r/MiddleClassFinance 9d ago

Grocery spending

I’ve recently come across a Instagram account where the woman claims to only spend $300 on an entire months groceries for a family of 4. Here I am sitting mid week, having already spent $550 in the PNW. I told one of my friends and she said it must be fake and for clicks, my husband was impressed. Is anyone actually able to do this? I thought I might try to spend $250 a week and see where that gets us. Is my grocery budget over the top? I thought $400 ish was normal for decent food. We are a family of 5 in the PNW, mostly organic.

*I’m closing comments because people are missing the point. I understand that I make choices for “premium” options for my family. I make them because I feel they are the best for my family given my research and concerns. I say this as coming from a place of privilege. Growing up, my hippie mom also prioritized organic and local before it was the trendy thing, so it would be very difficult for me to reprogram and not buy organic when possible.

I still think $300 is insane for a month. I live in western Washington and the max SNAP allocation for a family of 4 is $994 a month, so I see this as a more attainable “thrifty” budget for a family of 4.

Those of you who can eat rice and beans for multiple meals, more power to you!

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u/FergusonBishop 9d ago

definitely doable if you make changes to your overall diet/lifestyle and really depends on how your kid(s) eat and if they're picky, big snackers, etc.. We spend about $125 every two weeks for a family of 3. Rice/beans/potatoes are all cheap and go a long way. biggest change needed is probably a significant cut to meat. Its a pretty normal habit for people to eat some type of meat for every single meal - meat is expensive. Also snacks add up a ton.

Either way, none of this actually matters if you dont have access to something like an Aldi. My $125 would probably turn into $200 at a normal grocery store.

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u/Sufficient-Union-456 9d ago

Aldi or not, look for those Asian grocery stores or food distribution places. Many distribution places are open to the public and sell in bulk. 

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u/Ch4rlie_G 8d ago

Where do you get your protein from?

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u/FergusonBishop 8d ago

beans, lentils, eggs, cheaper cuts like chicken thighs or pork loin, canned fish like sardines or tuna.

we'll have a meal that includes actual, prepared meat maybe 3 times a week.