if you are really sticking to a budget, you have to change your whole thought process on food.  It is a staple of survival.  Lard is the highest calorie per cent food you can buy.  Disturbing, but if you are going to be scientific about it, makes the most sense (I’ve never had to go there).
  • You can do this by ramen, but that isn’t healthy, or tasty.

Alright, so if you want to do $36 a month for food, you are going to have to break that down to about .33 a meal.  Sounds like pennies.  It isn’t as tough as you think.

Cook Every Meal At Home:

No question about it, except if you can find a bag of day old bagels.

Sales and Shopping:

The hardest part to start.  You need to shift your habits to load up on foods that are deep discounted.   Figure out the stores cycle of coupons, sales and clearance.  When I lived in Rhode Island, Sunday was the big sale day and also the day when the clearance stickers went on.  In Boulder, the grocery store I go to has the best bang for your buck day on Wednesday (they honor last week and the next weeks deals).  Ground beef might be on a super deal (sale plus a manager special), grab a months worth.  That week, other items won’t be on sale, pass on them.  Your pantry, and your ability to not have anything spoil will be a great way to cut costs.

Breakfasts:

Cheapest meal of the day, also my favorite.  Oats with raisins or a banana works out to be about $.12 a serving.  Milk or soy brings it up to about $.20.  Lipton tea bags cost $.02 a piece.  If you are on the run the oatmeal packets (the flavored ones) run around $.15 a piece.  Eggs can run as low as .09, so a 3 egg omelet with peppers and cheese goes for $.38.   I used to see english muffins go for $1  a pack of 8 on Sundays.

Lunch:

Sandwiches are the cheapest route.  PB+J can be priced at $.25, so doing two plus a banana ($.10) makes a pretty filling lunch for $.60.  Leftovers from dinner are also an option.  Rice cakes and cheese was a favorite.  Bagels, fruit and salads are staples.  Lunch was always my wild card.  Leftovers were the norm.

Dinner:

Rice and beans extravaganza is my favorite meal (still to this day I make it once a week).  Rice can be found in 10lb bags for $5 at a specialty store.  You can soak your own beans, add ground beef (a pound of 85% can be as low as $1.25) cheese and an avocado.  You can make 3 dinners for around $.44 a serving.  A big pot of soup can be ultra cheap (chicken broth, veggies, spices) with bread.  Homemade bread can be time consuming, but can bring costs down to around $.80 a loaf.

Salads are cheap, buy from the bins and bag your own.  Spaghetti can cost out to $1.50 with enough for three meals.   Repeating meals saves money because you can share ingredients.   Also, if you are really hurting to make due, ask your friends to cook for you.  Bring what you can and help clean up.

Snacks:

The bulk section (generally the biggest rip off) can have some great snacks (granola ~$.15 a handful).  Carrots or produce can be cheap, shop the deals.

I'm too cheap for food...

Hacks

Drink tons of water 20-30 min before your meal.  Your brain will think you are full when you start eating, and you won’t feel bad about not having a feast.  Find as much free snacks as you can (during this time I would take a small bag of peanuts from the admissions office every other day).  The smaller your stomach is, the easier this is going to be.  There are tons of ways to get free food by just asking.  Waiters that happen to be friends are a good source.  Dumpster diving (a favorite of my neighbor) is surprisingly clean with most of the good stuff set in a box on top of the garbage.

Coupons:

There are a ton of no frills coupons on items.  I remember buying a flat of spaghetti sauce for $.1o a can.  If you have the time, you can cut your bill in half, if not more.  A friend still sends fan mail to companies in hopes of getting coupons back.  There is room here if you have the time!

Closing:

Please list some of your favorite ultra bootstrappy meals in the comments.  This is a case of a little extremism.  I could have gone cheaper, but instead had a pretty good amount of food, both quality and quantity.

I’m going to go eat something that doesn’t remotely resemble a $.33 meal.


