Vegan Meal Prep Ideas: 25 Easy UK-Friendly Meals
If vegan meal prep has ever turned into soggy salads, dry rice, or the same curry five days in a row, this is for you. Below are vegan meal prep ideas that hold up in the fridge, freeze well, and make the cheapest option the easiest option all week.
Quick Answer
What are the best vegan meal prep ideas?
The best vegan meal prep ideas are the ones that stay nice after 3–4 days, reheat well, and can be remixed with sauces so you don’t feel like you’re eating the same thing on repeat. Think: lentil bolognese, bean chilli, chickpea salad jars, tofu stir-fry packs, and freezer-friendly soups.
This guide gives you 25 ideas (breakfasts, lunches, dinners, and snacks), plus a simple UK-friendly prep plan that reduces last-minute supermarket trips and “we’ll just grab a takeaway.”
How to use this list (so it actually saves you money)
Most meal prep plans fail because they try to solve everything at once. Instead, use this list to build a week around four building blocks:
- One batch main (4–6 portions): chilli, curry, lentil stew.
- One no-cook lunch (3–4 portions): jar salad, sandwich filling, pasta salad.
- One breakfast repeat (4–5 portions): overnight oats, chia pudding, baked oats.
- One “rescue” freezer item (2–4 portions): soup, sauce, burritos, dumplings.
If you’re new to storage, start with Meal Prep Containers: what to buy (and what to skip) so you don’t end up with leaky lids and sad leftovers.
Vegan meal prep ideas for breakfast
Breakfast prep is the quickest win because it removes the daily decision. Pick one of these for the week, then keep toppings flexible (frozen berries, bananas, nuts, peanut butter, jam).
1) Overnight oats (3 flavours)
Base: oats + plant milk + chia seeds + pinch of salt. Then mix in cocoa, grated apple + cinnamon, or frozen berries.
2) Chia pudding jars
Great when you want something that feels lighter than oats. Add vanilla + lemon zest, or cocoa + banana.
3) Baked oats squares
Bake once, slice, and refrigerate or freeze. Ideal for busy mornings when you want “grab and go.”
4) Tofu scramble filling
Cook crumbled tofu with turmeric, smoked paprika, and onion. Use it for wraps or toast across 2–3 days.
5) Peanut butter banana breakfast wraps
Spread, roll, slice in half. If you freeze them, wrap tightly and defrost overnight for a portable breakfast.
Vegan meal prep ideas for lunch (that don’t go soggy)
Lunch prep is where money leaks: it’s easy to spend £6–£12 on a meal deal plus extras. These ideas are designed to travel well and still taste good on day three.
6) Chickpea “tuna” sandwich filling
Mash chickpeas with vegan mayo or yoghurt, Dijon mustard, lemon, and chopped gherkins. Keep bread separate until you eat.
7) Chickpea Greek-style jar salad
Layer dressing → chickpeas → chopped cucumber + peppers → tomatoes → leaves. Add olives or vegan feta if you like.
8) Peanut noodle salad
Cook noodles, rinse cold, mix with shredded veg, and a peanut-lime dressing. Add edamame or tofu for protein.
9) Lentil tabbouleh bowls
Cooked lentils + parsley + cucumber + tomato + lemon + olive oil. Holds up well and tastes better the next day.
10) Hummus snack boxes
Hummus + carrot sticks + cucumber + cherry tomatoes + pitta wedges. Add roasted chickpeas for crunch.
Vegan meal prep ideas for dinner (batch-cook friendly)
These are the “one pot, many portions” dinners that make weeknights calmer. Cook once, portion, and freeze any servings you won’t eat within a few days.
11) Lentil bolognese
Red lentils or green lentils work. Serve with pasta, on baked potatoes, or in a toastie.
12) Three-bean chilli
Beans + tomatoes + spices. Flexible, cheap, and brilliant for freezer portions.
13) Chickpea and spinach curry
Use tinned chickpeas and frozen spinach for a budget-friendly version. Serve with rice or flatbreads.
14) Lentil and vegetable stew
A “fridge clear-out” meal that tastes better the next day. Add a splash of vinegar or lemon before eating to lift it.
15) Roasted vegetable traybake + tahini sauce
Roast peppers, onions, courgette, broccoli, and chickpeas. Serve over couscous or quinoa with a tahini-lemon drizzle.
High-protein vegan meal prep ideas
If your vegan meal prep leaves you hungry, it’s usually because the meal is mostly carbs and veg with not much protein. These ideas are built around tofu, beans, lentils, and edamame.
16) Tofu stir-fry packs
Cook tofu until crisp, then portion with veg and a sauce. Reheat with rice or noodles.
17) Teriyaki tofu rice bowls
Make a quick sauce (soy, ginger, garlic, a little sugar). Add broccoli and spring onions.
18) Black bean burrito bowls
Rice + black beans + corn + salsa + lime. Add guac if you’ll eat it that day; otherwise keep avocado separate.
