Sometimes even the easiest recipe isn’t easy enough. That’s where the best meal delivery services come in. Yes, even people who are obsessed with food and cooking as much as we are as editors at Bon Appetit like cooking from meal kits. We turn to meal kits to get some external recipe inspiration and to gain some tips for working smarter rather than harder in our home kitchens. When we say external inspiration, we mean curated grocery deliveries that come with recipes, preportioned ingredients, or even fully premade meals, if you’re into that. To help you narrow down your meal kit options—you have many—we tried some of the most popular services around. Here’s what we learned: While all of them have their pros and cons, there’s a meal delivery company for every kind of cook (and non-cook). So whether you’re looking for a subscription service that meets specific dietary needs, prioritizes high-quality ingredients and truly fresh meals, or offers a good selection of budget-friendly healthy meals, you’ll surely find your match below. Go directly to our top picks to order your weekly meals, or skip down to learn more about how our editors tested these kits.
Skip straight to shopping meal kits:
- The Best Plant-Based Meal Kit: Shop Purple Carrot ($14/serving)
- The Best Sustainable Meal Kit: Shop Green Chef ($13/serving)
- The Best Option for People Who Love to Cook: Shop Marley Spoon ($21–$26/serving)
- The Best Virtual Grocery Store: Shop Hungryroot ($8/serving)
- The Best for Family-Friendly 15-Minute Meals: Shop Home Chef ($10/serving)
- The Best Affordable Meal Kit: Shop Dinnerly ($5/serving)
The Best Plant-Based Meal Kit: Purple Carrot
I would summarize Purple Carrot as a plant-based meal kit for vegans and people who just want to eat more vegan meals (wannabe-gans?), who like to cook but prefer to skip picking out recipes and grocery shopping. Admittedly, the kits didn’t save me much time in the kitchen—there are plenty of vegetables to peel and chop, and in my experience, multiple pots and pans (and even a blender) to clean after the cooking is finished. But I like that I could skip the trip to the store and the endless scroll through recipes, and some of the dishes are intriguing, with ingredients I wouldn’t ever think to combine (crisped gnocchi with furikake and a miso-tomato sauce? Color me skeptical-curious). The flavors are bold and bright. I made a Thai tempeh khao soi that took about an hour but tasted like it took four—and I even learned a technique or two (like sprinkling tempeh with sugar for the last few minutes of cooking so that the crumbles caramelize) that I’ll use when I’m riffing in the kitchen without the friendly guidance of a meal kit. Don’t want to cook at all? Purple Carrot also sells fully prepared meals. —Sarah Jampel, contributor
Pros: Extremely flavorful vegan meals (including some fully prepared meal options)
Cons: Meals take time to prepare, and you’ll make a lot of dishes
The Best Family-Friendly Meal Kit: Marley Spoon
Meet Marley Spoon, a.k.a. the easiest way to get Martha Stewart’s most beloved recipes onto your dinner table. This meal kit collaboration between the American lifestyle icon and the popular Berlin-based meal company offers a plethora of classic, family-friendly meals. With more than 100 dishes to choose from every week, Marley Spoon has one of the biggest menus I’ve seen from a traditional meal kit service. I enjoyed the red chili beef enchiladas, in which all the flavors from the tomatoes, bell peppers, and chorizo chili spice melded together deliciously. I was also a fan of the pastrami-spiced burger with homemade thousand island. I liked that all of the dishes came with preportioned ingredients and premade spice blends, but I should note that there’s still a lot of prepping you’ll have to do—whether that’s chopping zucchini, snipping herbs, cutting chicken breast into 1" cubes, or making a tomatoey caramelized onion sauce from scratch. These recipes take a little more time and effort, and they also require you to have some of your own pantry ingredients on deck. In many cases, you’ll need to have your own butter, garlic, and red wine vinegar to make the meals. These recipes aren’t a pour-and-stir situation, instead they actually require a good amount of attention. That said, Marley Spoon is a great option for people who want a meal kit that still allows them to cook, as opposed to one that does all of the cooking done for them. And for the days when you’re short on time or don’t want to clean a bunch of dishes, they offer some faster, “tray bake” meals (like this alfredo chicken and gnocchi) that don’t require as much prep. —Tiffany Hopkins, commerce writer
Pros: Recipes from the all-star Martha Stewart archive, variety,
Cons: Lots of prep, comparatively time-consuming recipes
