Ask the internet how many meals to prep and you'll get "all 21" — three a day, seven days, every container in the house full by Sunday night. That advice is why most people quit meal prep by week three: half the food is still in the fridge on Friday, going to waste. The honest answer for most UK adults is 10 to 15 meals a week — the lunches and dinners that are otherwise the expensive, decision-fatigued meals you outsource to meal deals and takeaways. Breakfast usually doesn't need prepping; it's already cheap and habitual. WRAP, the UK's food-waste authority, puts household food waste in the millions of tonnes a year, and over-prepping is a direct contributor. The right number is the one you'll actually finish before it spoils. Here's how to land on yours, costed from Aldi, Lidl and Tesco, and how to scale it without binning food.
Most UK adults should prep 10–15 meals per week — typically five lunches and five to ten dinners — rather than all 21. Cooked meals keep three to four days refrigerated, so prepping more than four days ahead means freezing or wasting food. Prepping 10–15 meals from Aldi, Lidl or Tesco staples costs roughly £15–£25 and cuts both spend and food waste.
What the Right Number Actually Depends On
The right number of meals to prep per week in the UK depends on three things — how many meals you'd otherwise buy, your fridge-versus-freezer space, and how many days of repetition you'll tolerate — and for most adults that lands at 10–15.
There is no single answer, but there is a sensible range. The goal is to prep the meals that cost you most in money and willpower, not to fill every container you own.
Match prep to the meals you outsource
The meals worth prepping are the ones you'd otherwise pay a premium for — work lunches and weeknight dinners. Breakfast is usually already cheap and routine, so prepping it adds effort for little saving. Targeting 10 lunches-and-dinners replaces the £4 meal deal and the £8 takeaway, where the budget actually leaks. Work backwards from your real week: count how many lunches you currently buy out and how many evenings end in a takeaway or a ready meal, and that total is your prep number. For most people that's the five working lunches plus three or four chaotic weeknights — somewhere in the 8–14 range. Prepping the weekend, when you've usually got time to cook fresh, is effort spent where there's nothing to save.
It helps to put a pound figure on each meal you currently outsource. A bought lunch at £4 and a midweek takeaway at £8 are the two most expensive, lowest-effort decisions in your week, and they recur. Prep those and you are converting your most costly meals into roughly £1.50–£2 portions; prep the weekend lunch you'd happily make fresh anyway and you've saved nothing while adding a container to wash. The discipline is to aim your prep at the expensive, willpower-draining slots and leave the cheap, relaxed ones alone. That targeting is why two people can both "meal prep" yet one saves £25 a week and the other saves almost nothing — the number matters less than which meals it covers.
The four-day fridge ceiling
NHS food storage guidance advises eating cooked meals within three to four days, which caps how much you can prep without freezing. Prep five days of fridge meals and the last portions are past their best — so anything beyond four days should go straight to the freezer. This single rule is why "prep all 21" advice falls apart: a meal cooked on Sunday for Friday lunch has been in the fridge five days, past the safe window. The way around it isn't to skip prepping, it's to split your batch — keep four days in the fridge and freeze the rest, which resets the clock and lets you cook a fortnight's worth in one go if you want.
Why More Isn't Better: The Waste Trap
Prepping all 21 weekly meals is the most common reason people abandon meal prep, because cooked food spoils within four days and the surplus gets binned — wasting both money and the time spent cooking it.
Over-prepping feels productive but quietly burns money. The food you throw away is money you already spent, plus the energy and effort of cooking it.
What over-prepping costs
WRAP, the UK's waste and resources authority, reports UK households waste millions of tonnes of edible food a year, much of it through buying or cooking more than gets eaten. Every binned portion is a double loss: the ingredient cost and the labour. Over-prepping feels thrifty in the moment — look at all this food I've made — but if two of seven portions get scraped into the bin, the real cost per eaten meal has gone up, not down. The maths of meal prep only works when the denominator is meals you finish. A modest batch you clear beats an ambitious one you don't, every single week.
The repetition limit nobody mentions
Even when food keeps safely, most people tire of identical meals after three or four days. The British Nutrition Foundation recommends variety across the week, which is also the practical reason to prep two dishes of moderate quantity rather than one giant batch you stop wanting by Wednesday. Boredom is a real cost, not a soft one: the day you can't face the fourth identical chicken-and-rice box is the day you buy a meal deal instead, and the surplus you cooked goes in the bin. So the repetition ceiling and the waste trap are the same problem seen from two angles — cook more of one thing than you can stand to eat, and you lose either way. Two moderate dishes that alternate keep each one feeling fresh through to Friday, which is exactly why the 10–15 range built from two recipes outlasts a single giant batch of one.
How to Prep 10–15 Meals From One Shop
Prepping 10–15 meals takes one shop and about 90 minutes of cooking — two protein dishes and two carb bases produce a week of varied lunches and dinners from Aldi, Lidl or Tesco staples.
The number only works if the system is simple enough to repeat weekly. Two dishes, cooked in parallel, hit the 10–15 range without a marathon in the kitchen.
The two-dish formula
Cook one traybake protein (chicken thighs, frozen, around £3 per kg at Aldi) and one pot dish (a lentil bolognese or chickpea curry), plus a big pan of rice and pasta. That's roughly 12 portions split across lunches and dinners. Two dishes is the magic number: enough variety that you don't tire of either by midweek, few enough that one 90-minute session covers it. Mix and match the components — chicken with rice one day, the same chicken with the bolognese sauce another — and twelve portions feel like four or five different meals rather than two on repeat.