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404 responses to “How To Live (Comfortably) on $36 A Month For Food”

  1. Cheryl L Avatar
    Cheryl L

    are usually good one of those really super long things of hamburger meat and divided into little bitty bags holy bags not even sleepy time and freeze it and you can also use the bag system like this lock bags and sandwich bags to divide of the other very cheap ingredients for meals such as rice and potatoes and things like that instant foods seasonings you can freeze some things some things don’t have to be frozen you could learn to make your own seasoning stretch by mixing them with lesser price ingredients seasoningsbut unfortunately many times when you are trying to live life on a shoestring you will not always have the nutrients that your body needs so you will probably need to also invest ina multi vitamin bottle or something like that.. because if your diet is a lot of carbs and “filler foods” then you it you may be lacking in some ingredients for a healthy body including protein but the good news is that your body doesn’t need all that much protein to thrive but you do need to kind of keep an eye out for iron and B vitamins. I think that taking some regular tea bags and then some more expensive herbal tea can be mixed together and then drink sparingly so that you feel like you have a little luxury out of life now and then .
    just learn to take something that’s less expensive to mix with the more expensive sometimes like these things better who knows good luck and God bless. ????

  2. Judge Judy Avatar
    Judge Judy

    I can’t help but feel like there’s a weeeee bit of judgement coming from your direction…

  3. Jen Avatar
    Jen

    I like cheese with rice. Just regular boiled white rice and then add cheese while it is hot and it melts on. Sounds weird? Try it…its actually really good.

  4. Peter Solomon Avatar
    Peter Solomon

    .15 cents .38 cents for sandwich..where the hell do you live? In Timbuktu?

  5. Nutmeg and Snowball Avatar
    Nutmeg and Snowball

    I’ve read almost all the comments, and have seen that lots of people understand what this article is really saying. Look for the cheapest deals and make them stretch the best that you can. Sure, prices have gone up quite a bit since this was posted, but if you really sit down and do a meal plan and look at the sales you can cut your costs down quite a bit. I have fed a family of 5 on only 198.00 a month. So all you doubters out there, figure that one out. 🙂

  6. Jyoeru Avatar
    Jyoeru

    One chicken = ten meals (give or take). Eight bucks. Ten meals.

  7. TanyaRN Avatar
    TanyaRN

    Wow, awesome article! Thank you for sharing these tips.

  8. Zanny Belle Avatar
    Zanny Belle

    I worked the midnight shift in a deli-bakery during college. I never had to buy food. We were allowed a free meal during our shift and that along with testing our end products was more than enough to fill me for the day. My husband worked at a place where all meals were provided. I don’t think we used the refrigerator or stove in our apartment except on Thanksgiving.

  9. mreha Avatar
    mreha

    Along similar lines, the standard Japanese breakfast is really inexpensive, healthy, and filling. Steamed rice + miso soup. The packets of miso soup are a horrible deal, but if you make it yourself (which is literally as easy as boiling water in a kettle and pouring it over the ingredients in a bowl) from miso paste, nori, and pressed tofu it comes out to around than $0.60 for a large bowl and has lots of protein as well as being probiotic, and the rice will keep you full all morning. I like to add a scoop of kimchi (not Japanese, so not totally authentic, but still good) over the rice to get a bit of veggies (and more probiotics). Good stuff…and the Japanese have the longest life expectancy in the world, so they must be doing something right.

  10. Jonesy Avatar
    Jonesy

    I would love to know how to do this without the dumpster stuff, and without really begging for freebies. I just want to learn how to live an American life with the cheapest bought food.

