Outputs
Weekly plans, grocery lists, printable recipe cards
Delivered in formats ready for print or import to spreadsheets
Free tool
Use a browser-based generator to produce personalized weekly menus with portion guidance, prep times, consolidated shopping lists, and export-ready recipe cards. Filters cover common diets, allergens, and seasonal substitutions.
Outputs
Weekly plans, grocery lists, printable recipe cards
Delivered in formats ready for print or import to spreadsheets
Customization
Diet filters, serving sizes, prep-time limits
Adjust per meal or across the entire week
Localization
Seasonal substitutions and regional cuisine options
Suggests ingredient swaps to match local markets
Quick overview
Provide a few details — number of days, servings, dietary rules, budget or prep-time constraints — and the generator returns a ready weekly schedule plus a consolidated grocery list. Plans include portion guidance, estimated prep times, and printable recipe cards for each dish.
Designed for practical use
The generator is tailored to a wide audience: busy professionals who need quick, healthy plans; parents building family-friendly menus; fitness enthusiasts tracking macros; dietitians creating client plans; and budget-conscious shoppers planning efficient grocery runs.
Practical prompts
Below are sample prompts you can paste into the generator and modify. Each prompt produces a structured plan plus a single grocery list grouped by aisle or category.
Kid-friendly dinners, two 15–20 minute weeknight recipes, one vegetarian day. Output: daily schedule + single grocery list grouped by aisle.
Balanced macros, per-day calorie target provided by user. Output includes portion sizes and prep times.
3 meals + 2 snacks per day, protein targets scaled to bodyweight. Export recipes as printable cards.
Prioritize affordable proteins, seasonal produce, bulk-cook options, and list low-cost variants.
Ready to use
Plans are output in practical formats to integrate with your routine: printable recipe cards for meal prep, a CSV shopping list with aisle grouping for quick in-store runs, and a schedule-format file you can print or save to your calendar.
Where suggestions come from
Recipe and nutrition suggestions are drawn from public nutrition databases, open recipe collections, regional produce calendars, and user-provided data. Nutrient estimates use common reference tables and open-source nutrient profiles — presented as estimates for planning, not medical advice.
Practical guidance
The generator is provided for planning and convenience. Nutrition estimates are useful for everyday meal planning but are not a substitute for professional medical or clinical nutrition advice. For conditions like diabetes, pregnancy, severe allergies, or other clinically managed situations, review the plan with a qualified clinician or registered dietitian before implementing.
Estimates are based on public nutrition tables and typical portion conversions; they are intended for planning and comparison rather than clinical diagnosis. For precise tracking or clinical requirements, validate with a registered dietitian or use lab-grade nutrient analysis tools.
Yes. Use the generator's filters to exclude ingredients or entire food groups and to select religious-compliant options. The tool flags common hidden sources of allergens and provides suggested substitutes where available.
The generator can produce diabetic-friendly menus with carbohydrate counts and low-GI options, but plans should be reviewed by a clinician before being used to manage medication or treatment. Treat generated plans as a planning aid, not a replacement for medical guidance.
Choose your preferred export format after generation: printable recipe cards (PDF), shopping CSV grouped by aisle, or a printable calendar-style weekly plan. These formats are designed for easy printing or importing into spreadsheets.
Yes. You can specify serving sizes or a batch-cook target (for example, produce 12 lunches). The output adjusts ingredient quantities and updates the shopping list accordingly, with reheating and storage notes when batch-cook instructions are selected.
The free generator does not automatically retain personal plan history unless you export or save plans manually. Persistent preference storage may be available through account features described on the product site; exported plans remain yours to store and reuse.
When you specify a region or season, the generator prioritizes local produce and suggests seasonal swaps to reduce cost and increase availability. Substitution suggestions also include pantry-staple alternatives to avoid extra shopping.
Yes — many nutrition professionals use generated plans as starting templates. Outputs are formatted for easy editing and printing, but dietitians should review and adjust nutrient targets and clinical recommendations before delivering plans to clients.
The free generator provides immediate plan creation and export options in common formats. Certain advanced features or persistent account-based storage may be part of paid offerings; check /pricing for current details.
After generation, export the shopping CSV and add estimated local prices (many grocery stores provide CSV/price lists you can merge). Use the budget prompt template to produce a plan that prioritizes low-cost items and bulk-buy suggestions.