Costing the week
Two protein dishes, two carb bases and frozen veg come to roughly £15–£25 from Aldi, Lidl or Tesco. Money Saving Expert's cheap supermarket food guide notes own-brand and tinned staples drive that figure down, keeping each prepped meal well under £2. A worked example: 1kg frozen chicken thighs (£3), 500g 5% mince (£3), four tins of lentils (£1.80), 1kg rice (£1.20), 500g pasta (75p), 1kg frozen mixed veg (£1.39) and a couple of tins of tomatoes (70p) lands around £12 and yields twelve-plus portions — comfortably under £1 a meal before you've touched the store cupboard. Push to the £25 end only if you swap in more premium protein like salmon or steak. For most people the £15 shop is the realistic figure, and because the tinned and frozen items roll into the following week, the true cost of week two is lower again. That is the whole financial case for landing in the 10–15 range rather than over-buying: you spend once, waste nothing, and beat the meal-deal-plus-takeaway week by £20 or more.
Scaling Up or Down Without Wasting Food
To prep more than 12 meals a week safely, freeze everything beyond day four; to prep fewer, halve the batch — both adjustments keep food out of the bin while matching your real appetite.
The number isn't fixed for life. It flexes with your week, your freezer and how much you genuinely eat.
Using the freezer to extend the range
Curries, bolognese and soups freeze for up to three months per NHS guidance, so you can cook a larger batch, eat four days' worth fresh, and bank the rest. This is how to prep 15-plus meals without anything spoiling — the surplus simply waits in the freezer. The freezer effectively removes the four-day ceiling, turning meal prep from a weekly chore into something you can front-load every fortnight. Label each portion with the dish and the date so the freezer doesn't become a mystery drawer, and rotate the oldest to the front so nothing gets forgotten and binned — which would put you right back in the waste trap you were avoiding.
Scaling down for smaller households
Solo or two-person households often do best at 8–10 prepped meals plus a couple of fresh cook-nights, which avoids the late-week repetition fatigue and keeps variety high. Halving recipes and freezing single portions stops the over-catering that wastes food in smaller homes.
Your Weekly Meal-Prep Quantity Plan
A practical UK meal-prep target is 5 lunches plus 5–7 dinners — about 10–12 meals — costing £15–£25 and covering the working week with one freezer-banked dish in reserve.
Pinning down a concrete weekly number is what turns the theory into a habit you keep.
The default week
Five chicken-and-rice lunch boxes, five lentil-bolognese or curry dinners, and one extra dish frozen for the day plans change. That's 11 meals from one 90-minute session, refrigerating what you'll eat in four days and freezing the rest. It covers every working lunch and most weeknight dinners while leaving the weekend free to cook fresh or eat out without guilt. Crucially it sits inside the four-day fridge window for the fresh portions and uses the freezer for anything beyond — so nothing is at risk of spoiling and nothing gets binned.
Building your own number
Track which prepped meals you actually finish for two weeks, then set your number to that. Kira Mei's Nutrition Blueprint gives you the macro framework, meal prep system, and UK supermarket strategy — one purchase, no subscription, no meal plan to follow forever. It's not a diet plan, it's a textbook, available at kiramei.co.uk for £49.99.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many meals should I prep per week?
Most UK adults should prep 10–15 meals a week — typically five lunches and five to ten dinners — rather than all 21. Cooked meals keep three to four days in the fridge per NHS guidance, so prepping more than four days ahead means freezing or risking waste. Breakfast usually doesn't need prepping as it's already cheap and routine. Prepping the lunches and dinners you'd otherwise buy is where the real money and time savings sit.
Is it safe to prep a week of meals in advance?
Yes, with the right storage. Cooked meals keep three to four days refrigerated and up to three months frozen, per NHS food storage guidance. Refrigerate portions within two hours of cooking and label them with the date. For a full week, eat the first four days from the fridge and freeze the rest, reheating each portion only once. Rice dishes in particular should be cooled quickly and reheated thoroughly to stay safe.
Why shouldn't I prep all 21 meals a week?
Because cooked food spoils within four days, so the back end of a 21-meal batch gets binned — wasting both the ingredient cost and the cooking time. WRAP reports UK households waste millions of tonnes of edible food yearly, and over-prepping is a direct contributor. Most people also tire of identical meals after three or four days. Prepping 10–15 you'll actually finish saves more money than cooking 21 you won't.
How much does prepping 10–15 meals cost in the UK?
Roughly £15–£25 from Aldi, Lidl or Tesco, depending on the protein. Two protein dishes, two carb bases and frozen veg cover 10–12 portions, working out under £2 a meal. Money Saving Expert highlights own-brand and tinned staples as the cheapest route to that figure. Compared with five £4 meal deals and a couple of £8 takeaways, prepping the same meals saves well over £20 a week.
Should I prep breakfast too?
Usually not. Breakfast is already cheap and habitual for most UK adults — eggs, porridge and yoghurt cost pennies and need little planning — so prepping it adds effort for small saving. The meals worth prepping are the expensive, decision-heavy ones: work lunches and weeknight dinners. If your mornings are rushed, jarring a few overnight oats is enough; there's rarely a case for cooking a full week of breakfasts in advance.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical, nutritional, or professional fitness advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to your diet or exercise routine.
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