Beat inflation: How healthy eating can save you money

Food prices are still rising due to uncontrollable factors. But this should not stop you from achieving your lifestyle goals of eating healthier foods and staying more active. You can still eat healthy even if you are on a tight budget. Being more aware of your food consumption behavior can motivate you to spend money wisely, choosing only the foods that can greatly contribute to your health and well-being.

Analyze your current food expenses

How much money do you usually spend on sweet snacks and drinks from coffee shops in a day? How often do you eat out or order restaurant foods online? How many high-calorie ultra-processed foods do you buy from the supermarket on a weekly basis?

Just imagine how much money you can save if you can just lessen or eliminate the foods that your body doesn’t need. Extra expenses that you usually spend on junk foods, alcohol, and sweet drinks can be allotted instead to healthier foods, fitness needs (online fitness subscriptions, personal trainer, fitness equipment, and gym membership), vitamins and supplements, and health check-ups.

Stick to a monthly food budget (from grocery shopping to eating out),  making sure that you mainly focus on buying healthy and satisfying foods that can help achieve your goals of having a strong and disease-free body. Your total budget will depend on your income, food preference, lifestyle, weight and fitness goals (weight loss, maintenance to gain). Healthy eating doesn’t have to be expensive. You just need to be wise and systematic when it comes to food planning.

 Make efforts to prepare home-cooked meals

Prepare your simple meals at home to save money. Give time for food planning, grocery shopping (which can now be easily done online with a minimal delivery fee), and cooking.

Set your health goals and create your budget so you can manage your healthy eating well. I eat home cooked-meals six days a week and eat out once a week. For the past 2.5 years, on average, I spend Php 300 a day on three meals and two light snacks, consisting of vegetables, quinoa, brown rice, oats, Shirataki rice, fruits, seafood, some red meat, nut, seed, eggs, yogurt, cheese, nut milk, herbs, spices, and other important cooking ingredients.

Restaurant foods are expensive and usually contain more ingredients that can cause bloating and weight gain. Try to limit restaurant foods (food delivery or eating out) to once or twice a week and see how much money and calories you can save.

Spend money on high-quality foods

Email the author at mitchfelipe@gmail.com or follow/message her on Instagram @mitchfelipemendoza

 

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