GET FREE SAMPLES

sign up for our newsletter to get free sample alerts

The 11 Healthy Meal Delivery Services Actually Worth Your Money

Get yourself on the no-planning food prep routine
Photo 7/12
Sakara Life
Availability: Continental United States

Price: You can order the 3-day meal plan for $239 (about $80/day) or the 5-day plan for $349 (roughly $70/day). Each day consists of three meals plus snacks, wellness water and tea

Good for: Someone obsessed with clean eating. It's vegan, and gluten- and dairy-free

Pros: Large, filling portions. Gorgeous, Instagrammable dishes that make you feel like a better person

Cons: Some of the meals weren't as good as others

Tester's Notes: Rave-worthy meals included the Sakara nicoise salad, made with adzuki bean tempeh, and an "egg" made from cashews and macadamia nuts; wild mushroom pasta with black truffle oil and sauteed spinach, using chickpea pasta; and a melt-in-your-mouth Greek yogurt and roasted grape tart. Because the ingredient list is so clean and the meals are presented so thoughtfully, you feel virtuous for eating them, which is never a bad thing. Our taster even called one of these meals an "I-didn't-want-it-to-end heaven."

The meals were slightly hit-and-miss for our taster, though. The good ones were amazing, but there were one or two that ended up in her trash (and wasting food never makes one feel virtuous).

While the plans are pricey, they do come with a ton of fancy wellness perks: Superfood Beauty Water, Detox Tea, and two snacks. The Dark Chocolate Granola was described as "life-changingly good."

The 100 percent plant-based, organic program is designed with nutrition in mind and takes all the work out of eating healthfully. Not once did our tester miss sugar or processed food, nor did she experience salad fatigue, despite the 4-6 cups of greens in each lovingly crafted creation.

Image via @sakaralife

Photo 8/12
Urban Remedy
Availability: Nationwide

Price: $55-$73 per day for meals, juices and tinctures

Good for: Detoxing or easing your way into a juice cleanse

Pros: Nutrition content readily available, filling portions and zero prep

Cons: The calorie count seemed off -- website said 1,400 max, but our taster counted 1735 in a day, not including the tinctures

Tester's Notes: The Metta Morphosis plan is a delightful cleanse/detox that will make you feel light, bright and oh-so righteous in a healthy state of mind. The green drinks are delicious, and the soups and nut milks were filling enough that I wasn't even the slightest bit hungry by the end of the day. That might have been because they were on the heavier side, calorie wise. While the green juice was 50 calories, the salads were in the 400s and the nut milk, which is the last thing you consume before bed, was 360. If you're using the plan to cut out certain ingredients, like gluten or sugar, that's fine -- but you might be disappointed if you think it's a cleanse that will help you shed pounds. However, there are other plans available if a svelte figure is your goal.

The Metta Morphosis plan will help you feel lighter, though, and will certainly help shut down sugar and carb cravings over the course of three days. Our taster especially liked the Veggie Pho Soup and Umeboshi Salad. The plan offers a daily meditation and guided movement, which is the kind of thoughtful consideration Urban Remedy approaches food with, too. These plans are great for slimming down before a big event (without starving yourself and turning into a hungry monster in the process).

Image via @urbanremedy

Photo 9/12
Fitness Kitchen LA
Availability: Southern California: Los Angeles County, Orange County, San Diego County, Riverside County (excluding desert regions), San Bernardino County (excluding mountain & desert regions), Ventura County and Santa Barbara

Price: $50 to $75 a day for a weekly plan; starting at $12 per meal for a la carte options

Good for: SoCal residents who want to get fit quick

Pros: Packed with protein, calorie control options

Cons: You're essentially paying for a calorie counter

Tester's Notes: These protein-dense meals look small, but they keep you full throughout the day (However, you will be starving by the time you're ready for the next one if you choose the "Trim" plan). The quality is decent, but the taste is not outstanding (though it helps that you don't have to lift a finger to cook or clean dishes). The dishes are pretty standard -- things like Grilled Vegetable Salad with Salmon and Lime Dressing, or Cajun Red Snapper with Brown Rice & Black-Eyed Peas. The meals are varied and hearty, but still feel pretty no-frills -- the Fitness Kitchen approach to meal plans is seeing food as fuel. As a weight-loss tool, these are fantastic, and you'll likely notice a difference on the scale within two or three days.

Image via @fitnesskitchenla

Photo 10/12
Sun Basket
Availability: Most zip codes in the U.S., excluding Alaska, Hawaii, Montana and parts of New Mexico

Price: $11.49 per serving, plus a $5.99 weekly delivery fee

Good for: The recipe/organic food enthusiast who doesn't like to go to the grocery store

Pros: Ability to choose your own recipes, organic and fresh ingredients

Cons: Several steps to cooking, multiple pans and dishes required

Tester's Notes: The produce and meat that comes in Sun Basket's delivery looks like it came straight from Whole Foods: it's filled with organic and sustainable produce and meats and generally just looks healthy looking. The recipes don't require a chef's skill, and some of the steps are made easier by some pre-prepping on Sun Basket's part -- like garlic that is already peeled.

Taste-wise, it's better than what most of us non-chefs serve ourselves most of the time, and dare I say even dinner-party-worthy. The sole and squash salad, for example, is a tastier dish than most non-professional chefs might come up with on their own. Dishes like the vegetarian polenta, red pepper and egg recipe do require several steps that will have you swapping out pans, but it's good (and plentiful!) enough to be worth it. All of the packaging is recyclable (and even has handy reminders like "Recycle me!" with instructions on the package.

Image via @sunbasket

Photo 11/12
Hello Fresh
Availability: Nationwide

Price: $9-$10 per serving for dinner only; $15/bottle for optional wine plan

Good for: Impressing dinner guests and getting yourself out of a recipe rut

Pros: 24/7 support line, excellent wine pairings and healthy meals everyone will eat

Cons: Unless you're a professional chef, the meals take longer to prepare than the instructions say

Tester's Notes: If you're looking for a meal kit that will satisfy everyone at your table, this one is one to consider. You pick the meals you want to make and can choose from classic, vegetarian or family recipes. With meals like Barbecue Chicken Tenders With Sweet Potatoes and Sugar Snap Peas, even your toddler will eat without protest. The family-friendly sides were simple enough to make, even if they did feel a little basic.

Of the dishes our taster tried, the vegetarian Patatas Bravas and Crispy Artichokes with Garlicky Aioli was the surprise standout meal. "It was an unexpected dish I never would have discovered on my own -- and the flavors were incredible," said our taster, who served it at a dinner party. "Everyone demolished it and then asked for the recipe."

Like all of the other "we shop, you cook" services we tried, this, too, took longer than the estimated 30-40 minutes advertised -- unless you rope in others to help.

And about that wine pairing: "Impeccable," said our taster. It adds something extra to a meal kit for a great value, and takes the hassle out of pacing the wine aisle at your local Trader Joe's. Having your own personal sommelier to pick out a wine that goes with your meal takes out a lot of guesswork, especially if you frequently cook for others.

Image via @hellofresh

BY EMILY WOODRUFF | AUG 23, 2017 | SHARES
VIEW COMMENTS
Full Site | Terms & Conditions | Privacy Policy
TotalBeauty is a property of Evolve Media Holdings, LLC. © 2024 All Rights Reserved. | Affiliate Disclosure: Evolve Media Holdings, LLC, and its owned and operated subsidiaries may receive a small commission from the proceeds of any product(s) sold through affiliate and direct partner links.