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8 PlateJoy Alternatives for 2025: Smarter Meal Planning Without the Subscription Shock

18 de julho de 2025 · 9 min

8 PlateJoy Alternatives for 2025: Smarter Meal Planning Without the Subscription Shock

PlateJoy popularised the idea of a dietitian in your laptop. You tick boxes for Instant Pot, pescatarian, gluten‑free or low‑FODMAP, and—boom—a week of photo‑rich menus lands in your inbox with an Instacart button attached. For many households, that service is worth every penny of PlateJoy’s $12 per month (billed annually) plus Instacart’s fees. But in 2025 competition has erupted: planners that write grocery lists grouped by shelf life, solvers that slash prep time, and mobile apps that weave workouts and lab tests alongside dinner. If PlateJoy’s price, US‑only grocery partners, or limited macro control have you eyeing the exit, this 2 000‑plus‑word guide compares eight compelling alternatives.

PlateJoy: Quick Recap of Strengths & Limitations

  • What it nails: Dietitian‑tested recipes with high‑resolution photos, appliance and allergy filters, variety and batch‑cooking sliders, one‑tap Instacart or Shipt carts, and optional Nutrition Pro micronutrient upgrade.
  • Where it stalls: US/CA grocery‑only, no international metric measures in lists, no household calorie scaling (just servings), breakfast and snack suggestions cost extra, and the $99 annual fee plus delivery surcharges can dilute the promised grocery savings.

Bird’s‑Eye Comparison of Top Alternatives

AppCore USPFree tier?Grocery exportBreakfast/LunchAnnual cost*
Centenary DayAI solver + routine builderInstacart β / PDFYes$89.04
Mealime Pro15‑minute dinnersInstacartLunch leftovers$59.99
Eat This MuchFull‑day macro generatorLimitedInstacart, AmazonYes$108
eMealsOne‑tap Walmart cartsWalmart, KrogerDinner only$71.88
Plan to EatRecipe clipper + calendarTrialCSV / PDFManual$39
Prepear GoldSocial cookbooksLimitedWalmartYes$119.99
HelloFresh MarketHybrid kits + grocery add‑onsKits shippedDinners$9–12 / meal
Paprika 3Offline recipe organiserEmail / printManual$29.99 one‑time

*Annual price for ad‑free tier billed yearly; HelloFresh cost is illustrative per serving.

Framework: How to Pick Your PlateJoy Replacement

Before binge‑cancelling, identify what PlateJoy already fixes and what still hurts:

  1. Prep‑time drag: Need dinners under 20 minutes? Pick Mealime.
  2. International shopper: Choose recipes‑only tools (Plan to Eat, Paprika) or PDF exporters (Centenary Day) that work in any country.
  3. Whole‑day tracking + macros: Eat This Much or Centenary Day.
  4. Family scaling & chore assigning: Centenary Day Family, eMeals Family.
  5. Cookbook aesthetics & community: Prepear Gold.
  6. No time to shop or chop: HelloFresh or Blue Apron kits.

Deep‑Dive Reviews

1. Centenary Day — Beyond Menus: Full‑Stack Automation

When PlateJoy publishes Monday crock‑pot carnitas, you still have to schedule a workout and remember labs. Centenary Day centralises these moving parts. During onboarding you enter wake/sleep times, allergies, macro goals, household members and preferred cook frequency. Hit Generate, and a linear‑programming solver creates a 7‑day schedule:

  • Green blocks for meals (breakfast, lunch, dinner, snacks).
  • Red blocks for workouts (strength, Zone 2, mobility).
  • Blue for recovery (sauna, breathwork).
  • Purple for mental tasks (gratitude journal).

The solver minimises prep minutes and groups meals that reuse bulk‑cooked protein. Grocery lists group by perishability: green leaf icon for short‑shelf items, orange jar for pantry staples. Toggle family circles on each meal to auto‑scale ingredients; grocery totals update in real time.

Pros

  • Automates meals and workouts in one drag‑and‑drop timeline.
  • Guideline stars show adherence to fibre, sugar, cardio minutes, sleep hours.
  • Free tier covers one meal plan and two routines—ad‑free.
  • Family tier adds task delegation and calorie scaling for up to 5 eaters.

Cons

  • Instacart live cart export still beta; PDF workaround.
  • Recipe photo catalog smaller (8 k) than PlateJoy.

