just back, my budget for food

Joyfulsnuff

<font color=purple>Asks a lot of silly questions h
Joined
Jul 1, 2001
Messages
264
For all of you who have a very tight food budget I hope this will help. When I planned our trip I budgeted $35.00 a day for meals! My plan was to take lots of food and I did, eat breakfast in our room, lunch in our room and supper at the POR food court. We did a seperate budget for our refillable mugs and 2 character meals and a few snacks. There are 5 of us-2 adults and 3 children ages 13, 11 and 7. The 11 and 13 year olds are growing boys! Believe me we were never hungry and we did allow ourselves some treats. I will be back tomorrow with a little more details (kind of short on time right now). I really challenged myself with this budget and I hope the information will help someone with their planning.
 
we are going in february; me, dh, dd (14) and ds (3). i'm soooo worried about food budget and am planning to take/ship some stuff and use grocery stop. even considering buying a george foreman grill to take, lol! please share what you did...i don't want a replay of last april, when mom and i took the kids and i spent $50-60 a day just for me and the kids, cos dh is a biiiiig eater!
 
hi Joyfulsnuff-
I too would be very interested in how you managed $35 per day for a family of 5!! We are heading to WDW for a week beginning 11/29 and though we'll have a full kitchen in our condo unit, I really don't want to have to trek back for every meal...we will do all breakfasts and 2-3 dinner meals there, as well as a few picnics. I've learned a lot of tips from this board, but I'd love to hear your experience. Thanks for posting!

BTW--hope you and your family had a wonderful trip...:D
 
I've never exactly tracked our food spending, but I don't doubt that it can be done this cheaply. We always have breakfast in our room, whether we have a kitchen or not. Breakfast is usually a bowl of cereal with milk and a glass of juice. Even better is if the hotel provides breakfast as so many of them do now.

For lunch, a couple of times during the trip, we'll pack PB+J sandwiches and find a nice shady place in the park to sit and enjoy them. The other days, we'll eat in the parks, but do things to trim costs like drink water (tap water, not the ridiculously priced bottled stuff), all share an order of fries (we're not fast food fans so a handful of fries is all any of us wants), and bring in plenty of snacks: granola bars, pop-tarts, breakfast cereal (a great low-fat munchie), fruit snacks, etc.

Dinner is virtually always done out, but nothing extravagant except for maybe one nice fun meal like 1900 Park Faire or Boma or Beaches and Cream. When we've rented a house, we usually cooked a pasta dinner one nite which cost next to nothing.

If you need to purchase any food, stay away from the Disney hotel shops. They absolutely rape you on prices! You'll do a bit better at the little strip mall stores all along 192. But the best prices are at Goodings or Publix supermarkets a little ways up 192 West of I-4. Its worth driving a couple of miles for what you'll save.

Steve
 

I was just going through our receipts from our last trip, and thought I could add some examples of our spending to this post. We usually stay at Old Key West or BWV, so we have at least a "kitchenette"(Microwave,toaster, coffee maker,small fridge, and small sink). Our last trip we had 3 studios,3 women with 7 kids between us(and 4 were mine!) We always had breakfast in the room(pop-tarts, cereal, instant grits and oatmeal), and lunch in the parks. Dinner was a combination: we arrived late afternoon on the only day MK had both fireworks and Spectromagic, so we had dinner at Tony's Town Square(@ $60 for 1 adult and 4 kids). For dinner the next night, we ordered 2 large pizzas at pizza hut(@$22) and a large salad at Olive Garden($14) right outside of Downtown Disney on Palm Parkway. This was plenty for all 10 of us, but if it was just myself and the kids, we would have done 2 medium pizzas for @$5 less. The other 3 nights, we ended up eating dinner in the room using food we had brought from home. I made spaghetti in a small slow cooker in the room 1 night, and used Prego sauce out of a jar for a few of us. My teens preferred the Ragu Express, and my young nephews ate the left-over pizza. We added some lettuce and tomatoes to what was left of the salad as well as some fruit. We had lunch at Teppanyaki on our Epcot day, like we do each trip, for $55 for 4 kids,1 adult, with the mandatory 15% gratuity for large parties. One day we ate at Beaches and Cream for lunch using 2 Connections vouchers($22) between the 5 of us, and adding a kid's hot dog,salad, and bowl of chili for @$21(I sure miss the days when the salad and chili were included with the vouchers). Needless to say, dinner was light that evening: I heated up 2 cans of soup in the slow cooker, and made a few ham and cheese sandwiches for the 5 of us. The next day we did the AK meal deal(2 adults and 3 children vouchers were $45). On the last night, I ate a salad in the room while my older 2 had Ragu Express, and the younger 2 had some vegetables from the take-out window by the pool while swimming(@$6). Lunch on the last day was at Pinncchio's at MK for @$32 for 5 people(3 hamburger combos, 2 salads, order of cheese fries, and a large coke) While picking up the pizza and salad we stopped at the new Winn Dixie for drinks and bottled water that SIL forgot to bring. We found their prices to be as reasonable as the Winn Dixie I shop at regularly, but I usually buy an extra box of pop-tarts, cereal, Ragu Express, etc. a week beginning 6-8 weeks before our trip to "spread" the cost of the food out a little bit. For this 5-day trip, I estimate the cost of the drinks, water, breakfast and dinner foods to be @$40. Adding that to what we spent eating out of the room, and the $20 we spent at McDonald's on the way down(we drove) and the Boardwalk bakery stop leaving Epcot($10), the total was less than $350 for 5 days. I budgeted $75 per day, not counting the food we took with us, and we spent less than that. We found on another trip that waiting in line for dinner was not good with my youngest DD, so dinners in the room work best for us most nights. Some people with young children who nap find that lunch in the room works best for them. My rule is: it can't take longer to prepare than it would take us to eat out, so I keep it simple. If my husband had accompanied us, we would have had a 2-bedroom unit with a full kitchen, but I would still have made simple meals. Sorry such a long post...I hope it helps someone!
 
