The meal delivery industry has exploded. You've got meal kits, prepared meals, hybrid services, grocery delivery, diet-specific services, and local options. Choosing wrong means wasted money, disappointing food, and a canceled subscription by week three.

This guide gives you the five-step framework we use to match subscribers to services. Follow it and you'll know exactly what to order — and what to avoid — before you spend a dollar.

Step 1: Meal Kit or Prepared Meals?

This is the biggest decision, and most people skip it. The two categories are fundamentally different products:

🧑‍🍳 Meal Kits

  • Pre-portioned raw ingredients + recipe cards
  • You cook (30–60 minutes)
  • $8–$13/meal typical price
  • Examples: HelloFresh, Blue Apron, Green Chef
  • Great for learning to cook, couples who cook together
Ideal for: people who enjoy cooking and want better ingredient quality without grocery shopping

⚡ Prepared Meal Delivery

  • Fully cooked, ready to reheat (2–5 min)
  • You just heat and eat
  • $11–$16/meal typical price
  • Examples: CookUnity, Factor, Trifecta
  • Great for busy people, those with dietary restrictions
Ideal for: people who want home-quality food without any cooking time investment

Quick litmus test: On a typical weeknight when you're tired, would you actually cook a 45-minute recipe? If yes, meal kits. If no (be honest), prepared meal delivery will serve you far better and you won't end up ordering DoorDash instead.

Step 2: Set Your Realistic Budget

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The real cost calculation

Most services advertise a per-meal price that requires ordering a specific number of meals. Here's what you'll actually spend at various household sizes:

Service Type Price/Meal Min Weekly Cost (Solo) Min Weekly Cost (Couple)
CookUnity Prepared $13–$16 ~$52 (4 meals) ~$78 (6 meals)
Factor Prepared $11–$15 ~$66 (6 meals) ~$77 (7 meals)
HelloFresh Meal Kit $9–$13 ~$27 (2 meals×2srv) ~$54 (3 meals×2srv)
Trifecta Prepared $14–$18 ~$98 (7 meals) ~$196 (14 meals)
Hungryroot Hybrid $9–$12 ~$65 (box min) ~$99 (larger box)

Rule of thumb: Budget $50–$70/week for a single person on prepared meals, or $25–$45 on meal kits. For two people, add 60–80%. These are "supplemental dinner" budgets — most subscribers don't replace every meal, just 3–5 dinners per week.

Step 3: Match to Your Dietary Needs

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Diet compatibility varies wildly across services

Some services excel at specific dietary patterns. Choosing the wrong one for your needs leads to frustration when 80% of the menu doesn't apply to you.

If you have multiple dietary restrictions: CookUnity's stacked filter system (e.g., Keto + Dairy-Free + Gluten-Free simultaneously) offers the most flexibility. With 300+ options, even restrictive eaters typically find 20–40 compatible meals per week.

Step 4: Size for Your Household

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Minimum orders and portion sizing

Each service structures its plans differently. Here's how to match household size to the right service:

Solo (1 person)

Prepared meal delivery wins here — meal kits often require 2-serving minimums, leaving you with identical leftovers. CookUnity's 4-meal plan is purpose-built for singles.

Couples (2 people)

The sweet spot for most services. Prepared delivery lets each partner choose different meals (no recipe compromise). See our best meal delivery for couples guide for specifics.

Families (3–4+ people)

Meal kits scale better and cost less per person for families. HelloFresh's family plan serves 4 for $8–$10/meal. Prepared delivery gets expensive at family scale unless you're using it for lunch/dinner supplementation.

Specific needs

Step 5: Check the Flexibility Fine Print

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The pause/skip/cancel experience matters more than you think

Real life means travel, busy weeks, and weeks when you want to cook. Services differ hugely on how easy they make it to skip a week or cancel.

What to watch for: Services that require phone calls to cancel (rare in 2026, but it happens). Services with auto-skip deadlines that are easy to miss. If you travel frequently, prioritize services with generous skip windows and delivery address flexibility.

Quick Recommendation Matrix

Your Situation Best Pick Runner-Up
Busy professional, no cooking time CookUnity Factor
Couple who enjoys cooking together HelloFresh Green Chef
Serious athlete / macro tracking Trifecta CookUnity (high-protein filter)
Strict keto diet CookUnity Trifecta keto plan
Family of 4, tight budget HelloFresh EveryPlate
Senior / easy no-cook meals CookUnity Factor
Single person, variety-focused CookUnity Factor
Vegan / plant-based CookUnity Fresh N Lean
Budget-conscious, willing to cook EveryPlate HelloFresh
Organic ingredients priority Green Chef Sun Basket

Start With Our Top Pick

CookUnity wins for most people — 300+ meals, 2-min reheat, easy cancel. 50% off your first box available now.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between meal kits and prepared meal delivery?
Meal kits send pre-portioned ingredients with recipe cards — you cook for 30–60 minutes. Prepared meal delivery sends fully cooked, ready-to-reheat meals in 2–5 minutes. Meal kits typically cost $8–$12/meal; prepared services cost $11–$16/meal but save significant daily time.
Which meal delivery service is best for beginners?
For beginners wanting no commitment and maximum variety, CookUnity is the most forgiving — order as few as 4 fully-prepared meals per week, pause anytime, and choose from 300+ dishes. HelloFresh is the best starter kit if you want to learn to cook with guided recipes.
How do I know if a service delivers to my zip code?
All major services let you check delivery availability by entering your zip code on their website before subscribing. CookUnity, Factor, HelloFresh, and Trifecta cover most of the contiguous US. Rural and very remote areas may have limited options.
Is it worth trying multiple meal delivery services?
Yes — most services offer 40–60% off the first week. It's completely reasonable to try 2–3 services to find your fit. Just be sure to cancel or pause before being charged for a second week if you're comparison shopping.
What should I look for when comparing services?
The five key factors: (1) meal type — kit vs prepared; (2) menu variety and rotation frequency; (3) price per meal and minimum order; (4) diet compatibility; and (5) how easy it is to skip, pause, or cancel. Don't sign up based on first-week discount alone.