The Best Meal Kit for Sustainability: Green Chef
If you’re interested in sustainability and cooking with organic ingredients, then you’ll appreciate Green Chef—the first certified organic meal kit. It offers a weekly menu of 30 meals to choose from and caters to a variety of diets, including Mediterranean, keto, vegan, and gluten-free. But what I like most about this meal delivery service is the variety of flavors within the menus. With options like salmon with creamy chimichurri, creamy mushroom and meatball soup, and Italian roasted carrots with barley and ricotta, I found it easy to stay satisfied without getting bored. One of the best meals I tried was the enchilada-spiced ground turkey bowl. Not only was it tasty—smoky and savory with a pleasant crunch thanks to toasted pepitas—but also the premade enchilada sauce and ready-to-use paprika-cumin blend helped keep the prep and cook time down to 25 minutes total. That said, I should note that while all of Green Chef’s recipes are simple and easy to follow, most of them require using multiple pots and pans (at times, too many for my liking). This isn’t the meal delivery service for one-pot recipes, but it is your best bet if you want high-quality, fresh ingredients from local farmers and eco-friendly packaging that’s made from recyclable, reusable, or compostable materials. —T.H.
Pros: Flavor variety, high-quality ingredients, easy-to-cook recipes
Cons: You’ll use a lot of dishes cooking these meals
The Best Virtual Grocery Store: Hungryroot
Hungryroot is essentially a virtual grocery store with hundreds of recipes built around the food on its digital shelves. If you’re interested in getting help with your meal planning, this meal delivery service is a great place to start. You get a weekly set of recipes based on special diets and dietary preferences (vegan, vegetarian, pescatarian, diabetes-friendly, etc.), and they’re usually very simple, nutritious, and easy to assemble: grain bowls, salads, burgers, plates featuring meat and/or veggies. You can also order a selection of stand-alone groceries, including organic produce and an array of sweet and savory “healthy” snacks you’d likely find in a hip media company’s pantry, like dried mango jerky, organic Medjool dates, and almond chickpea cookie dough. After using Hungryroot for half a year, I eventually grew bored of the recipes, which were basically permutations of a core set of foods and ingredients—the same sesame ginger sauce applied to different styles of bowls and salads, for instance. But I became deeply attached to several grocery items, such as the prepackaged garlicky herb chickpea duo, a dish I loved mixing into quinoa or farro for a quick and refreshing lunch. Hungryroot is best if you’re in discovery mode and want to poke around grocery aisles for hidden gems without ever leaving your apartment. —Karen Yuan, culture editor
Pros: Offers stand-alone grocery delivery in addition to kits (and has lots of fun healthy packaged snack options), meal planning services that cater to dietary preferences, easy recipes.
Cons: Recipes can get boring after a while, since they tend to pull from the same core ingredient set repeatedly.
The Best for 15-Minute Meals: Home Chef
Home Chef has a nice variety of meals, and if you’ve got dietary restrictions, the customization opportunities here are many. There are oven-ready meals that come with their own tin and grill-ready meals that arrive in a foil bag. There are the more traditional preportioned 30-minute meal kits, prepped 15-minute meal kits, and the Fast & Fresh option, a fully prepared meal you just have to stick in the oven or microwave. I am not a mom to anyone besides two cats who eat out of cans, but if I were a parent to human children, I imagine these options would feel like blessings. For those with more time to spare, the “Culinary Collection” offers some more advanced recipes, like blackened mahi-mahi with lemon dill cream, sautéed asparagus, and Parmesan potato pressé—a dish that turned out to be a bit too advanced for yours truly because I don’t own a muffin tin. (But did the challenge of making do without make me a better home chef? Perhaps it did, reader. Perhaps it did.) They also have snack, dessert, and breakfast options like maple brown sugar oatmeal bites from GoOats, a product I will be buying again because who doesn’t want to eat oatmeal that tastes like doughnut holes? While none of the meals blew me away in terms of flavor, and the packaging was a bit gratuitous, if you’re looking for family-friendly meals to feed picky eaters, you will find a lot to appreciate here. —Hilary Cadigan, contributor
Pros: Choose between advanced, 30-minute, 15-minute, or fully prepared meals; includes snack, breakfast, and dessert options.