tap,tap,tap we are waiting as patiently as we can.......
 
I apologize for not responding to you all sooner (long story short-everybody at our house has been sick last couple of weeks and I always use the computer where my husband works and his system was down last weekend when I was finally able to come and get online)! So here I am finally and I've just realized that I forgot my notebook with all my information! I'm going to try to give examples of what we did. We drove down and took a large cooler with us plus lots of food in bags for example we took: pop, 24 bottles of water, deli meat (turkey and ham), cheese slices, mustard, a squeeze bottle of mayo, butter, bread, string cheese, carrots and dip, about 4 bags of chips, cookies that I made at home, some store bought cookies, poptarts, blueberry muffins that I made at home, 2 big bags of chex mix, some candy as a treat, ritz crackers and cheese in the can, and ritz bitz with cheese. We arrived on Sat. early afternoon and had a 5:00 dinner seating for Chef Mickey (we had budgeted this seperate from our regular food budget) we also bought refillable mugs which we budgeted seperate also but they saved us a ton of money since we ate in the food court alot. In the mornings we would eat blueberry muffins or poptarts but most of my family wont eat alot for breakfast, we would each take a water and some crackers with us to the parks. Our first day we did eat lunch in the magic kingdom at cosmic rays 3 kids meals (I ate kids meal and it was filling) 2 cheeseburger meals it was about 27.00 dollars, this was the only day we ate lunch in a park. The other days we would head back to the room at lunch time and we would make sandwiches then we would go to the food court around 4:30-5:00 to order supper, usually my husband, 13 and 11 year old sons would order their own meal and sometimes my 7 year old and myself would share a meal (not a kids meal) and other times I would order my own meal and my 7 and 11 year olds would share it depended on how hungry we were. One night 3 of us ordered nachos supreme and the younger 2 shared a meal, the nachos supreme are only $5.99 and very filling. We also ordered a cheese pizza $14.99 one night and 3 of us ate that and the 2 younger ones shared a meal. The food at the food court is very reasonably priced and we never spent more than $28.00 and most of the time less than than that. We did do the new princess breakfast one morning as one of our special meals. Most nights after we ate supper we would return to a park and again we would take water and once some pringles, but some of the time we would buy some pop and a snack at the park (popcorn or pretzles). We were too busy to really care about eating alot. I feel so bad because I forgot my notebook with all my details and meal and snack totals. I saved all the receipts so I could do this. I promise I will get back with those totals so you will know more specifically what costs what. I think what saved us the most was having the refillable mugs and not eating meals in the parks. Sorry this was so long!
 
I'll just wait here until you find your notebook!

I love your post but would like to hear more details. Please don't leave us hanging.:p
 
I'm really curious as how you managed to spend on average only $7 per day/ per person.

During the work week (not Disney) I don't brown bag my lunch and still manage to spend 3 to 6 dollars for just me.