2. Mealime Pro — Weeknight Hero for 15‑Minute Dinners

Mealime beats PlateJoy on speed. Recipes target 15–30 minutes, one pan whenever possible, and ingredient lists rarely break ten items. The free tier already offers unlimited dinner plans and Instacart export; Pro ($59.99/yr) unlocks macro info, exclusive recipe packs, and AI‑refactor—a GPT‑4 model that suggests ingredient swaps if your store is out of shiitakes.

Mealime turns leftovers into next‑day lunches by default—a slider sets how many serve as lunch, slashing midday decision fatigue. Breakfast and snacks are BYO, so macro purists might pair Mealime with Cronometer.

Pros

  • Fast recipes with step photos; ideal for novice cooks.
  • Instacart export free; serves Global regions where Instacart operates (US, CA, UK).
  • Leftover planner covers lunch—one less meal to plan.
  • No ads, even on free tier.

Cons

  • Dinner‑centric; no structured breakfasts.
  • Micronutrient tracking absent.

3. Eat This Much — Algorithmic Full‑Day Menus

Eat This Much (ETM) remains the macro‑geek’s favourite robot chef. Enter calories, protein %, diet style (keto, vegan, Mediterranean), maximum cook time and cost per day, then hit Generate. ETM produces breakfasts, lunches, dinners and snacks, plus leftover reuse windows (e.g., chilli good for 3 days). Grocery lists feed Instacart, Amazon Fresh or PDF export; EU users rely on the latter.

The UI lacks PlateJoy’s polish, but power controls surpass it: lock Tuesday dinner, ban cilantro globally, limit price per serving to $3.50, or tell the solver you hate repeat proteins. ETM recently added a recipe photo initiative—still thin but growing.

Pros

  • Satisfies macro and cost constraints simultaneously.
  • Full‑day planning; breakfasts and snacks sorted.
  • Variety slider and ingredient bans prevent monotony.

Cons

  • Old‑school UI, few images.
  • No workout or habit tracking.

4. eMeals — One‑Tap Grocery Carts, US‑Only Convenience

eMeals is essentially PlateJoy’s dinner cousin with supermarket muscle. Pick a plan—Quick & Healthy, Budget, Diabetic. Every Wednesday, seven dinners drop into the app; remove the ones you hate, hit Shop Now, and a pre‑filled cart opens at Walmart or Kroger. Breakfast/lunch add‑ons cost extra; nutrition info is calories and macros only.

Family‑friendly features include kid‑approved menus and easy serving increases. If you live outside the US, though, you’re stuck copying the PDF list into your local store app.

Pros

  • Seamless grocery pickup—zero list editing if you trust the defaults.
  • Low subscription fee—often $5.99/mo on promo.
  • Family and budget plans target real‑world constraints.

Cons

  • Dinner only unless you pay extra.
  • US grocery partners exclusively.
  • Minimal nutrition depth.

5. Plan to Eat — The DIY Recipe Clipper & Calendar

If PlateJoy’s curated recipes bore you and you already hoard 1 000 Pinterest links, Plan to Eat shines. A browser clipper pulls ingredients and steps into your private cookbook. Drag recipes onto a calendar, drag the edges to repeat leftovers, and the grocery list consolidates items by aisle. A pantry inventory hides items you already own.

The platform costs $39/year after a 30‑day free trial—cheapest on this list—but provides zero automation. You plan; it organises. Macros rely on FatSecret API and can be hit‑or‑miss. Still, for control freaks or international cooks who need metric and local produce names, Plan to Eat is gold.

Pros

  • Own your recipes; export anytime.
  • Global‑ready: metric units and any cuisine.
  • Cheapest yearly price; no ads.

Cons

  • No automatic meal generation.
  • Limited nutrition data scraping accuracy.

6. Prepear Gold — Social Cooking Meets Meal Plans

Imagine Pinterest, but every pin is a structured recipe with macros and step photos. That’s Prepear. Follow celebrity bloggers (Skinnytaste, Budget Bytes), buy their digital cookbooks (included in Gold), and drop their weekly plans onto your calendar. The Prep Mode voice command walks you through steps hands‑free. Grocery lists export to Walmart or PDF.

Community feed shows what friends cooked last night, encouraging exploration beyond your comfort zone—an antidote to PlateJoy’s algorithmic sameness.

Pros

  • Massive library of blogger cookbooks for one fee.
  • Voice‑controlled Prep Mode keeps screens clean.
  • Social feed for discovery and accountability.

Cons

  • Highest subscription price here.
  • US grocery partner only.