Cons: Flavor profiles can be uninspiring, some gratuitous packaging
If you’re looking for both ease and affordability, then Dinnerly could be another meal kit delivery service for you. It proclaims it’s “The Affordable Meal Delivery Service,” and at $5 a meal it does come in cheaper than most competitors. When trying it out for myself, I liked that there were many dinner options to choose from (28 a week, to be exact) and that every meal came with an easy-to-follow recipe card with only five steps. I went with the pastrami-crusted steak, orange chicken, and Thai red curry stir-fry—all good, all fuss-free. The flavors were on point but mellow, so to take them up a notch, I added more seasoning. For the orange chicken I doubled the orange juice and soy sauce and also added honey and chile flakes. You don’t have to stick to the recipes exactly (though you certainly can), but I think they offer a good base to play around with flavors you like. —Rachel Gurjar, associate food editor
While many food delivery services emphasize 30-minute home-cooked meals, Gobble advertises entrées that take half that amount of time to prepare from start to finish. And they make do on that 15-minute promise. With meals like Tuscan pork sugo with peppers and aloo matar with marble potatoes, I’d say this is the best meal kit service if you want hearty dishes with bigger portions. (In my experience with other meal kit services, portions tend to be small, so you really get your money’s worth here.) My favorite meal was the chicken burger with sriracha aioli and yuca fries. The recipe was easy to follow; the sauces, dressings, and spice blends were premade; and the burger was juicy with lots of flavor thanks to the Cajun seasoning, spicy aioli, and honey-Dijon slaw.
The weekly menu includes roughly 15 easy-to-make dinners, but what I especially appreciated were all the optional add-ons. Unlike other delivery services I’ve tested, the various à la carte salads, soups, and flatbreads made it easy to plan a meal with multiple courses. I recommend getting one of the soups to have on hand for a quick lunch—the chicken tortilla soup is a wonderful choice. They even have the option to add on breakfasts (like Belgium waffles and bacon, egg, and cheese sandwiches) and desserts (like premade chocolate chip cookie dough and chocolate lava cake). While Gobble does offer meals for more specific diets—including low-calorie, dairy-free, plant-based, and vegan—that’s not the primary focus. This is the place to go when you’re just looking for tasty, satisfying meals that pretty much anyone would enjoy. —T.H.
CookUnity
Of all the premade meal delivery services I’ve tried, CookUnity is my favorite. All of the recipes are crafted by award-winning chefs (many of whom we’ve featured here at BA, like Taïm’s Einat Admony, Teranga’s Pierre Thiam and Mokbar’s Esther Choi). Unlike its competitors, CookUnity doesn’t primarily focus on special diets, weight loss, or a “health” aspect, which I appreciate—sometimes, I just want a delicious meal and I’m not worried about if that meal is low-carb, high-protein, or if it has an ideal serving of fiber.
That said, CookUnity does offer a huge variety of options. It has one of the most robust weekly menus I’ve seen, and you can definitely find meals that’ll fit any kind of dietary preference, like vegetarian, dairy-free, gluten-free, and so on. I’ve found most of the meals I’ve tried to be hearty, flavorful, and well-seasoned, especially compared to other premade meal kits on the market. Some favorites? The grilled chicken yassa with jollof rice and plantains, the short rib with herb mashed potatoes, and the ginger salmon cakes with miso-sriracha sauce. For the best results, you’ll want to reheat the meals in the oven, but you can also reheat them in the microwave if you’re short on time. If you’re interested in a solid meal delivery service that does all of the meal prep and cooking for you, CookUnity is worth it. Just play around and try a bunch of meal options to learn what you like best. —T.H.
