Review: MealPal Makes Packing Your Lunch a Little Easier. And Cheaper.

Your weekday lunch dilemma, solved (with a few technical quibbles)

MealPal lunches from the NYC restaurant Naya

MealPal lunches from the NYC restaurant Naya

By Kirk Miller

Nota bene: If you buy through the links in this article, we may earn a small share of the profits.

What’s for lunch?

It’s the first question almost everyone asks when they get back to the office, and for good reason: It’s a small reward waiting for you about halfway through your day. 

The problem, particularly recently: You may have hundreds of lunch options, but quality varies and prices have skyrocketed. 

With that in mind, I spent a few months testing out MealPal. The service isn’t new — it was launched in 2016 by ClassPass co-founder Mary Biggins and ZocDoc alum Katie Ghelli. It pretty much operates as a ClassPass for food: Buy credits and get a curated selection of discounted meals from various local merchants. And we do mean discounted; the service suggests that you may discover lunches for $3.48 per meal (but really, think a few bucks more on average). Anecdotally, a publicist for MealPal told me that one journalist who used the service for five years saved an estimated $3,260.

While MealPal was been around for a bit, the company just launched two big initiatives (one environmental, one health-related) in the past few months. With that in mind, I decided to test out the lunch program over a series of weeks in the late fall and early winter, utilizing restaurants and food halls near the InsideHook office in midtown Manhattan (MealPal is currently available in 20 cities across the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Singapore, Australia and New Zealand).

Note: There is a “Workpals” option, a social feature that allows users to see what meals their co-workers are reserving. It’s supposed to make lunch pickups with colleagues easier (and it’s a good way to see what other people are ordering); that said, I did not try this and this seems best suited to very large workspaces that are using MealPal en masse. 

It’s Totally Fine to Eat Lunch Before Noon
You can eat lunch whenever you want, you’re an adult

How MealPal works

A map of participating restaurants and a sample meal from MealPal
MealPal

What we liked:

What needs work:

A sample reusable container and return bin for MealPal’s new green initiative
MealPal

What’s new:

Should you use MealPal?

MealPal is a good way to save a modest amount of money on your weekday lunch and enjoy a delicious, potentially healthy meal (it depends on how you use it and what you choose to eat, of course). If I used it every time I went to the office, I’d save roughly $600 per year. If you live in a participating city, work frequently out of an office and can get over the awkward pick-up mechanics, it’s one less thing to worry about during your dreary work day. 

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