Meal kits are convenient and are a good way to eat healthier, but a reptuation for being wasteful keeps some people from trying them. Fair concerns, but research from this 2019 study found meal kits actually cause less food waste, on average, and have a lower overall carbon footprint than provisions bought at the grocery store, with all it's complicated logistics.
To take things further, this 2022 study by US Packaging, a shipping materials company (which CNET confirmed has no business dealings meal kit services) examined four of the most popular meal kits — Blue Apron, EveryPlate, HelloFresh and Home Chef — to find which service is the least (and most) wasteful.
Blue Apron meal kits have the least waste
Blue Apron, one of the original meal kit services, proved to be the most eco-friendly meal kit, with an impressive 50% of its packaging being fully recyclable, just 1.19 packets per ingredient and the least amount of empty box space. After Blue Apron, there was a steep drop, with HelloFresh (second on the list) using only 9% recyclable materials and super budget-friendly meal kit service EveryPlate finishing in third with similar stats. Home Chef was the least green meal kit, finishing last out of the four services examined, with 2.38 packets per ingredient and just 19% recyclable materials.
As luck would have it, Blue Apron is also the best overall meal kit we've tested in 2023. Although there are other picks that might suit you better if you eat plant-based, cook for a large group or prefer prepared meals over meal kits. You can read about them all in our list of best meal delivery services.
Blue Apron meal kits proved to have the least amount of packaging waste. Home Chef lags behind the field with more single-use plastic than the other three.
To analyze the four services, US Packaging and Wrapping ordered three meals from each vendor and employed standardized metrics to evaluate total plastic use, recyclability of materials, number of packets per ingredient and empty box space. The four categories were accounted for in devising a final score for each one.
Blue Apron had the best green score of the four meal kit services analyzed.
Blue Apron trounced the competition, with half of its materials fit for recycling, while no other service broke even 20% in the category. The study found Home Chef's packaging is up to 90% plastic, amounting to 56 packets across the three meals. HelloFresh used the least amount of plastic (just 66%), as meals are mostly separated in large bags and ingredients are not individually packaged.
Some plastic is necessary for meal kits to work, but Home Chef uses more than the average service.
So how does that compare with our experience? We've tested every major meal kit service and also found Blue Apron to be one of the least wasteful — in addition to one of the best — with excellent meals at an affordable price per meal. EveryPlate is our favorite cheap meal kit. While EveryPlate's ice packs aren't recyclable, we didn't notice as much plastic as this study suggests, since EveryPlate sends most of the ingredients loose in a cardboard box and not packaged individually.
Meal kits are more environmentally friendly than you may think
There's no question that meal kits are convenient. Pick the right meal kit service, and it might save you some money over grocery store prices, too. One knock on handy meal kit delivery has always been that it's wasteful since items and ingredients for your dinner are often individually packaged and shipped in cardboard boxes with disposable ice packs. But as this 2019 study shows, meal kits aren't so bad for the environment, after all, and most actually cut down on food waste and total carbon footprint versus grocery shopping since ingredients are perfectly portioned with no excess food that could spoil if you don't use it in time.
Want to try a meal kit on for size? Use this sneaky hack and get months of cheap meal delivery and decide which one you like best.