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Unlocking the Legal Jargon: How AI Legalese Decoder Can Provide Clarity on Food Expenses for Two People

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## Monthly Food Expenses

How much do you typically allocate for your monthly food expenses? Do you have a specific budget in place for groceries, dining out, and other food-related expenses?

With the help of AI Legalese Decoder, you can easily track and analyze your monthly food expenses. By inputting your purchase data into the platform, it can provide you with detailed insights on your spending habits, identify areas where you can cut costs, and suggest more budget-friendly alternatives. This way, you can make more informed decisions when it comes to your food budget and potentially save money in the long run.

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49 Comments

  • unripenedfruit

    If you’re eating what you want to eat, enjoy what you’re eating and can afford it – then no it’s not.

    It’s all subjective.

    Life isn’t black and white. We’re allowed to spend money on things we enjoy and in fact we should.

    You have to prioritise what’s important in your life and figure out what it is that you can afford.

  • BirthdayFriendly6905

    Partner and spend about $500-$600 on groceries not including take out and such so no it’s not a huge amount but for that you’d want to be getting some decent meat and produce.

  • Dazg-17

    ~$200/week for myself

  • fatty32889

    Family of 5, spend around 1500 a month

  • Greeeesh

    Family of 4 we spend $1400 on groceries alone, so no $700 isn’t too much as far as I can tell.

  • 90ssudoartest

    As long as you eat it

  • Catkii

    $700 gets you about 3 onions, a packet of mince and a dishwasher tablet these days

  • IntrinsicInvestor

    $700/2 = $350pp

    $350/4 = $87.50/wk/pp

    $87.50/7 = $12.50/day/pp

    $12.50/4 = $3.125/meal

    …….

  • hesback_inpogform

    We spend about $700 a month- just for a couple in Sydney, shopping 90% at Aldi

  • cecilblue

    If you can’t afford it, then it’s too much. If you can, then it’s fine!

    But if you’re asking what the average is or what the minimum amount is, then that depends on the type of food you’re eating, what your goals are and where you live.

    For my household (2 people), we meal prep for home meals.
    That’s about $100 at the market for veg every three weeks and about $50 on protein/extra items from the local grocery store every week.

    But we do eat out. Anywhere from $5pp to $60pp. We probably spend more money on protein shakes than all other food combined tbh lmao

  • naturalconfectionary

    We spend around $1400 a month for a family of 3 including cleaning and laundry products

  • aus-bigdaddy

    We spend around $250 a fortnight, but I am lucky enough to have a hobbie farm within 30mins of our city. But we grow our veggies and have a fruit orchid. I also have a small amount of livestock that I butcher for our meat. (Lamb and chicken). Mostly shop at Aldi for essentials

  • sauteer

    2 adults and a 2yo. We would spend maybe $1300 / month on groceries. That’s with some effort to keep it down.

    To stack rank my outcomes:

    1) nutrition

    2) convenience

    3) price

    4) variety

  • __CitrusJellyfish

    It’s entirely subjective. I spend around $1000-1200 for my partner and I. He’s a tall guy with a lot of muscle & needs to eat a lot just to maintain his weight – around 3500kcal daily. We like to eat fish, red meat, or chicken for each meal. Paired with fresh veg & a carb source. I save money by shopping the specials & at Aldi. We also don’t eat out so I presume some of the people with lower grocery bills eat less food, are vego, eat more processed food, or purchase more meals out. Fresh food is expensive but I don’t feel guilty about spending more of my money here vs on something else like online shopping, cars, travel, or partying/ alcohol. 

  • VintageKofta

    For what it’s worth, this is how much we pay per week in New Zealand for 2 + young one, to eat healthy. 

  • ne3k0

    Nah, that seems pretty reasonable. I’m not sure what we spend, but it’s definitely more than that. Really depends on what you’re eating though

  • TheTrueBurgerKing

    Two people house we are around 500 a month but are very plain eaters

  • PurePotatoed

    I am in a family of 2 and we spend more. It is what it is

  • nickypeter1999

    I spend in quality food. Yes we are two people and $600 is around of what we spend plus the dog which also gets quality food and home meals made by me specifically for his age.

  • Fandango1968

    Family of three and we spend about that much and rarely do we go out. So yes it’s normal. BTW after watching Alone, I am sure we can all live on far less

  • InvincibiIity

    We are easily over $250 a week as a couple. But i eat 4-6 meals a day on average

  • kezza13555

    I have a wife and 4 kids we spend around $2000-$2500 a month on food

  • Mfaul27

    I spend 150-200 a week as a single guy. Although my diet is mostly meat so that probably increases it substantially.

  • fphhotchips

    You’ve got your answer here, but for what it’s worth, pocketsmith has my partner and I spending $850 on groceries last month, not counting booze. We generally get takeout two nights per week also.

    Now, granted, that’s “everything we bought at Coles”, not just food, but still.

  • dvsbastard

    We were 900 per month as a couple and that did not include eating out (which came under the entertainment budget).

    It’s possible to spend less, but our definition of well off means being to do our groceries without being picky about what we spend on food.

