Grocery Price Index

May 2026 Grocery Price Index: The Latest Family Dinner Cost Snapshot

SummitPlate Team·May 21, 2026·7 min read

As of the May update, the latest BLS food price data runs through April. The signal is still useful: broad grocery costs rose, restaurant meals kept climbing, eggs eased, and ground beef stayed expensive.

Quick answer

What is the practical takeaway?

In May 2026, the latest available official data showed broad grocery costs higher than January, restaurant meals still climbing, eggs easing, and ground beef still expensive. The practical takeaway is to plan one low-lift backup dinner before it becomes takeout.

The May 2026 snapshot

MetricReading
Food at home CPI index320.859
Food away from home CPI index393.546
Eggs, dozen$2.25
Ground beef, pound$6.90
Chicken breast, pound$4.17
Milk, gallon$4.14
White bread, pound$1.87
Estimated planned home dinner for four$17.40
Estimated casual takeout dinner for four$53.00

Data through: Latest BLS food price data available as of May 21, 2026: April 2026.

Since 2021: why dinner still feels more expensive

Compared with January 2021, the latest BLS readings through April 2026 show the bigger inflation backdrop families are reacting to:

CategoryCumulative change since January 2021
Food at home CPI+27.3%
Food away from home CPI+31.0%
Ground beef+74.0%
Eggs+53.5%
Chicken breast+27.9%
Milk+19.3%

Calculated from BLS January 2021 and April 2026 readings for the same CPI and average retail food price series used in the SummitPlate Grocery Price Index.

What changed this month

  • The latest food-at-home CPI reading is up from January, so the broad cart is not meaningfully cheaper.
  • Egg prices are down from January, giving families one flexible low-cost dinner lever.
  • Restaurant meals remain the expensive fallback, which is exactly why a tired-night dinner plan matters.

What families should do with it

  • Do not build the whole budget around one improving staple.
  • Make the default weeknight backup cheaper than takeout and easier than starting from zero.
  • Use the grocery list to connect ingredients across meals before prices punish duplicates and waste.

For a family of four, May's latest snapshot says the highest-leverage move is still avoiding one or two emergency takeout nights with a realistic plan.

SummitPlate planning move

Build the week around one low-lift fallback dinner, then make sure the same ingredients appear in at least one other meal.

If you want the practical version, start with a free SummitPlate meal plan or compare this month against the full SummitPlate Grocery Price Index.

Methodology and official sources

The SummitPlate Grocery Price Index is a practical family-dinner snapshot built from public food price indicators. It is not a replacement for official inflation data. It turns the latest food-at-home, food-away-from-home, and selected staple price data into a dinner-planning read for households deciding what to cook this week.

BLS series IDs

Series IDWhat it tracksUnit
CUUR0000SAF11CPI-U: Food at home in U.S. city averageIndex, 1982-84=100
CUUR0000SEFVCPI-U: Food away from home in U.S. city averageIndex, 1982-84=100
APU0000708111Average price: Eggs, Grade A, large, per dozen, U.S. city averageDollars per dozen
APU0000703112Average price: Ground beef, 100% beef, per pound, U.S. city averageDollars per pound
APU0000FF1101Average price: Chicken breast, boneless, per pound, U.S. city averageDollars per pound
APU0000709112Average price: Fresh whole milk, fortified, per gallon, U.S. city averageDollars per gallon
APU0000702111Average price: Bread, white, pan, per pound, U.S. city averageDollars per pound

The home-dinner and takeout-for-four figures are SummitPlate planning estimates used to translate official price signals into a weeknight dinner decision. They are not official BLS series.

Cite this page

Suggested citation: SummitPlate. "May 2026 Grocery Price Index: The Latest Family Dinner Cost Snapshot." SummitPlate Grocery Price Index, updated 2026-05-21. https://www.summitplate.com/blog/grocery-price-index-may-2026

Canonical hub: SummitPlate Grocery Price Index.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the SummitPlate Grocery Price Index?

It is a monthly SummitPlate data snapshot that translates public grocery, restaurant, and staple price data into practical family dinner planning guidance.

Where does the Grocery Price Index data come from?

The page uses public U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics CPI and average food price series plus USDA Economic Research Service food price context, then summarizes what the data means for family meal planning.

Which BLS series does the index use?

The index references CUUR0000SAF11, CUUR0000SEFV, APU0000708111, APU0000703112, APU0000FF1101, APU0000709112, and APU0000702111.

How often is this report updated?

SummitPlate plans to update the Grocery Price Index monthly as new public food price data becomes available.

SP

Written by Justin Goolsby

Justin builds SummitPlate and writes from the product's practical focus: calmer family dinner planning, grocery lists that match real stores, ingredient overlap, and less food wasted after the shopping trip.

Ready to Plan Dinner Before the Week Starts?

SummitPlate creates your weekly meal plan in under 2 minutes — so the grocery list, dinner decisions, and ingredient overlap are handled before the week gets loud.

Try SummitPlate Free →