7. HelloFresh Market — When You’d Rather Unbox Than Shop

If even Instacart feels like too much, meal kits eliminate shopping, chopping (mostly) and decision fatigue. HelloFresh delivers pre‑measured ingredients, recipe cards and add‑on grocery staples (milk, bread) in one insulated box. Compared to PlateJoy, cost per serving is higher, but time in store goes to zero.

The Market add‑on now sells ready‑to‑heat soups, breakfast burritos and protein add‑ons, nudging HelloFresh from pure kits into grocery territory. Nutrition labels show calories and macros; weight‑loss or keto boxes cost extra.

Pros

  • No shopping—everything arrives chilled.
  • Add‑on grocery staples reduce extra trips.
  • Rotating global flavours stave off boredom.

Cons

  • More expensive per meal (~$9–12).
  • Packaging waste.
  • Limited flexibility for allergies—though improving.

8. Paprika 3 — Offline Recipe Power for Globetrotters

Sometimes subscription fatigue is the real issue. Paprika is a one‑time $29.99 desktop/mobile app that stores recipes offline. A built‑in browser snags ingredients and converts units; a pantry module tracks stock and auto‑subtracts when you buy. Drag recipes onto a meal calendar, print or email a grocery list. Sync across devices costs $4.99/year—still cheaper than PlateJoy.

Paprika lacks auto meal planning, but its offline capability wins travellers and off‑grid cooks who can’t rely on cloud logins.

Pros

  • One‑time purchase, no recurring fees.
  • Works without internet.
  • Full control over units and categories.

Cons

  • No nutrition analysis or grocery delivery.
  • Manual planning required.

Cost Snapshot (Ad‑Free Plans)

PlatformMonthly*AnnualGrocery delivery?
PlateJoy$12$99Instacart, Shipt (US/CA)
Centenary Day Pro$9$89.04Instacart β
Mealime Pro$5$59.99Instacart
Eat This Much$11$108Instacart, Amazon
eMeals$5.99$71.88Walmart, Kroger
Plan to Eat$4.95$39None
Prepear Gold$12.99$119.99Walmart
Paprika 3$29.99 one‑timeNone

*Monthly reflects annual billing where applicable.

Feature Matrix

FeaturePlateJoyCentenaryMealimeETMeMeals
Breakfast & lunchOptional addonYesLeftoversYesAdd‑on
Leftover optimisationBatch sliderSolverAuto lunchYes
Micronutrient targetsAdd‑on45 fixedNoMacros onlyNo
Household scalingServings onlyCalories + servingsServingsServings x2Servings
International supportUS/CAGlobal (PDF)Instacart CA/UKGlobalUS only
Workout integration

FAQs

Is there a free alternative to PlateJoy?

Mealime’s free tier covers unlimited dinner plans and Instacart lists. Centenary Day’s free tier offers one weekly plan, grocery PDF and routine scoring at zero cost.

Which platform exports directly to Walmart Grocery?

eMeals and Prepear Gold both push carts to Walmart. PlateJoy uses Shipt which may partner with some Walmart locations but not nationwide.

Can I import my own recipes?

Plan to Eat and Paprika lead the pack with robust web clippers. Centenary Day supports manual label paste; PlateJoy manual entry exists but is clunky.

Which alternative gives workout reminders?

Centenary Day inserts workouts into the same calendar and pings your phone. None of the others integrate exercise scheduling.

What if I just want quick dinners without new fees?

Mealime’s free tier or Paprika (one‑time cost) plus your own recipe list are lowest‑fee paths.

Final Bite

PlateJoy remains the gold standard for beautifully photographed, dietitian‑approved menus with a slick Instacart hand‑off. But meal planning has diversified: Centenary Day automates full life routines, Mealime delivers lightning‑fast dinners, Eat This Much balances macros by the gram, and Plan to Eat lets recipe magpies finally tame their hoards. Decide which friction—time, variety, budget, or whole‑life integration—hurts most, and choose the planner that removes it. Your grocery cart—and your stress levels—will thank you.

Junte-se a nós

O Centenary Day não é apenas um produto — é um movimento. Uma comunidade crescente de pessoas determinadas a assumir o controle de sua saúde, estender suas vidas e inspirar outros a fazer o mesmo.

Quer você esteja otimizando sua rotina, explorando a ciência da longevidade, ou se preparando para o futuro da extensão radical da vida, estamos aqui para apoiá-lo em cada passo do caminho.

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