  11. Frustrated beyond belief Avatar
    Frustrated beyond belief

    I’m poor, I live on disability and I know how hard it can be….I buy what is on sale and don’t bother to check if it’s organic or not….if an apple that is organic costs .75 I’m and one that isn’t costs .25 then I’m buying the one that isn’t….I would never judge those that buy organic but at the same time I really wish they’d stop judging me and others like it for not buying it…I’m 50 now and the organic fad has only been around for a short time compared to how long I’ve been eating….health wise when it comes to eating my doctor says I’m doing great and so are my children and they to eat the none organic foods…maybe if it’s so healthy and good for a person they would think about marketing it cheaper so us poor folks can actually enjoy it

  12. Lynn Avatar
    Lynn

    Some pretty good tips but one thing that pissed me off was when it said “if you are $ poor you might not be time poor.” Excuse me, but in what universe is this true? You think my friend who is a single mom with three kids, working full-time and trying to go to school to get a better job has so much as ten minutes to herself?

  13. Oz Avatar
    Oz

    Under eating on 36 USD a day. Drink water so you don’t feel hungry. Because–you know–it’s not like hunger is a sensation for a reason, right?

    In the end, nothing will beat proper portions that meet your body’s need–be that in calories, vitamins, protein, and the like. Still, you do what you have to do in college.

  14. guest17 Avatar
    guest17

    Sounds like starving to me.

  15. anon Avatar
    anon

    An awesome addition to this is a little honey on the rice. It mixes up flavors if you eat as much rice as I do. Also the mix of salty and just a tad sweet is a great day starter.

  16. Bruce Nguyen Avatar
    Bruce Nguyen

    I have a high metabolism and even though I’m small I eat twice as much as someone double my size (some people, not everyone). I’m not overeating at all and I’m really skinny. I would literally be dead trying to make this crazy “no meat” diet of yours work. …now it’s time to go hunt a dinosaur or something….

  17. anonymous Avatar
    anonymous

    I thought this was a great article to read, I’m planning to move out soon and didn’t know what was reasonable for food, this has been very enlightening haha.

  18. canning granny Avatar
    canning granny

    been doing the cheap eats thing for many years. some of my favorite discoveries include sprouting beans, seeds, etc and adding them to your diet; bone soup; saving everything salvageable for the ongoing stock pot to create FREE food; learning my local forage foods (eating weeds and parts of plants that are not normally used as food widens your options); learning to cook rough fish & learning how to fish using minimal equipment; leaning to preserve any surpluses; getting a cheap used freezer for $50 and ‘take it away’ simply because it was huge and unwieldy (it ran good for another 30 years after I got it) then shopping the food sale cycles and buying in bulk; finding a local canning company store where they sold dented cans of veggies (they inspected them to make sure they were safe) for – get this- $6 for 24 one-pound cans; gardening in teensy places and indoors (sweet potato vines – those old houseplant stand-bys- are absolutely delicious!!!).
    I have even gone to the local parks dept. and asked permission to pick apples and other nuts & fruits from the trees in the park so I had extra food to can for later eating.
    They did not even know that mulberries were edible, let alone delicious! (I do admit to thanking them with some homemade mulberry jam later…). In the spring when gardening types are thinning out their beds and pruning their bushes you can get free plants for your own garden and yard. Pick edible landscaping types to increase food choices.
    Needless to say I have not paid full price for any food items for years, which allows me to save the money to purchase in bulk when the sales come along (roasts in the summer, pork in the fall at slaughtering time, turkeys when they are marked down for thanksgiving, and hams when they are marked down for Christmas. Oh yes – buy as big a turkey as you can fine (better meat to bone ratio) and have the meat man cut it in half or quarters. You can cook only part and freeze the rest if you have a freezer. Otherwise cook 2 turkeys (as long as the oven is on anyway) and bone out & freeze or can up the extra one. Then make turkey bone-soup (out of this world delicious) or stock and can that up to. Canning is easy to learn and I have found working pressure canners at the thrift shops for as low as $10.
    I could go on and on….

  19. Zach Avatar
    Zach

    just make sure that you cook it in glass, not the tuperware, lol. as for there is 10x more BPA distributed into your body after plastic heats up!

