The Real Cost of Convenience Foods
Buying guide5 min readUpdated June 23, 2026
What you’re really paying for
Pre-grated cheese, pre-cut vegetables, individually portioned snacks and ready-prepared meals all bundle labour into the price. You’re paying someone to do the chopping, grating, portioning or cooking. That can be a fair trade for your time — but the markup is real, and on items where the “work” is a thirty-second job, the premium can be steep relative to the effort saved.
Where the premium is steepest
The gap tends to be widest where preparation is trivial: a block of cheese versus the pre-grated bag, a head of lettuce versus the washed salad kit, loose oats versus single-serve sachets. Here you’re paying a large premium for very little saved effort. Where preparation is genuinely involved or time-critical, the premium is easier to justify.
When convenience is worth it
This isn’t an argument against ever buying convenience food — time and energy have value, and on a busy night a ready option can prevent a more expensive takeaway. The point is to choose it consciously. Pay the premium where it genuinely buys back meaningful time or prevents waste; skip it where the effort saved is negligible.
How to see the premium
Compare the unit price of the convenience version against the from-scratch equivalent and the gap is obvious. Folding the from-scratch staples into a basket you compare across stores claws back even more, since those base ingredients are exactly the staples where store-to-store gaps are widest.
| Item | Effort saved | Premium |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-grated cheese | Low | High |
| Washed salad kit | Low | High |
| Pre-cut stir-fry veg | Medium | Medium |
| Ready-cooked meal | High | High but may beat takeaway |
Convenience premium vs effort saved
Frequently asked questions
- Why do convenience foods cost more?
- The price includes the labour of preparing them for you — cutting, grating, portioning or cooking — on top of the ingredients.
- Is buying convenience food ever worth it?
- Yes, when it buys back meaningful time or prevents a more expensive option like takeaway. The aim is to choose it deliberately.
- How do I spot the premium?
- Compare the unit price of the convenience version to the from-scratch equivalent; the difference is the convenience premium.