Ground beef recently set a record. The average pound of plain hamburger ran nearly $6.90 in April and $6.75 in May, according to U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data. That’s steak money for the stuff you dump in a taco.
So when you walk into a warehouse club like Costco and see those giant trays of meat at bulk prices, the math feels obvious. Buy big, save big.
And usually, sure. I’ve said it myself — when beef costs this much, the meat case is one of the few spots a warehouse membership truly pays off.
But not everything behind that glass is a deal. Some of it’s a convenience tax wearing a bargain’s clothing. A few items cost more than your regular grocery store does on a decent sale week.
Here are seven I walk right past — and what I buy instead.
1. Pre-seasoned and marinated meats
That lemon-pepper chicken and those bourbon-glazed pork chops look like dinner solved. They’re also where you pay the most per pound.
You’re buying salt, sugar and oil at meat prices. Worse, a heavy marinade is a great place to hide meat that’s a little past its prime. Buy it plain and season it yourself for pennies.
2. Extra-lean prepackaged ground beef
The standard house-brand ground beef tends to run lean — think 90/10. Sounds healthy. Cooks like a hockey puck.
Fat is flavor and moisture. Strip it out and you get dry, flat burgers and sad meatballs. Here’s the kicker: It’s not even the cheapest beef in the store. Grab a chuck roast or ask the counter to grind some chuck. Cheaper, fattier, better.
3. Pre-cut stew meat
You’re paying a premium to have someone cube a cheap, tough cut for you. That’s it. That’s the whole product.
Buy a chuck roast and cut it into chunks yourself. It takes five minutes, costs less, and you actually know what cut you’re getting instead of trusting a bin of mystery trim.
4. Pre-formed burger patties
Same trick, different shape. Somebody patted ground beef into circles, and now it costs more per pound than the ground beef sitting three feet away.
Buy the ground beef. Make patties. Stack them with parchment between each one and freeze. If you’re not already letting your freezer do the heavy lifting on bulk meat, you’re leaving money on the table.
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5. Packaged chicken wings
The bagged wings feel like a party bargain until you do the math. Bone-in thighs or whole chickens beat them on price almost every time, especially when your grocery store runs a sale.
And the value packs draw a steady stream of complaints about packaging and quality. Skip them. Watch your local ads and the meat counter’s markdown bin instead.
6. Bulk hot dogs and breakfast sausage
Nobody needs 40 hot dogs. By August they’re a freezer-burned monument to optimism.
These are processed, sodium-heavy, and they go off faster than you’d think. Unless you’re feeding a ball team this weekend, buy a normal-size pack and move on.
7. Bulk deli and lunch meat
That tub of sliced turkey looks economical. Then it turns slimy on day five while you’re still working through it.
For a small household, the bulk deal becomes a slow-motion garbage disposal. Buy what you’ll eat this week at the deli counter and call it done.
What I do load into the cart
Don’t get me wrong — I’m a warehouse-club believer. The trick is knowing which side of the meat case to shop.
Whole cuts you break down yourself? Great. A chuck roast, a pork loin, a brisket, a whole chicken — that’s where the bulk model actually works in your favor.
It’s the pre-cut, pre-seasoned, pre-portioned stuff that pads the bill. You’re not paying for meat there. You’re paying for someone else’s knife work and a fancy label.
Buy the raw material. Do the easy part yourself. And save the convenience money for the stuff that’s genuinely worth hauling out to your car.
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