• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
Clever Dude Personal Finance & Money

Clever Dude Personal Finance & Money

Family, Marriage, Finances & Life

  • Toolkit
  • Contact
  • Lunch
  • Save A Ton Of Money
  • About Clever Dude

CleverDudes Can Cook

The Cost Of A Great Burger: Restaurant Vs Cooking At Home

November 11, 2023
By Brock Kernin
- Leave a Comment

homemade food, burger costs, cooking at home

Last Saturday my wife and I spent all day doing tasks around our home. I had planned on grilling hamburgers for dinner, but when dinnertime rolled around we were both exhausted. We still had a craving for a good burger, but neither of us had the energy nor the motivation to fire up the grill.

Because we were both tired and hungry, we decided to go out to a popular burger place near our home.

We each enjoyed a perfectly made burger along with a beer. When we were almost done eating, we ordered two burgers and fries to take home to my son and one of his friends. After tip, our bill came to just under $82.

Four burgers meals and two beers cost me $82.

We Should Have Stayed At Home

Suddenly I felt like I should have stayed home and fired up the grill. I wondered just how much it would have cost me to stay at home and have almost the identical meal. When I went grocery shopping that evening I added up the prices of the supplies needed to make 4 half pound burgers, fries, and two beers:

  • Two pounds of 80/20 hamburger, Kroger brand: ($5.29×2) $10.58
  • Hamburger Buns (generic brand): $1.39
  • Bag of French Fries (Ore Ida brand): $5.99
  • 2 Beers ($1.62 per beer x 2) (Sam Adams lager): $3.33

Total: $21.29

I would have saved $60.71 by staying home and making my own burgers.

Granted, there are a couple of things to keep in mind regarding the cost of making my meal at home:

  • The price of the drink at home beers is from buying an entire case at once. I can’t buy just two beers.
  • There’s a nominal cost of the charcoal needed for my grill.
  • There was also an initial cost of my grill, although over years of ownership the cost per use becomes increasingly lower.
  • It also doesn’t factor in the expense for gas to drive to the store, as well as the value of the time it takes to do the shopping.

Why Such A Big Difference? Convenience, of Course

The real reason for the difference in the cost of a great burger is convenience.  Was having someone else do the work of making our burgers worth $60.71? Thinking about it a couple of days later, the answer seems to be, no. Posed with the same question on Saturday night, my answer could have very well been the opposite.

How about you, Clever friends, do you think having someone else make a meal as easy as a hamburger is worth over $60.71? Have you ever calculated the difference between a restaurant meal and making the same thing at home?

Brought to you courtesy of Brock

  • Follow Clever Dude on Twitter
  • Like Clever Dude on Facebook
Avatar photo

About Brock Kernin

Brock is a software engineer by day and personal finance blogger at night. He is a fitness junkie and enjoys grilling and smoking meat. Married with two children,  Brock strives to improve his skills as a husband and father, and is always on the lookout to stretch his family’s budget as far as he can.

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Money Beagle says

    May 23, 2016 at 11:02 am

    Hard to argue the value of staying home in terms of dollars and cents, but sometimes it just feels good to go out, have someone else take care of the cooking, serving, and cleaning. There’s value that can be applied to each of those things.

    Reply
    • Brock says

      May 25, 2016 at 10:12 pm

      That may be true for some meals……but burgers are so easy to make!

  2. susan says

    May 23, 2016 at 12:40 pm

    When I order a burger out, I’m going to want to see some good cheese, bacon, lettuce, tomato, onion, pickles and some kind of really good sauce on that burger. I don’t see those “fixins” included in your home budget. When I make burgers at home, I buy angus beef, some good aged cheddar, applewood smoked bacon, vidalia onion, lettuce, awesome bbq sauce, pickles, good onion or pretzel rolls, etc. Depending on the burger place, I can sometimes get it cheaper if I go out. : )

    Now I want a burger….

    Reply
    • Brock says

      May 25, 2016 at 10:13 pm

      Ah, the “fixin’s”……..good point. Those definitely can add up too…especially, like the beer, that you can’t just buy one slice of cheese, or one slice of bacon. While the “per unit” cost is low, the overall expense needed to make the meal could be much higher if a person didn’t already have them on hand.

