We compare meal type, region availability, likely ongoing cost, first-order deal quality, prep effort, diet fit, household fit, menu variety, cancellation friction, and whether a service is a realistic weekly habit.
How Every Meal Guide Ranks Meal Delivery Services
Our rankings start with the dinner problem people are trying to solve, not with whichever brand has the loudest offer.
A discount can make a first order worth trying, but it should not override poor fit. We separate trial value from the likely second-box cost so readers do not mistake a big headline discount for long-term value.
We do not invent exact prices, coupon amounts, testing claims, or delivery coverage. If a claim can change quickly, the page should tell readers to verify it at checkout before buying.
Pages should be refreshed as affiliate approvals, current offers, user feedback, and Search Console data arrive. The most important money pages get deeper brand-specific notes first.