  20. mama4 Avatar
    mama4

    i have four kids , we make our own noodles and all sauces ex ranch bbq thous island dressing, we make our own laundry soap, have a garden tomatoes peppers onions carrots spices cucumbers zucchini potatoes , make our own ice cram with canned milk, we use home made cleaners. for a family of six i spend $60 a week flour sugar t.p. milk 3 gals, eggs., meat, razors, borax vinegar and kibble

  21. darknessra Avatar
    darknessra

    since I’m beind in bills… I have $39.71 to my name for the next 23 days… I also already have loads of can foods and frozen foods in the freezer that I’ll use to my advantage and the under $40 I have I’ll only use when I really need it… I plan on making some homemade stuff like chili since I found lots of different cans of tomatoes, chili beans, kidney beans etc… and also found some frozen hamburger meat and also found that I had a taco kit so I could have tacos at some point in the next 3 weeks! I’m look forward to the challenge since it works out that if I did use my money for the next 23 days, it would be about a $1.72 a day! (just under $2 a day)

  22. Shane Avatar
    Shane

    You forgot to mention the plethora of churches that you could visit that gives out free food. Even if you have zero faith, the churches do and God literally commands them to feed the hungry. Over 200 bible scriptures on helping the poor.

  23. Phoebe Prentice Terry Avatar
    Phoebe Prentice Terry

    In England we have alot of Asian supermarkets and when I was a student I used to always buy dried chickpeas I would soak myself for simple curries with potato or broccoli. I also love black eyed peas and have recently moved to France where everyone is crazy for lentils and although they cost 5 euros for a ready made 100g pot the dried ones are a euro for a pound, I probably get about eight servings for me and my partner or 25c for two people. One of my favourite dishes at the moment is green lentils cooked in chicken stock, then you stir in oil, balsalmic vinager, a touch of honey, soy sauce and mustard. Add some fried sausage or diced bacon and serve with a few poached eggs on top. Yum!

  24. Rachel Avatar
    Rachel

    When I was in college I worked on an organic farm 30 min away. Not only did they pay me 8 dollars an hour (I usually only worked 8-16 hours per week) but I could have as much produce as I wanted. I went home with greens, sungold tomatoes, chinese long beans, squashes, peppers, garlic, leeks, pears (oh the heavenly taste of a freshly plucked tree ripe pear), fresh herbs, and chestnuts when they were in season. I also ended up house/farm sitting for the owners which made me more money as well as fresh produce. I was an ag major, but honestly anyone who doesn’t mind a bit of labor and sun in exchange for a weeks worth of produce could do the job.

  25. Michael Avatar
    Michael

    I live almost the same way as you except with a slightly bigger budgets. Most of my buys are deals are usually whatever is in season and on clearance.

    While I prefer organic foods I couldn’t bother with the price differences since you save so much more. Majority of the elderly did not spend most of their time eating organics but have lived to be above eighty.

  26. Marie Avatar
    Marie

    What about the cost of vegetables? I eat bulk oatmeal for breakfast, usually with a banana. My dinner is always lentils and rice, both of which I buy in big bags. I complete my diet with eggs, milk, peanut butter, canned tuna and popcorn (that I buy in bulk and pop myself). I don’t buy meat nor prepared/packaged food because it’s too expensive. So far I shouldn’t ruin myself. However, I want to eat 5 portions of vegetables everyday. I look for vegetables that are on sale, I’m not picky, but I try to get different colors for maximize my nutrients. My grocery bill ends up being almost $400 every month.

  27. John Ogle Avatar
    John Ogle

    I don’t think I ever did it THAT cheap, but I have been able to make it on less than $50 a month and still eat very healthy while noticing people who spend $200+/month are obese and unhealthy. For me, the real difference-maker was lentils.

  28. Janne Avatar
    Janne

    Lentils and rice together form a perfect protein and are super cheap! Just add some veggies and salad, seeds/nuts, and oil, and you could survive on that for ages… Some variation is good, though, and some curry powder won’t hurt the taste of those lentils.

