Thanksgiving on a Budget
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Celebrating Thanksgiving on a Budget? No problem. We’ve got you covered with tried and true tips that work for the holiday celebration.

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Thanksgiving Dinner is an all-time favorite at our house. My kids start dancing and breaking out in song when they see anything remotely resembling mashed potatoes, gravy, cranberry sauce, and oh yeah, the turkey.
We have a smaller version of that meal throughout the winter and there are rarely leftovers.
But, having lived through some really tight times, I am aware that hosting a big holiday dinner can pinch the wallet. You want to be hospitable. You want to splurge. But, if you’re really serious about sticking to a budget, that can be a tough thing to pull off.
How do you do Thanksgiving on a budget?
While November is traditionally the month for fantastic stock-up sales, I’m not really seeing that in my local stores. I haven’t for awhile now.
In the good old days it was easy to snag a free turkey or even one for five bucks. That’s unheard of these days, especially now that the cost of turkey has increased by a chunk of change.
Likewise, potatoes, onions, baking ingredients, and other traditional ingredients, are not yet low enough in price for me to call them bargains.
So, again, how do you do Thanksgiving on a budget?

1. Consider your priorities.
Thanksgiving Dinner is a big deal. For some families it’s the one time that you get together in the year.
For hobbits like mine, it’s an occasion for feasting. The Thanksgiving meal includes some of our favorites of all the year.
But, that doesn’t mean you have to go all out and make everything. Instead ask yourself what are non-negotiables on the meal plan and what can you omit without a riot?
One year on Facebook, I suggested opting out of turkey in favor of a less expensive main dish.
I figure the Pilgrims would have eaten whatever was readily available. They were blessed to have turkey (if they actually did serve turkey) and I’m blessed to get chicken legs for just 99 cents/pounds.
Some folks had no problem with it, others thought it was near blasphemy to lose the turkey. My son, the gourmand, merely shrugged his shoulders.
Lesson learned: Find out what matters to YOUR family.
Now, fourteen years later, I make a slow cooker ham and a turkey breast and everyone is happy.
This year, my priorities are finances and fitness, so I won’t be going overboard on desserts which will push both of those priorities to their limits.

2. Make a Thanksgiving menu plan and a grocery list.
Don’t think that you can run to the store and just grab whatever. It certainly can be done, but you’ll pay more than you should or even want to.
Instead, write a thorough menu plan right down to drinks and appetizers. Compare your menu to what you already have on hand. Could you swap a few recipes to save money and use what’s already in your fridge, freezer, or pantry?
Double check your list and see if you could serve a lower priced alternative.
- Instead of a fancy charcuterie board, make a simple relish tray.
- Consider that maybe two desserts would be just as good as four.
- Does anyone really like pumpkin pie? If you only serve it due to tradition, consider saving some money by opting out.
- If the main dish protein is pricy, fill out with lots of Thanksgiving side dishes the kids love.
Include your family in this process. For the last few years I’ve prepared a google survey to send to my kids and dinner guests. They get to vote on things like dessert and let me know their preferences.
In this way I truly can find out what matters to my family and I don’t spend money on things that don’t.
Audit yourself so that you are planning a pleasing feast that won’t make you a pauper.
Once you figure out what you want to serve, create a grocery list, consulting your pantry and freezer as you go. You may not need to buy as many ingredients as you think if you know you can shop your kitchen first.

3. Find the best price — on most things.
Unless you have endless time and gas at your disposal, you realistically can’t get every good deal there is. Nonetheless, scan your grocery stores’ flyers and narrow down what the best prices are in each store.
This is pretty easy to do since most stores post their prices online.
Find the store with the best deals for most things on your list. Shop there to get the biggest bang for your buck.
While you’re there, be ready to flex. Keep an eye open for markdowns and manager specials. Don’t be afraid to buy a generic equivalent or a different brand ingredient for menu items that are lower in priority.
Remember to use store digital coupons and cash back apps, like Ibotta. Every drop of savings helps!

4. Accept help.
If you are hosting a big dinner with guests who are offering to contribute to the meal, let them! There’s no rule that says you have to do it all yourself.
The Pilgrims and the Wampanoag people both contributed food to the feast. Folks love to share food and lighten the load on the hostess. Let them.
Some might balk at this idea, but I think you need to reconsider. What’s at stake?
- If it’s your pride, better to nip it in the bud.
- If you are a control freak, then choose what they bring.
- If you love to cook, invite them to bring something that doesn’t matter to you, like beverages.
Money is tight; so be reasonable.

5. Be mindful of leftovers.
Thanksgiving Dinner can add up to quite a cost, especially when you make more courses than normal. Don’t let a bit of it go to waste.
Remember that wasted food equals wasted money. Save money when you avoid food waste.
This applies to the prepped food leftover from the holiday weekend as well as half-used ingredients that you bought to make those dishes.
Freeze what you can and then meal plan the next few meals around what’s left. Consider:
- Make soup with leftovers for a tasty weekend meal.
- Prep an easy single crust pot pie.
- Freeze whipped cream in dollops to use in hot cocoa throughout the holiday season.
- Turn leftover cranberry sauce into Kate’s amazing oatmeal jam bars.
Avoiding leftovers in the first place can help you save money, too.