  3. Eric Bowlin says

    May 23, 2016 at 4:31 pm

    Food always tastes better when someone else prepares it.

    Like Susan said…don’t forget about the condiments.

    For example, I always throw away at least half of every head of lettuce I buy. So I get lettuce for my burger and chances are I waste a minimum of 50% of it.

    You also got a couple hours out away from your kid and his friend. If you cooked at home they would be present I assume. I imagine time away from the kids has value.

    So, is it worth $30 extra? Yea, definitely…a couple times a month. Is it worth $30 a day? No way…

    Reply
    • Brock says

      May 25, 2016 at 10:14 pm

      Oh, I’m not sure if food tastes better when someone else makes it…..I make some pretty good food. Now, the time away alone with my wife…that is priceless!

  4. RAnn says

    May 28, 2016 at 10:09 am

    Restaurant food of any sort has value if you enjoy the eating out experience, but it is a luxury, not a necessity. Hopefully your budget has room for luxuries; which luxuries you choose is up to you and your family.

    Reply
    • Brock says

      June 12, 2016 at 1:48 pm

      Good point, RAnn…..it’s OK to spend money on luxuries. However, I can think of better luxuries than a burger I can cook at home.

  5. FF @ Femme Frugality says

    May 28, 2016 at 10:38 am

    I’m seriously considering starting bulk freezer cooking for this exact reason. There’s so much to do in the day that by the time we reach 5 o’clock, it’s too easy to cave to $33.

    Reply
    • Brock says

      June 12, 2016 at 1:49 pm

      Meal planning WORKS!

  6. Latoya @ Life and a Budget says

    May 28, 2016 at 11:45 am

    This is a tough one. For me, there are just days when it seems worth it. I can only do so much and suffering from simple exhaustion sometimes gets the best of me. I know that I could plan better for days like this, but having food in the house really isn’t going to motivate me to cook when I’m in one of those moods. Of course, I could save tremendously; however, I’m a big advocate of “life and a budget.” Sometimes life just gets the best of us and as long as I’ve got the money in the budget, I’m going to spend it without the guilt of saving money attached to it.

    Reply
    • Brock says

      June 12, 2016 at 1:50 pm

      I can see how some days it may seem worth it. It think it’s the fact that we spend money on something I could easily make at home…..

  7. Mitch Mitchell says

    May 28, 2016 at 8:55 pm

    This is one of the things I debate myself over all the time. I don’t have a grill & don’t know how to use one, but I can always fry up a very nice burger for way less money than it costs to have one outside the house. Yet… every once in a while you just want one that someone else cooks because it just tastes different. I figure that as long as that’s not my norm then I can forgive myself when I do it.

    Reply
    • Brock says

      June 12, 2016 at 1:50 pm

      Come on over sometime, Mitch, I’ll teach you how to use a grill. 🙂

  8. Emily @ JohnJaneDoe says

    May 30, 2016 at 11:19 am

    We don’t eat out often, and most of our burgers actually end up coming from fast food joints. I do know that if I eat a good burger out, I generally want toppings that I probably wouldn’t put on at home like blue cheese and carmelized onions, and have them with side dishes we wouldn’t make.
    But I do get the point. It’s easy to make a burger (or sandwich, or pasta, etc) at home. It’s more challenging to make Indian or Thai food, so eating exotic is probably a better bargain.

    Reply
    • Brock says

      June 12, 2016 at 1:51 pm

      Totally agree, Emily. If I’m going to splurge, I want it to be on something I can’t/won’t make at home!

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

Are you feeling the call to be a Clever Dude? Then, let's get down to brass tacks and explore what it takes to be one. Get ready for an in-depth look into the anatomy of someone who exudes cleverness!

There's nothing like hearing you're clever; it always hits the spot!

Best of Clever Dude

  • Our Journey to Debt Freedom
  • Ways to Save Money Series
  • Examine Your Motives Series
  • Frugal Lunch by Clever Dudette
  • An Illustrated Frugal Lunch
  • I'm Tired of Buying and Spending
  • 50 Tips for New PF Bloggers
  • Other Personal Finance Blogs

Footer

  • Toolkit
  • Contact
  • Lunch
  • Save A Ton Of Money
  • About Clever Dude
Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our newsletter and stay updated.

Copyright © 2006–2025 District Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Contact Us