Hello Fresh
I’m a big podcast listener, so I’ve been hearing about Hello Fresh—and its many, many coupon codes—for a long time. It has a lot going for it: There are plenty of options to choose from, the shipping is quick, and the meals are super easy to cook. I sometimes eat meat (the cuts of beef and pork I received were tasty, fresh, and high-quality) but was happy to see plenty of vegetarian and plant-based options to choose from, like black bean and corn tacos and bulgur grain bowls. My only caveat is that there was a lot of sameness to many of the meals I tried—repeat ingredients or the same seasonings used across disparate international cuisines. Still, portions were large, leftovers were plentiful, and I really enjoyed the convenience of knowing dinner was taken care of. Stick to more classic options—I loved the beef tenderloin with truffle mash—and you won’t be disappointed. —Alma Avalle, digital operations associate.
Factor
Even the best home cooks can get a little tired of making dinner post-holiday cooking season. If you want to eat meals that are nutrient-dense but dead easy to prepare, Factor is probably the way to go. Factor is a little like a fancier, dietitian-approved TV dinner. It’s a prepared-meal delivery service that takes cooking completely out of the equation. Here are the steps: Take the meal tray out of its paper sleeve, poke holes in its plastic lid to let air out, and pop the tray in the microwave for two minutes. I’ve tried a variety of meat dishes, such as Creamy Tomato Pork Chop and Garlic Herb Salmon, but the real stunner was the Indian-Style Vegetable Rice, a richly seasoned vegetarian meal. The carnivorous dishes became a little repetitive, to be frank: Many of them consist of a small slab of meat sitting on a bed of some purée, accompanied by a couple dollops of different greens. But it's precooked by “real chefs,” as Factor’s website puts it, and a prepackaged meal with generous portion sizes, so I can’t really complain. The meals are filling for a single person, the ingredients are whole and simple, and the nutritional information per serving is broken down on the label of each dish (and if you’re concerned about following a particular set of dietary restrictions or are carb-conscious, there are paleo, low-carb, and keto-friendly meal options too). All in all, a solid choice when you want to eat a cooked meal while watching a half-hour sitcom but don’t want to order takeout or do any of the cooking yourself. —K.Y.
EveryPlate
EveryPlate is all about affordability, and that’s a really good selling point for a meal kit, especially when some plans end up costing you about the same as a mid-range restaurant meal. Here a single-serving shakes out to about $5, with added discounts for students. Not bad for a ponzu chili steak bowl with charred snap peas and ginger rice. Meals marked as “premium” will run you an extra $3.99 a serving, but these typically include pricier proteins like scallops. Dishes aren’t revelatory but are tasty and relatively simple to put together, and the ones marked “30 minutes or less” made good on their promise. I appreciated the ease with which a surprisingly hearty chicken sausage and kale soup came together, though a little packet marked “chicken stock concentrate” was certainly pulling a lot of weight. I also appreciated the relatively low level of packaging with this kit, and the fact that there were plenty of comfort foods and vegetarian options. That said, healthy eating is not necessarily the name of this game: a dish of scampi-style scallop linguine included 4 Tbsp. butter for two portions and no vegetables save for a single shallot. But maybe that’s what I get for picking the scampi. —H.C.