  29. Char Avatar
    Char

    I am really happy to have stumbled upon this article! I happen to be in the same boat that you were, so it will be interesting to see if I can manage this budget for my senior year of college. I could splurge a bit more on groceries during the school year, but I decided I wanted to go on a solo roadtrip across the U.S. from Michigan to California and back to try and see as many National Parks as I can in a month instead!
    My favorite inexpensive dinner is bean and spaghetti soup. My mom’s college roommate introduced it to her many years ago. All you need is a box of spaghetti noodles, a can of pork and beans, water and bit of parmesan cheese (bought in bulk of course). A whole batch ends up being about 3 to 4 dollars and lasts me a week!

  30. faye Avatar
    faye

    I live with my elderly mom and because she needs someone full time I had to learned to be really really cheap. I love going to the store and going early to get great deals on veggies and fruits. They are often 1/3 of the cost and are still in good shape. I clean, cut and get them ready for the freezer. As they freeze break them up so they will be easy to take a little as you need out and don’t need to use too many freezer bags.
    With the cheap veggies and fruit you can also dry them for later. I loved using dried fruit for homemade turnovers and that is a really yummy and cheap thing to
    make. Dried veggies can make great soups in the winter and you can save room in the freezer.
    Walk the store sometimes they have a clearance area. Things can be really cheap there. So keep a look out. Also walk the isles and see what is on sale or you have coupons for. I use a lot of coupons when thing buy one get one. I got 10 containers of free BBQ sauce this weekend and 10 jars of pickles for 50 cents a jar. Rice and beans go on sale a lot and I get what I can and put them in canning jars to store ( I get them at yard sales for .25 each if not .10)
    Meats also go on sale so look out and when you get it break it up in meal size and freeze them.
    One things I do is plant a garden and freeze, dry and can all that I can during the summer. I also have brothers who bring things from their garden. I also make some of the tea I make from plants in my garden. I save money on dried and fresh herbs from my garden too. It sounds like a big garden, but it isn’t. I just work hard in it. It’s what you have to do when you have very little.
    One thing to remember if you are feeding yourself and your family all the work you put into it is out of love, with God’s help everything will workout.

  31. faye Avatar
    faye

    I forgot to say I shop for veggies and fruit on Friday mornings. They you have to look for the deals. You can always ask friends and family to share their unused coupons.
    I think the best advise I have is to package the supply of food in the freezer where you can get what you need and not waste. I try not to waste anything so I do a lot of freezing, drying and canning.
    One more thing never use a coupon just because you have it, I find that If you plan and really use the coupons that save you the most you can add food and supplies to your cabinet and freezer for hardly any money.
    Also all extra cooked food I have is frozen or sent for lunch or supper for someone else.
    I am very cheap and it helps. Even if I had a ton of money I would do things the same.
    Working in a garden is not easy and if you save a seed supply it can be really cheap to start a garden each year. I use my seeds to make small plants before I plant. Working a garden and being with the family I love makes being cheap worth while saving money on food or anything else. It gives me a chance to give my mom the love and support that she gave me over the years.
    Saving money on food is doable as long as you work hard to make sure you and your family have what they need and don’t have to do without . I even help fill up several peoples cabinets and freezers with free food from gardening. Remember always share if you have more than you need. You never know when that little extra help will really be needed and might be that persons only food for the day.

  32. Cosmic Lightning Avatar
    Cosmic Lightning

    Hiya, I liked reading this article and is up most impressive. My dad said so as well. My diet is see food I eat. But when I don’t have the money, it’s my parents food. Any ideas how I can break my habit as I’m leaving the house and want to get better stuff when I start making money…
    I also want to do 10 dollar per week budget. But I’m a picky eater unfortunately as a lot of the green food tastes like water. I like celery, broccoli, carrots though.
    I’m also in the oil field where a gallon of milk is 8 dollars and 12oz soda can is a dollar. I don’t usually eat breakfast and lunch and dinner but once in awhile I change the routine just to break my minds fattening “I want to eat” type deal.

