Love to Eat Out, How much Extra Money is that Burger Really Costing You?

My family loves a good burger and fries every now and then. It’s the most requested item from my son when we are going to eat out. He just loves his hamburgers. They are easy to get at almost any restaurant but do you know how much you can actually save by making burgers and fries at home for your family.

We eat out every once in a while but when I see how much I can really save by burgers at fries at home, it really makes me reconsider. This is a great comparison on the cost difference of eating hamburgers out and making them at home. I was shocked there was such a price difference. I would have never guessed it was that much.

Now I’m not talking about beating the cheap price of those thin, cardboard-tasting hockey puck burgers you can get at the fast food chains. Those are fine once in a while when you need a quick lunch.

Although you might be shocked at just how inexpensive you can make burgers at home. It might be really close to the same price as those thin puck burgers depending on where you live.

I’m talking more along the lines of a 1/4 pound burger with the regular fixings and a side of homemade thick cut fries. I know when we eat out at places like Red Robin or other sit down restaurants, a burger and fries can cost around $14 plus the tip too. We don’t buy drinks we just drink water instead but that brings our dinner to around $54 with 4 regular burgers and fries.

Making that same meal at home can be so much less expensive, even if you don’t shop at a discount grocery store or find the items on sale.

Let’s break down the cost and see how much saving you can really get by making your own burger and fries at home.

The Cost Breakdown for Burgers and Fries at Home

One Pound of Hamburger

I purchased ours from Safeway the day I did this price comparison. The cost of one pound of ground beef, we like 80% lean for burgers, was $3.99 per pound. The usual everyday price is $5 per pound so I used that price for this comparison. Ground beef price $5 for one pound.

Hamburger Buns

Now you could use this hamburger bun recipe to make the buns for the burgers but if you don’t have that kind of time, like myself the day I did this comparison you can purchase them. I picked up an 8 pack of buns for just $1.39 making the 4 buns we needed for dinner just $.70.

The Condiments

This is where it got a little trickier to figure out the price. Since we only use a very small amount of each condiment I just figured $1.00 for the mayonnaise, mustard, ketchup, and relish. Which are my family’s favorite toppings and that comes on most restaurant burgers.

In reality, it cost about $.50 for mayonnaise, mustard and ketchup for the burger. But we like to dip our fries too. I just made it easy and bumped the price up to a dollar.

Vegetable Toppings

My husband likes onions and I purchase onions at $.50 a pound or less. For a slice of onion, I figured about $.10 which would be quite a bit for him. I purchased a tomato at $.50 and a head of lettuce at $1.59.

I actually get lettuce for around $.25 a head at a local discount grocery store but I wanted to keep with the most mainstream prices in our area. I figured half a head of lettuce which was more than enough at $.50. The total I came up with for pickles, lettuce, tomato, and onion for all 4 burgers was $1.35.

Making hamburger at home not only saves money but they taste so much better too.

For the Fries

I used 5 large potatoes which worked out to be a little over 2 pounds. At $.54/lb the potatoes were just $1.25. Add in a couple tablespoons of oil and salt that brought the fries to $1.35 for enough for all four of us.

If you want to skip making the fries yourself you can purchase a bag of frozen fries enough for 4-6 people for about $3.40. Making your own fries at home can save you about $2.

That brings the supplies to just $9.40 for four 1/4 pound burgers and fries with the normal burger toppings. If you want to figure in a generous $2 for cooking the fries and burgers at home that still only brings the total to $11.40 for 4 burgers and fries at home.

To purchase the 4 hamburgers and fries at Red Robin it costs our family $54 for the Keep it Simple Burger from Red Robin. So for less than the price of one hamburger and fries out you can make enough for 4 people at home.

It’s like saving $42.60 each time you make burgers at home instead of eating them out at a regular sit down restaurant.

If you compare it to eating out at fast food prices of $6 a meal per person you are still saving about $12. So you could make burgers at home twice for the about same amount of money spent to eat at a fast food restaurant.

We eat out every once in a while but when I see how much I can really save by burgers at fries at home, it really makes me reconsider. This is a great comparison on the cost difference of eating hamburgers out and making them at home. I was shocked there was such a price difference. I would have never guessed it was that much.

Why I Do These Cost Comparisons

Often I think it’s just easier to go out for dinner or pick something up and maybe you do, too. But when I have the actual price difference right in front of me and I see that I can save, between $12-42 by making burgers at home, it makes me really think about it.

What could you do with the extra $12-42 each time you decide to eat a burger at home instead of eating out? Maybe put it towards debt you are working out of? It could go towards a vacation fund or towards retirement.

When you look at just one time of eating out, it doesn’t seem like a huge difference. But let’s say you make burgers at home once a month instead of eating at a sit-down restaurant, you could save $504.

If you didn’t grab a drive through burger meal for a quick lunch twice a month that works out to be $280 a year. Combine this one small change with others and soon you have thousands of dollars saved over the course of a year.

Now that you know how much you can save by making burgers and fries at home. What changes do you think you’ll make? Will you be eating burgers at home more often?

I know since I’ve started keeping ready made burgers in the freezer and picking up hamburger buns to keep in the freezer too, we are eating burgers at home more often.

See more price comparisons for homemade versus store-bought or eating out,

Homemade Pizza compared to Eating Out or Take and Bake
Brownies, Box or Homemade
Burritos, Packaged or Homemade
Loaf of Bread, Purchased or Homemade
Breadsticks, Canned Breadsticks or Homemade

4 thoughts on “Love to Eat Out, How much Extra Money is that Burger Really Costing You?”

  1. Great post, Shelly!! I love how you broke it all down- thanks for taking the time to do that! I just recently wrote something similar about eating out and I find it is amazing how much of a difference it makes when you count the cost. I have been on a quest lately to mimic some of our favorite eat-out meals and the savings of making it ourselves versus buying it is significant- makes me giddy to think about it! 🙂

  2. Cara @ Fashionably Frugal

    Wow! I am spoiled by growing up with home raised beef and homemade burgers cooked by a (self-proclaimed) grill master, it takes a pretty special burger to beat what I can make at home. The only time I eat take-out burgers is when it’s a local greasy-spoon, and you have to have the burger, fires, and a milkshake (it’s an American tradition). That usually does cost me dearly, next time I am going to have to just cry a little and keep driving to save myself that money. Thank you for the reminder that it’s so much cheaper to just make a good burger at home.

    1. It is hard when you realize how much extra it does cost to eat burgers out. I know when I decided to figure it out, I was surprised at how much more it really costs. We still eat out once in a while but now I keep hamburger buns on hand and homemade hamburger patties in the freezer so we can avoid eating burgers out to save the money.

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