Pick a fixed 15-minute planning slot
Decide when you plan, not just what you eat. A 15-minute slot on Sunday evening or Monday morning is enough. Putting it in your calendar is the difference between planning consistently and planning never.
Default to three breakfasts, three lunches, three dinners
A shortlist of three options per meal gives you variety without decisions. You can run the same nine-meal week for months if it is working — there is no prize for novelty.
Batch where it pays off
Batching dinner two nights at a time is usually the highest-leverage thing a busy person can do. You cook once, eat twice and have a planned lunch the next day.
- Cook a tray of chicken, rice and roasted veg for 2–3 portions
- Make a big pot of chilli or soup for the week
- Hard-boil a batch of eggs for fast breakfasts and snacks
Have a 'fallback' meal you can always make
Busy weeks always include a night where cooking is not happening. Pick a fallback you can make in under 10 minutes — eggs on toast, a yoghurt bowl, a wrap — and plan it in. A planned fallback beats an unplanned takeaway.
Tick meals off as you go
When the week is hectic, ticking meals off in a tracker tells you in two seconds where you stand for calories and protein. That removes the mental load of trying to remember what you have eaten.
Copy the weeks that work
When a week feels easy and on-target, copy it forward. Busy weeks are not the time to redesign your eating — they are the time to lean on a plan you already know works.