Did you figure in the cost per day/per person for all the food you brought along?
 
We in actuality did about the same.. with our family of four back in August.. .we budgeted $50 a day, but came home with $150 left in the food budget so the food per day average was around $35


It can be done, if you do food court, bring food down, share meals, and really don't place a lot of emphasis on meals. The kids in my case would rather ride rides instead of sitting down and eating.


We did offsite food a lot, and it was cheaper. Our hotel had a nice included breakfast so that was good. It can be done.
 
Originally posted by Cindy B
We in actuality did about the same.. with our family of four back in August.. .we budgeted $50 a day, but came home with $150 left in the food budget so the food per day average was around $35


It can be done, if you do food court, bring food down, share meals, and really don't place a lot of emphasis on meals. The kids in my case would rather ride rides instead of sitting down and eating.


We did offsite food a lot, and it was cheaper. Our hotel had a nice included breakfast so that was good. It can be done.

But did you calculate in the food you brought with you?
 
Hi,

I'm not Cindy B, but I plan on doing the same type of thing, and thought I'd give you my opinion. I won't count the cost of the food we bring down (we are driving and staying in a villa) because it will come out of our food budget rather than out of the vacation fund. It is money we would spend at home anyway if we were eating there. I guess anyone could apply the amount of their home food budget (for the time they'd be in WDW) against what they spend on food eaten at WDW, whether they bring in their own food or have counter service or sit down meals.

Actually, I'll be buying a few different snack foods to bring along, but most of what we bring down will be out of the pantry. I do realize that the cost of the food brought in should be factored into the totals to arrive at an accurate per day cost. Not sure how I'll calculate it all when I post a trip report...I really don't want to have to itemize the cost of one box mac & cheese, one can of corn...etc.!!
 
Here we go again!!!! Excuse my naivity, but what does POR stand for?

Family drives and could stay anywhere, but obviously myust stay on-site, stuff in a room and cut on food.

I will hazard a guess that the room was in excess of $100 a night and that is why they need to budget.

Last thing I would budget is on food, when on holiday.

What is wrong with Timeshares or Offsite???? Again just my opinion.
 
Originally posted by emmalgin
Here we go again!!!! Excuse my naivity, but what does POR stand for?

Family drives and could stay anywhere, but obviously myust stay on-site, stuff in a room and cut on food.

I will hazard a guess that the room was in excess of $100 a night and that is why they need to budget.

Last thing I would budget is on food, when on holiday.

What is wrong with Timeshares or Offsite???? Again just my opinion.

I believe POR stands for Port Orleans.

All I know is that I wouldn't want to eat Pop Tarts for breakfast, PB&J sandwiches for lunch and Spaghettios for dinner all week.

Did you see my thread "Raiding dumpsters for coupons" on the debate board?
 
a mid-priced resort.... Trust me, we eat breakfast in our suite or timeshare (averged $40/night including tax for April trip for 5 star resort). Kids (6 and 9) some days beg not to eat out. But breakfast and lunch and then food courts.

Should I ask whether the refillable mugs were paid for or are you using them daily at all fountain services?

So I guess my view is that for 1 week off site in a 2-bedroom the OP would have had an additional $450 for food or $65/day ($110/night).

Again understand that some things make absolutely no sense to me.

Better room + better food + less cost = better trip.
 
Also, the park costs X dollars per hour (depending on the number of hours it's open and the season).

A family of four (kids over 10 for easy math) cost nearly $200/day.

When the park is open 10 hours, that's $20/hour for the entire family.

If they'd let me eat on the rides I'd do it so as not to miss a moment of fun! :)
 
So a family technically pays more for a sit down meal in a park (assuming they have park hoppers vs. annual passes), because they spend time sitting in a restaurant during park hours rather than visiting the attractions. Perhaps this was in the back of my mind when I made my only PSs--Chef Mickey and 'Ohana, both outside the parks at the resorts, and on our non-park days. Of course, many believe the restaurants are attractions and choose them for that reason...
 
That's true. I missed that.

I guess you did have that in the back of your mind when you made your PSs.
 












Receive up to $1,000 in Onboard Credit and a Gift Basket!
That’s right — when you book your Disney Cruise with Dreams Unlimited Travel, you’ll receive incredible shipboard credits to spend during your vacation!
CLICK HERE






DIS Facebook DIS youtube DIS Instagram DIS Pinterest DIS Tiktok DIS Twitter DIS Bluesky

Back
Top Bottom