    Lastly, Mini-fridge budget as well.

  33. Shanna Avatar
    Shanna

    I’m actually allergic to many foods that aren’t organic…and have discover many others are as well. I have no choice on things like apples and grapes; I have to buy organic. Clearly there’s something in it that my body doesn’t accept.

  34. Sophie Avatar
    Sophie

    Yeah my housemate is allergic to some pesticides, just a bit of bad luck really. You can be allergic to almost anything.

  35. bw Avatar
    bw

    make homemade pasta – very easy – just flour, water…some recipes call for just 1 egg. You don’t need a pasta machine(manual or electric) but it helps.

  36. Dev Vallencourt Avatar
    Dev Vallencourt

    Yes, but I want to live to be 85 and the pesticides on non-organic will kill you much earlier than that. Besides, I can’t afford cancer drugs.

  37. GodSAveAmerica Avatar
    GodSAveAmerica

    36 dollars a month? When was that? 1980?

  38. Lisa Langley Avatar
    Lisa Langley

    The cheapest 85% here is right at $4

  39. xpdAnonymous Avatar
    xpdAnonymous

    Find The.Luciferian.Doctrine.pdf
    book1

  40. disqus_BdOLC1pcNm Avatar
    disqus_BdOLC1pcNm

    A very old post but I love it! My Korean college friends used make a very simple dish of rice mixed with soy sauce and sesame oil (and if they were feeling fancy, a fried egg on top). It was simple, easy, and cheap. My (first world) problem is that I am spoiled with extremely high quality rice and it is hard to go back to the cheap, long grain rice Americans are used to eating when I know how much more fragrant and delicious medium grain first harvest rice is!! It’s a habit I need to break if I want to save money.

  41. dodieellen Avatar
    dodieellen

    Tortilla chips with lettuce, tomato, onion, cheese and chili on top….You can make 4 or 5 meals out of this…….I find cheap chili and add pinto beans…….Very healthy and cheap….

  42. legalflowers Avatar
    legalflowers

    Bannock: literally flour, water, salt. Better than bread IMO. Versitile and an excellent backpacking meal.

  43. Hitgrim Avatar
    Hitgrim

    I remember being super broke and throwing a can of drained tuna in some black beans with paprika.. it was way better than I thought it’d be. Total cost was stll 79 cents for the tuna and 69 cents for the beans…
    I thought I ate cheap… wow.. 33 cents a meal?! I usually shoot for $2-3 per feast.

  44. Hitgrim Avatar
    Hitgrim

    you mean a bartender friend who steals from his employer to give you free drinks?

  45. lauraglu Avatar

    Wow, six years later. Did I say that? I had a friend, who ended up my roommate, who owned a bar.

  46. Hitgrim Avatar
    Hitgrim

    lol. no sweat. I think 6 years ago I was having heavy drinks poured for me at a few places. 😀

    How’s your last 6 years been?

  47. Wade Avatar
    Wade

    From Tupperware’s website: As of March 2010, items sold by Tupperware US & CA are BPA free.

  48. Sarina Amira McBride Avatar
    Sarina Amira McBride

    Eating and eating healthy is only for the rich people… us poor, disabled people get processed non food garbage… its worse for those of us poor and disabled who also need to eat gluten free and can’t afford it. No worries, you will stop feeling hunger soon enough and prob get an eating disorder like I did… and nobody will care because you can’t afford to pay for “treatment” so… 🙁

  49. Melissa Gerber Avatar
    Melissa Gerber

    NotNot ridiiculous at all, if one knows anything about dandelions, which you obviously don’t.
    The root, greens and flower are edible and medicinal.
    The flowers of creeping charlie can be used in salads, and the greens are good for winter health conditions.

  50. Melissa Gerber Avatar
    Melissa Gerber

    No, that would be suet. Lard is pig fat.

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