6. Remember, “Enough is as good as a feast.”
I am the first one to admit how easy it is to go overboard at the holidays. This year, however, I’m focusing on keeping things simple.
It really doesn’t matter if you have three kinds of breads, four different appetizers, and ten desserts. Thanksgiving is not about impressing!
Rather, it’s about enjoying the bounty you’ve been blessed with. Some years there is plenty, and some years there isn’t.
And that’s okay. Enough is as good as a feast.

More Budget Holiday Tips
This post was originally published on November 15, 2011. It has been updated for content and clarity.





This year, we’re going to my brother’s house for Thanksgiving, and we’re tag-teaming it. He’s making the ham, stuffing, and a store-made pie, and I’m bringing the turkey, mashed potatoes, and gravy. Sounds like a plan to me!
I have guests help bring food and I settle for some storebought and check the grocery sales for multiple stores. And just generally keep things pretty simple.
I so agree with #4. We trade off Thanksgiving and Christmas with the cousins and everyone who comes shows up with a dish. Or two or three. The host is in charge of the turkey and the table. We’re lucky to have so many to contribute, and it sure makes it easier on everyone on the big day.
Whenever our family gathers year round, we potluck it… depending on ability, time, etc. It helps a lot, and is fun for us.
One family always bring great wine to our routine Friday pizza gathering, while another brings an armful of soda–not equal, or someone with plenty of time cooks a time intensive dish… (That’s me, I make the dough which costs nearly nothing, but bakes into the best pizza.) We love sharing, and it’s a joy when my kids yell “Thanksgiving–it’s time for Auntie Elaina’s pies!”
I ABSOLUTELY agree that enough is as good as a feast.
I have also found that keeping things simple instead of turning them into casseroles has made a huge difference. It was absolutely delicious, cheaper, and healthier. I’ve also been trying to just keep things simple. Sure, I could make 18 different pies and do everything from scratch but why??? Who am I showing off for?
Here is our menu from last year:
We did have a turkey, roasted like mom does.
Stuffing was the boxed stuff bought on sale, as was the canned cranberry sauce.
We roasted the asparagus instead of drowning it in hollandaise sauce.
I just served a hot bowl of corn (from frozen) instead of a cornbread casserole.
I made rolls in the bread machine (The Betty Crocker recipe)
And instead of a candied yams, we made Tyler Florence’s roasted sweet potatoes with honey and cinnamon.
We also made a pumpkin pie, and whipped our own cream.
I can’t remember if I put out the usual relish tray of pickles and olives or not.
It was not a stressful day in the kitchen, our table was colorful, everyone enjoyed the meal.
I plan to keep it equally simple this go around.
I’m pretty sure the Pilgrims had lobster at the first Thanksgiving.
We had our wedding reception at Plimouth Plantation and had our pictures taken in front of the Mayflower so yeah, I like Thanksgiving a lot. But, I agree 100% that everyone should pitch in.
I’m scaling back my menu this year. I’m still going to do the turkey roulade that we love, but I’m leaving out the corn bread stuffing with chorizo and butter nut squash. I’ll make simple bread stuffing in the crockpot instead.
I haven’t seen many sales either.
I’ve heard that putting on a Thanksgiving meal will cost 13% more this year than last year. This topic must be top of mind, I also wrote a similar post.
Rule # 4 is in my opinion that most important. Not only as a hostess should you ask for assistance but as a guest offer up, even to buying the turkey if you know it’s going to be a hardship for someone. My mom has not gotten a paycheck (or unemployement) for nearly two months following a medical crisis. While she’s still having the dinner at her house I told her I would buy the turkey and bring my usual stuff. Helps relieve the stress a little bit.
So glad that you are able to bless your mom that way!
I just posted my Thanksgiving Savings Plan yesterday. Saving money makes the holiday sweeter!!
Well I am all in favor of being less rigid and traditional in favor of not crying over the grocery bill LOL.
I host a medium sized dinner here and one thing I’ve learned, aside from sharing the load [mom brings fresh fruit platters for before and after – I hate dealing with that when I’m busy cooking – MIL brings bakery pies and FIL likes to make cranberry sauce – god bless LOL – other guests bring wine] is that the dishes that I used to make that were very time and ingredient intensive were simply not worth the money or time. I now make a few traditional sides that I know everyone loves [stuffing, mashed potatoes, cornbread] and a variety of roasted vegetables, generally with different seasonings but basically cooked the same, prepped the same, no sauces, no saucepans, no finicky stuff] and everyone over a certain height loves them – and it all basically was one ‘recipe’ with tweaks for time and seasoning. This year we’re having roasted onions, portobellos, sweet potatoes, asparagus and garlic.
As for the turkey/grocery price thing I have found that it makes one thing easier for me – I have been wanting to move more toward farm raise, local, grass fed etc in our meats. It makes it so much easier when the price gap [sadly] is so much less than it was in times past – looking forward to our more naturally raised bird this year, and to emptying enough of my freezer to place a meat order at a new farm I’ve found!
Yes, the price gap is closing with conventional being higher priced. It’s a blessing in disguise, isn’t it?
I definitely agree with #4 – I grew up with all holidays being large family gatherings where everyone contributed. As soon as you were married or lived on your own, you were assigned something 🙂 My in-laws don’t do it that way and it was so strange for me to have Thanksgiving with them the first time and not being able to bring anything.