In about five minutes
How to make a weekly shopping list in 5 minutes.
Four small steps from "what is for tea" to a weekly shopping list that actually fits your UK family. No spreadsheets, no faff.
Tell us about your household and budget
Pop in how many adults and children you are feeding, your weekly budget, and any dietary needs like vegetarian, gluten-free or halal. Tell us if anyone hates mushrooms, and how brave you fancy being with new recipes. It takes about a minute.
You can change any of this later from the settings if your week looks different. Got a £35 budget this week instead of £60? Just say so.
We plan your week
Our clever software builds a seven-day plan that fits your family, your budget and your tastes. You will see what is for tea each night, with sensible British portions and UK measurements. No cups, no Fahrenheit, no ounces.
You pick a cooking style too: balanced, healthy, comfort food or Mediterranean. That steers the kind of meals you see week to week, so it always feels like cooking for your family.
Alongside the plan, we write your shopping list. It is grouped by aisle, so fruit and veg sit together, frozen things sit together, and you are not zig-zagging across the supermarket. Each item shows a price guide based on what shoppers have reported in your part of the country at Asda, Aldi, Lidl, Tesco, Morrisons, Sainsbury's, Iceland and Waitrose.
Not keen on Tuesday's tea? Tap swap and we will pick something else and update your list. Found a meal the kids love? Hit save and we will bring it back in future plans.
Tick items off as you shop
Open this week on your phone when you get to the shop. Tap each item as it goes in the trolley and watch the "left to spend" number tick down. It is the bit our users say feels most like magic, especially when the weekly bill comes in under budget.
Share the list with whoever else does the shop. Both of you can tick off as you go, so nobody buys the milk twice.
Back home, the recipes are right there for the week. Cook them as they are, or batch-cook a couple on Sunday to save time on busy nights.
Then make it your own
After your first week the app starts to feel like yours. Add staples you always have at home to your pantry and we skip them off the list. Add things you always need (milk, bread, toilet roll) to always need and they appear at the top of every list automatically.
Snap a photo of your till receipt when you get home. We read every line and the prices on next week's plan get more accurate -- at your shop, in your area, not somebody else's.
Two or three weeks in, the plan stops feeling generic and starts feeling like the app actually knows your house.
your turn