Content Planning - Meal Planner - Basic
Download and customize a free Content Planning Meal Planner Basic Excel template. Perfect for business, legal, and personal use. Editable and ready to boost your productivity.
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Basic Meal Planner Excel Template for Content Planning
The Basic Meal Planner is a streamlined, user-friendly Excel template designed specifically for Content Planning. Whether you're a food blogger, nutritionist, meal prep coach, or simply someone aiming to organize weekly eating habits efficiently, this template provides a clean and structured way to plan meals with minimal complexity. As the name suggests, this is a Basic version—free from overcomplicated automation or external integrations—making it ideal for beginners and users who prefer manual control with essential smart features.
Sheet Names
The template contains three clearly labeled sheets:
- Weekly Planner – The primary interface where meals are scheduled day by day.
- Ingredients Inventory – A running list of all ingredients used, with quantities tracked to avoid overbuying or waste.
- Nutrition Summary – Automatically calculates daily and weekly nutritional totals based on meal entries.
Table Structures
Weekly Planner Sheet
This is the core of the template. It features a grid-style table with 7 columns for each day of the week (Monday through Sunday) and 5 rows representing meal types: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner, Snack 1, and Snack 2.
Columns & Data Types
| Column | Description | Data Type |
|---|---|---|
| A1:A6 | Meal Types (row headers) | Text (Fixed: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner, Snack 1, Snack 2) |
| B1:H1 | Days of the Week (column headers) | Text (Fixed: Monday through Sunday) |
| B2:H6 | Meal Entries |
A dynamic dropdown list is applied to all meal cells (B2:H6) using Excel’s Data Validation. The list includes common meal options such as “Oatmeal with Berries,” “Grilled Chicken Salad,” “Vegetable Stir-Fry,” etc., which the user can customize under the Meal Library tab (optional, included in download).
Ingredients Inventory Sheet
This sheet tracks every ingredient used across meals. It auto-populates based on predefined meal-to-ingredient mappings.
Columns & Data Types
| Column | Description | Data Type |
|---|---|---|
| A1:A100 | Ingredient Name | Text (e.g., “Chicken Breast,” “Brown Rice”) |
| B1:B100 | Quantity Used (per week) | |
| C1:C100 | Unit of Measure | |
| D1:D100 | Purchased? (Y/N) |
Nutrition Summary Sheet
This sheet calculates total calories, protein, carbs, and fats per day and per week based on meal selections.
Columns & Data Types
| Column | Description | Data Type |
|---|---|---|
| A1:A8 | Day (Monday–Sunday + Weekly Total) | |
| B1:B8 | Calories | |
| C1:C8 | Protein (g) | |
| D1:D8 | Carbs (g) | |
| E1:E8 | Fat (g) |
Formulas Required
- In the Nutrition Summary: A
VLOOKUP()formula pulls nutritional data from a hidden “Meal Library” table (e.g., =VLOOKUP(B2,MealLibrary!$A$2:$E$50,2,FALSE) to retrieve calories for the meal selected in B2 of Weekly Planner). - In the Ingredients Inventory: A
SUMIFS()formula aggregates total usage per ingredient: =SUMIFS(WeeklyPlanner!$B$2:$H$6,MealLibrary!$A:$A,B2), mapping ingredients to each meal. - In the Nutrition Summary: Weekly totals use
SUM()across daily rows.
Conditional Formatting
- Cells in the Weekly Planner turn light green when a meal is entered, indicating completion.
- If an ingredient quantity exceeds 500g (or another user-defined threshold), its cell in the Inventory sheet turns yellow as a warning for possible overbuying.
- Nutrition Summary rows with calories over 2500 turn red, helping users identify potential excesses.
Instructions for the User
How to Use: Start by selecting meals from the dropdowns in the Weekly Planner. No manual data entry is needed beyond choosing your meals. The Ingredients Inventory and Nutrition Summary update automatically. At week’s end, review what you ate versus what you planned—adjust future weeks accordingly. Customize the Meal Library by adding your own recipes to expand options.
Example Rows
Weekly Planner - Wednesday:Breakfast: Greek Yogurt with Granola
Lunch: Quinoa Salad with Chickpeas
Dinner: Baked Salmon with Broccoli
Snack 1: Apple Slices with Almond Butter
Snack 2: Dark Chocolate Square
Recommended Charts or Dashboards
To enhance the Content Planning experience, add a simple dashboard on a fourth optional sheet called “Dashboard.” Include:
- A column chart showing daily calorie intake over the week.
- A pie chart of macronutrient distribution (Protein/Carbs/Fat) for the entire week.
- A bar graph comparing ingredient usage by category (e.g., Proteins, Vegetables, Grains).
These charts help users visualize their eating patterns and identify trends—perfect for bloggers creating weekly content or planners evaluating dietary balance.
Conclusion
The Basic Meal Planner is a purpose-built tool for efficient Content Planning. Its simplicity ensures accessibility, while its smart formulas and formatting deliver intelligent automation without complexity. It empowers users to plan meals systematically, reduce food waste, track nutrition, and generate content-rich insights—all within one intuitive Excel file. Perfect for bloggers needing meal visuals or individuals seeking structure in daily eating habits.
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