Territory
Territory Foods, another brand that solely provides premade meals, began in 2011 as a meal delivery service targeted at the cult of Paleo adherents. Now it’s expanded, thanks to a $22 million investment, into a more diet-agnostic but still Paleo-minded platform. The name “Territory” presumably references the fact that the company works with local restaurants and independent chefs in each of its markets—a cool feature. Because of that structure, menu options vary widely across locations and change frequently, though everything is always free of gluten, dairy, and refined sugars. If that sounds limiting, it really isn’t: In the three weeks that I sampled Territory, I didn’t notice those omissions until I read the fine print. Choose your delivery schedule (once or twice weekly) and number of meals (at least four per week). Each meal is priced individually, and you can skip weeks without penalty as often as you need to. I like how many filtering options there are when choosing dishes: Customers can limit by diet (Paleo, of course, but also vegan, vegetarian, keto, Whole30, low-fat, and more) or even specific macro amounts. Of all the different meals, miso pesto ramen with shrimp was my mainstay—the shrimp were large and tender, and the brown rice-and-millet ramen was delicious both hot and straight from the fridge. I also found myself returning to the Springbone chicken and rice, which came close to the halal cart I used to frequent near my office. The best part about all of them? The preparation doesn’t require any cooking, all you have to do is reheat them in the oven or microwave. Meals arrive in an insulated cardboard box. Except for the included ice packs, all the packaging is recyclable; the Paleolithic people would be proud. —Amanda Shapiro, contributor
Cumin Club
Whether you’re looking for an introduction to Indian regional cuisine or an easy way to put dishes you grew up with on the table, Cumin Club offers low-effort meals while delivering big on flavor. The company’s three cofounders, all of whom hail from the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu, were looking for easy ways to get a taste of home. What I love about this meal kit service is that it’s basically an “add water, heat, and serve” type of situation. It’s great for days that I want a full meal but don’t have the time to make it from scratch. All the dishes are vegetarian, and I often use them as a base for my dinners or add a quick-cooking veggie—like frozen peas and carrots to the service’s upma—to call it a day. (You could also add meat.) My favorite meal was the dal makhani. It’s made from a short list of simple ingredients, has all the creamy richness you'd expect from the dish, and it takes seven minutes to prepare as opposed to overnight in the slow cooker. I ate this with a dollop of yogurt, chopped cilantro, and premade rotis. I also appreciate that Cumin Club offers dishes from distinct places of origin, like Kolkata and Chennai—both regions that represent my cultural identity but that often get overlooked when it comes to Indian food in the US. All the meals, which do not shy away from spice, come out to just under $5 a pop, which makes them relatively affordable even though it’s a subscription-based service. —Urmila Ramakrishnan, associate director of social media.
Sunbasket
Of all the meal kit delivery services I’ve tried, Sunbasket is perhaps the most premium. They predominantly focus on health and sustainability, striving to use 100% organic fresh produce, responsibly raised meats, and wild-caught or sustainably raised seafood. Here, you’ll find an abundance of delicious meals—like Korean rice bowls with sticky-sweet BBQ chicken skewers and kimchi, Burmese chickpea and tomato soup with lemongrass, and seared tuna and black rice with roasted sweet potato and nori—that extend beyond the more basic, “greatest hits” recipes you’ll find at other meal kit services. All of the dishes I tried were flavorful and well-seasoned, and I enjoyed the unmatched diversity of ingredients. Looking through the menus, I would routinely come across a dish or ingredient I’d never cooked before—like these hominy fritters, which are very much speaking to me. That’s why I’d recommend this meal kit service to anyone who could use a little inspiration in the kitchen. Not to mention, all of the meals are quick and easy. I appreciated that the sauces and dressings were premade (and actually tasted good) and that the protein choices for the meals were customizable. For example, when ordering the BBQ meatloaf with garlicky greens and potatoes, you can select either ground beef, ground chicken, or ground turkey. For other meals, you can even choose your preferred cut of steak or chicken. They also offer weekly fully prepared, microwave-ready meals (I can vouch for the turkey chili mac with cheddar). So, if you’re looking for culinary creativity and lots of flavor, Sunbasket might be the best meal kit for you. —T.H.
Sakara Life
BA’s commerce editor Carina Finn called her time testing Sakara Life’s healthy prepared meals her “week of wellness-girlie cosplay.” At $420 for 5 days worth of meals (breakfast, lunch, and dinner), this is one of the more outrageously expensive meal kits on the market. And the brand is definitely positioning itself in the luxury health space: It has been endorsed by a whole host of wellness influencers, and also, crucially, by Gwyneth Paltrow—so you get what you’re dealing with here.
