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Swedish author spends under 1,000 kronor weekly on family food

Key Points
  • Åsa Axelsson limits family food spending to 1,000 kronor weekly while ensuring nutritious and eco-friendly meals.
  • Swedish food prices have risen 25–30 percent since 2022, prompting her cost-saving experiment.
  • She claims eating healthily is cheaper than buying processed foods, with potential savings of over 100,000 kronor annually.

In Sweden, author and mother of two Åsa Axelsson has challenged herself to spend a maximum of 1,000 kronor per week on food for her family of four while maintaining nutritious, tasty, and environmentally friendly meals. She reported that the experiment went better than expected, meeting all three criteria. Food prices in Sweden have increased significantly since 2022, with a total rise of around 25–30 percent by the beginning of 2025.

In her new book "Matexperimentet," Axelsson details her weekly cycling trips to stores to buy the cheapest possible food for herself, her husband, and two teenage daughters. She stated that it is cheaper to eat healthily because raw ingredients are much less expensive than processed foods. Axelsson compared her spending to a friend with a similar-sized family who spends more on food, noting that if her friend's family ate for 1,000 kronor per week, they could save 114,000 kronor in a year and potentially save a million kronor over eight years.

it is cheaper to eat healthily because raw ingredients are much less expensive than processed foods

Åsa Axelsson, author and mother

Her weekly shopping total came in under 1,000 kronor.

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