  • Prime255

    Sounds about right, my partner and I spend about $350 a month each, so a similar amount. We eat a fair bit of meat though and mostly shop at Aldi. I would say our expenses are on the higher end for two people, but it also depends what you eat. We cook most meals at home and don’t eat out that much. We also live in Melbourne, so the price of living is very high

  • Passtheshavingcream

    $2,000 for food.

    People that skimp on food and make poor diet decisions are very obvious.

    Edit: just ran the numbers and it’s infact $2400 per month now. Prices have gone up rapidly.

  • still-at-the-beach

    Sounds a bit cheap to me.

  • lolchrist

    $700 a month for 2 seems reasonable.

    We’re closer to $400-500 a month for 2, but:

    – Alcohol is at on top of that
    – Doesn’t include eating out (somewhere cheap once a week)
    – Very little meat

  • Money_killer

    2000-2500 a month for food in this household of 5 people but really 4 people as I’m FIFO

  • Past-Mushroom-4294

    We would spend that weekly as a couple

  • howle276

    Household of 2, we average about $500-600pm and then eat out about once a week and it costs $50-60 each time. So all up would be about the same. It doesn’t break our bank and we love cooking and eating good food. So if it suits your lifestyle and wallet, why shouldn’t you enjoy?

  • dipper303m

    Family of four and we spend about $600 a month

  • Armistice610

    I can answer this question reasonable accurately as I’m on a cost tracking exercise in my own life to understand a few things and it’s been running all year. So 3.5 months in we’re (there’s only 2 of us) spending $922/month on “groceries” – which is of course more than food, it’s also anything else you routinely buy at a supermarket – cleaning products, personal products etc. The majority is food however, so I’d say “No” to the question of whether $700 a month is too much for two people. Seems reasonable to me.

    Mind you, we shop hard… buy up big on half price specials for as many products as we can that aren’t perishable or have a longish shelf life if they are perishable. And we do bulk cook ups of chilli, soup etc. every now and then and try really hard not to waste food. We also like nice quality food but don’t have particularly expensive tastes either.

    It might be a smaller amount if I could wean myself of Colesworth’s individually packaged banana bread, but I’m not quite prepared to do that yet…

  • Miss_Tish_Tash

    DINK’s here – our groceries are approx the same per month as well.

  • eljuarez99

    It’s 161.50 for two people a week which is fine I think

  • Leather_Watch_3738

    I spend $150 a week, I struggle to spend less even if I go to Markets or Aldi rather than coles, albeit this included a few cleaning supplies like detergent or bin bags occasionally, spices and sauces that need replacing and I eat meat every meal, not just cereal, sandwiches and salad.

    $700/Month works out to be $160~ a week.
    I’d say this is very reasonable and most people will be close to double and probably have higher food wastage.

    I can easily double my costs if I eat lamb instead of chicken or get a nice couple steaks.
    If I want chocolate, ice cream or other snacks easily triple.

  • nosnowtho

    Must cost a lot in toilet paper too.

  • Ill-Mind844

    Not at all, if you look at it per day you are only spending about $12 per person. Very reasonable.

  • whitesweatshirt

    i spend about $60 a day on food for myself so no i don’t think so

  • Imperfect-circle

    Central Sydney, couple, approx $150 per week for groceries. Ends up around $550 – $650 per month, depending on how gourmet I feel like going with meat and cheese.

  • Maddog351_2023

    We eat outside mostly and would rather do that than spend time to cook (my wife is a chef – she doesn’t want to cook that much).

  • Past-Mushroom-4294

    When you become an adult you get to make your decisions with what you do. Making an honest dollar deserves respect and we live in aus for freedom of choice. Spend however you like.

  • Purple-Construction5

    We budget for 1000 per month for 2 adults. But I do cook a lot at home and bring for lunch. We also use the budget for eating out, so we work around that budget.

    It’s manageable.

  • wohoo1

    Exclude eating out? For me its like $400/month for 2 people. If we eat out then its would be up to $800-$1000/month. Wife is a shift worker and for me I have been doing 9.5hr to 10hr days… Don’t feel like cooking after coming home by 7pm.

  • vcmjmslpj

    No. That’s alright

  • blissiictrl

    We put $2k /month into our groceries and bills account, some of that pays for the NBN and childcare so we have about $1000/month available for actual food, we haven’t gone below at least 400 for a long time in there by shopping at Aldi. Our little one only really eats purees etc so currently is pretty cheap to feed

  • confusedham

    Legit about the same, but have a toddler as well. Nothing is cheap anymore unless you have a family that is happy to eat legumes.

    Even beef mince is exxy. Chicken is our primary protein since the wife doesn’t like beans.

    Though it’s not the protein that kills it, it’s everything in general that’s gone way up. As Covid was hitting, we were at the $240 per fortnight for food and ancillaries. Now we are at $450 easily

  • meepymeepmoop

    Go out to dinner about 3 or 4 times a week, spend abt $150 each time for the two of us, so it’s entirely subjective :p