19) Edamame fried rice (freezer veg version)
Use frozen peas, carrots, edamame, and spring onion. A good “use what you’ve got” midweek meal.
20) Tempeh bacon BLT-style wraps
Marinate tempeh, pan-fry, and store separately. Assemble wraps as needed to avoid soggy lettuce.
Freezer-friendly vegan meal prep ideas
The freezer is the best defence against takeaway spending. If you have even two portions ready, you’ve bought yourself time on the nights when cooking feels impossible.
21) Portionable soups
Tomato and lentil, minestrone, carrot and ginger, or spicy black bean. Freeze flat so they stack.
22) Freezer burritos
Fill wraps with rice + beans + veg. Wrap tightly and freeze. Reheat until hot all the way through.
23) Lentil bolognese sauce (sauce-only prep)
Freeze sauce portions, then cook fresh pasta when you need a quick dinner.
24) Veggie burger patties
Make a batch and freeze between parchment. Cook from frozen in the oven or air fryer.
25) Cooked grains in 1-cup portions
Freeze cooked rice/quinoa in small portions so you can build bowls quickly.
Keep It Safe
Storage and reheating tips (especially for rice)
Good meal prep is safe meal prep. A few habits reduce risk and keep food tasting fresh:
- Cool cooked food quickly before refrigerating, then seal it.
- Label portions with dish + date so you don’t play fridge roulette on Thursday.
- Reheat thoroughly so it’s hot all the way through, then eat straight away.
- Be extra cautious with cooked rice. If you won’t eat it soon, freeze portions instead of stretching it.
For official UK guidance, see the Food Standards Agency home food fact checker and NHS advice on storing food and leftovers safely.
Turn takeaway temptation into a quick “time cost” check
Meal prep works best when you can pause before spending. If you’re hovering over a takeaway app, convert the cost into hours of take-home work. It turns a vague “it’s only a tenner” into a clear trade-off.
Quick Check
Convert a takeaway order into hours
Try the total including delivery and service fees. Then compare it to the meals you already have ready.
Hours to earn this order
0.0 hours
If you buy it weekly
That’s 0.0 hours of take-home time every week.
This is simple maths, not financial advice. It is just a calm way to pause before you spend.
If you want this mindset in your pocket, 118M8 helps you turn prices into hours in seconds so you can make the call that fits your week.
A simple vegan meal prep plan (60 minutes)
This is a realistic weekly reset that doesn’t require a spreadsheet. Aim for: one pot, one tray, one sauce, one breakfast.
- Cook one pot: lentil bolognese or bean chilli (4–6 portions).
- Roast one tray: mixed veg + chickpeas (3–4 portions).
- Make one sauce: tahini-lemon or peanut-lime (enough for the week).
- Prep breakfast: overnight oats or chia pudding (4–5 jars).
- Freeze two portions: future-you will thank you.
Once you’ve done that, you can mix and match: chilli with rice one night, bolognese on a jacket potato another, roasted veg in wraps for lunch.
About 118M8: pause before you spend (even on food)
Meal prep is a money habit disguised as a food habit. It reduces the small, frequent spends that add up: extra supermarket trips, snacks you didn’t plan, and last-minute takeaways. 118M8 is a simple companion that shows the time cost behind everyday spending decisions, so you can pause and choose what’s right for you in the moment.
- turn prices into hours of work instantly
- tap “Sleep on it” and get a 24-hour reminder
- track savings when you decide not to buy
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Frequently Asked Questions
What are good vegan meal prep ideas for beginners?
Start with 2 mains and 2 no-cook lunches you can mix and match: a lentil bolognese or chilli, a chickpea curry, and two jar salads plus overnight oats. Batch-cook one pot, roast one tray of veg, and prep one sauce so you can build different meals without cooking every day.
How long does vegan meal prep last in the fridge?
Many cooked vegan meals keep well for about 3–4 days in the fridge if they are cooled quickly, stored in sealed containers, and reheated until piping hot. Foods like cooked rice need extra care, so if you’re unsure, freeze portions instead of pushing fridge storage.
Can you freeze vegan meal prep?
Yes. Vegan chilli, lentil stews, bean curries, tomato-based sauces, cooked grains, and roasted veg generally freeze well. Freeze in flat, portion-sized containers, label with the date, and defrost safely in the fridge overnight or reheat from frozen if your microwave allows.
What protein should I use for vegan meal prep?
For budget-friendly vegan meal prep, rotate between lentils, chickpeas, beans, tofu, tempeh, and frozen edamame. A simple rule is to build each meal around one main protein plus a carb base and at least one vegetable for fibre and volume.
How do I stop vegan meal prep from getting boring?
Prep components rather than identical meals: one grain, one protein, one tray of roast veg, and two sauces (like tahini-lemon and a quick salsa). Changing sauces and add-ons (pickles, herbs, seeds) keeps the week varied without more cooking.
Stock images by Ella Olsson, Alisha Hieb, Bakd&Raw, Joanna Stołowicz, Lynnsey Schneider, Sirius Harrison and Torbjørn Helgesen via Unsplash.