Despite her skepticism, Carina really enjoyed these meals. The breakfast options were almost entirely sweet, so she warns in her review that if you tend to be an eggs and avocado kind of breakfast person, you might be disappointed with the offerings. They also can have painfully twee names, like the “Yoga Bunny” breakfast she tried, which consisted of a gluten-free carrot muffin with carrot coconut butter and an extremely small apple (perhaps perfect for an actually bunny?). Once she got past the name, the muffin was nutty and delicious, with a fluffy texture you don’t often get with gluten-free baked goods—a lot of meals also come with gluten-free breads that were impressive in both flavor and texture. Carina also tried protein waffles and a sweet potato and coconut yogurt parfait that she loved as part of the breakfast offerings.
Lunches from Sakara are, predictably, rainbow plates of vegetables and leafy greens, but Carina was pleasantly surprised by how filling they were thanks to lots of added seeds, beans, and whole grains. Dinners included the most variety, and a few of the offerings didn’t even seem dairy-free or suited to dietary restrictions—Carina double-checked the ingredients on an eggplant parm dish that was so rich and creamy, it was hard to believe there was no dairy involved.
Overall, if you’re eating with particular dietary restrictions or an overall focus on healthy foods with zero effort, Sakara is a genuinely delicious option, even if it comes at an outrageous price. Carina was inspired to recreate many of the meals on her own, so if you want to splurge on your own week of wellness-girlie/Gwyneth Paltrow cosplay, you can use it as a jumping off point to inspire your own healthy cooking down the line.
How We Tested Meal Kits
At any given moment, BA editors are probably testing a meal kit—we keep this process going perpetually to ensure that we test the ever-changing meal options the kits offer and to monitor quality and consistency over time. For over a year, we’ve integrated meals from all of the companies above into our daily cooking repertoires. Editors select meals from the company, ensuring that they choose a wide variety of meal options that will really demonstrate everything this particular meal kit has to offer. We test and retest the kits, dividing them up among staff members, so that we get a variety of perspectives. We also periodically test meal kits that are new to the market, or ones we haven’t tested yet. Here are the factors we consider when we’re testing:
We unpack the meal kits carefully, paying attention to the way the ingredients arrive. We want packaging that ensures freshness, but we also keep an eye out for waste—to avoid things like single-use plastics as much as possible. We look at the individual ingredients offered in each meal kit, and assess their quality comparative to ingredients at our local grocery stores, and, of course, in comparison to their competitors.
Many of the editors who test our meal kits work on developing and cross-testing recipes, so they are experts at assessing whether the instructions are clear, the steps are efficient, and whether the recipe offers the best possible cooking results. But we also deliberately test these kits in our home kitchens, as part of our normal cooking routines, so we can gain genuine insight into how they perform when we’re quickly cobbling dinner together after a busy day of work, or trying to feed our families. After all, this is the reason many of us seek meal kits out in the first place.
This one’s obvious! We take tasting notes while we’re testing, and we consider this the most important metric upon which we judge the best meal kits.
Different meal kits are designed to meet different needs. Some offer packaged ready-made meals that are as easy as fast food, but offer more nutritional value. Some involve just as much chopping and sautéing and cleaning up afterward as a regular recipe. The first might be great for a busy family looking to fill a few weeknight dinners with cook-free options, while the second might be perfect for someone who genuinely loves to cook and is looking for new recipes and to learn new techniques. We do judge these meal kits against one another, but we also assess them from
There’s no way around it: Meal kits are expensive. But you pay this premium for the convenience of having the meals delivered to your door, access to original recipes, and, in some cases to have ready-made meals. We compared the price per serving on meal kits and tried to find the best quality for the price, or to ensure that the factors named above offered enough of a benefit to outweigh the increased cost.