Best Budget Meal Plan for a Family of 4 (₱5,000–₱7,000 Weekly Budget)

If you’re feeding a family of four on a weekly budget, you already know the struggle: you plan carefully… then prices change overnight. 😅

This is a realistic ₱5,000–₱7,000 weekly budget meal plan designed for Filipino families — busog, balanced, and practical for busy moms. It’s also built to keep everyone happy (yes, even the picky eater) while minimizing food waste.

And since this is meant to be real-life helpful, I included:

  • a 7-day menu
  • a grocery shopping list
  • a printable meal plan format
  • “if prices increase” alternatives (super important in 2026)
budget meal plan for a family of 4

What This ₱5,000–₱7,000 Meal Plan Includes

This weekly plan assumes:

  • Family of 4 (2 adults + 2 kids)
  • Mostly home-cooked meals
  • 2–3 snack options (simple, budget-friendly)
  • Smart “repeat” ingredients (para walang tapon)
  • Mix of ~70% Filipino dishes and ~30% international for variety

Budget Breakdown: Where the ₱5,000–₱7,000 Goes

Your budget will vary depending on location and brand choices, but this is a helpful guide:

  • Proteins (₱2,000–₱2,800): chicken, pork, eggs, tofu, canned tuna/sardines
  • Vegetables & fruits (₱900–₱1,500): leafy greens, squash, carrots, bananas, seasonal fruit
  • Rice, bread, noodles (₱700–₱1,100): rice, pandesal, pasta/noodles
  • Dairy & pantry (₱900–₱1,300): milk, oil, soy sauce, vinegar, garlic/onion, seasonings, canned goods

Tip: If you’re closer to ₱5,000, lean more on:

  • eggs, tofu, monggo, sardines, tuna
  • seasonal veggies
  • “1 big meat ulam stretched into 2 meals”

7-Day Budget Meal Plan (Family of 4)

Each day includes Breakfast + Lunch + Dinner. Lunch can be leftovers to save time and money (the true secret weapon 😄).

Day 1 (Monday)

Breakfast: Pandesal + scrambled eggs + banana
Lunch: Chicken adobo + rice + sautéed pechay
Dinner: Ginisang monggo with malunggay + tinapa (or fried tofu)

Day 2 (Tuesday)

Breakfast: Oatmeal (or champorado) + milk
Lunch: Leftover adobo + cucumber tomato salad
Dinner: Sinigang na baboy (use more gulay: kangkong, labanos, okra)

Day 3 (Wednesday)

Breakfast: Garlic fried rice + egg + sliced tomatoes
Lunch: Leftover sinigang
Dinner: Tuna pasta (garlic, oil, canned tuna, a bit of cream or evap) + steamed veggies

Day 4 (Thursday)

Breakfast: Peanut butter sandwich + banana
Lunch: Chicken tinola (sayote/papaya + malunggay)
Dinner: Tortang talong + ensaladang talong (or cucumber) + rice

Day 5 (Friday)

Breakfast: Lugaw with egg (add tokwa if you want)
Lunch: Leftover tinola
Dinner: Pork giniling with potatoes & carrots (stretch with more veggies) + rice

Day 6 (Saturday)

Breakfast: Pancakes (or hotcake mix) + fruit
Lunch: Leftover giniling (or make giniling omelette)
Dinner: Stir-fry chopsuey + tofu (or chicken strips)

Day 7 (Sunday)

Breakfast: Corned beef + egg + rice (or sardines if budget is tight)
Lunch: Creamy mushroom chicken (budget version) + rice
Dinner: Filipino-style spaghetti (sweet style) + garlic bread (simple)

Snacks (Budget-Friendly Options)

Choose 2–3 for the week:

  • Saging na saba / banana
  • Kamote cue (air-fry/less oil option)
  • Popcorn (super tipid!)
  • Peanut butter pandesal
  • Homemade gulaman / sago’t gulaman
  • Yogurt (if budget allows)

Grocery Shopping List (₱5,000–₱7,000)

Adjust quantities depending on your kids’ appetite.

Proteins

  • Chicken (1.5–2 kg)
  • Pork (1–1.5 kg)
  • Eggs (2 trays if possible, 1 tray minimum)
  • Tofu (4–6 blocks)
  • Canned tuna (2–4 cans)
  • Sardines or tinapa (2–4 pcs/cans)

Vegetables

  • Garlic + onions (1 week supply)
  • Tomatoes (6–8 pcs)
  • Pechay / kangkong / talbos / malunggay (choose what’s cheap)
  • Eggplant (6–8 pcs)
  • Sayote or papaya (2–3 pcs)
  • Carrots (4–6 pcs)
  • Potatoes (4–6 pcs)
  • Cabbage (1)
  • Monggo (½ kilo)

Fruits

  • Bananas (lakatan/saba depending on budget)
  • Seasonal fruit (1–2 kinds only)

Pantry & Carbs

  • Rice (5kg or top-up)
  • Pandesal or loaf bread
  • Pasta (spaghetti + macaroni if needed)
  • Soy sauce, vinegar, oil (top-up)
  • Evaporated milk or fresh milk
  • Seasoning basics: pepper, salt, patis, sugar, bouillon

If Prices Increase: Smart Alternatives (Super Tipid Swaps)

When meat prices go up, don’t panic—swap wisely:

Protein Swaps

  • Chicken/pork → eggs + tofu
  • Pork giniling → tokwa giniling (tofu crumble + carrots + potatoes)
  • Fresh meat → canned tuna/sardines + extra gulay
  • Chicken strips → mushrooms or tofu

Ulam Extenders (Para Mas Dumami)

  • Add sayote, carrots, cabbage, potatoes to stretch ulam
  • Add egg to giniling (giniling omelette)
  • Turn leftovers into new meals:
    • Adobo → adobo fried rice
    • Giniling → giniling lumpia / omelette
    • Tinola → tinola arroz caldo

Budget Veggie Rule

Buy what’s cheapest that week, not what’s “ideal.”
Your best friends: pechay, kangkong, repolyo, carrots, kalabasa, talong.

Tips to Make ₱5,000 Work (Without Feeling Deprived)

  • Cook 1 big ulam that becomes 2 meals (lunch leftovers = lifesaver)
  • Rotate 2 budget ulam days (monggo/tortang talong/itlog + gulay)
  • Keep snacks simple (bananas/popcorn/kamote)
  • Avoid “one-time ingredients” that you won’t reuse

There’s something comforting about having a plan—even if the week is chaotic.

A budget meal plan isn’t just about saving money. It’s about:

  • less “anong ulam?” stress,
  • fewer last-minute fast food runs,
  • and more peace when you open your wallet.
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HELLO

My name is Peachy and I’m a foodie mommy living in the Philippines.I am a mom to two daughters named PURPLE SKYE and PERIWINKLE MOONE and wife to a loving husband I fondly call peanutbutter ♥
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