Cookout on a Budget:
Eat Well for Under $10, $15 & $20
Cookout is already the best value in fast food. But there are smarter ways to order at every budget level. Here’s exactly what to get.
Cookout Budget Guide
Cookout’s Regular Tray ($7.39) is already one of the best deals in American fast food — one main, two sides, and a large drink for less than the cost of one combo meal at most competitors. But knowing how to order smartly at each budget level unlocks even more value from the menu.
The Regular Cookout Tray at $7.39 handles this tier by itself. You get one full-size main, two sides, and a large drink. The question is how to build the most satisfying version within that frame.
Best $8.99 Tray build at a glance
At this budget level, Cookout can feed two people a complete meal — something that’s genuinely impossible at most other fast-food chains in 2026.
Two Junior Trays at $12.78 is the most efficient way to feed two people at Cookout. It costs less than one combo meal at Chick-fil-A and gives both people a full meal with customization options.
This is where Cookout’s value becomes almost absurd compared to any competitor. Under $20 comfortably covers a family of three or a group looking for variety.
Cheapest standalone items on the Cookout menu
If you need to eat at Cookout for under $5 without a Tray, these are your options:
| Item | Price | Calories | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cheese Dog | $0.99 | 146 Cal | Most affordable item on the menu |
| Plain Hot Dog | $0.99 | 260 Cal | Tied for cheapest item |
| Mustard Relish Hot Dog | $0.99 | 400 Cal | Most filling under $1 |
| Chicken Quesadilla | $1.99 | 220 Cal | Best filling-to-price ratio |
| Cheese Quesadilla | $1.99 | 180 Cal | Vegetarian-friendly |
| Bacon Ranch Wrap | $1.99 | 420 Cal | Most calories per dollar at this price |
| Corn Dog | $1.99 | 220 Cal | Good as a Tray side or standalone |
| Chicken Nuggets (5 pc) | $1.99 | 199 Cal | Kid-friendly |
| Cajun Fries (standalone) | $2.39 | 350 Cal | Best standalone side |
| Milkshake (any flavor) | From $3.69 | 510–900 Cal | Best standalone dessert value in fast food |
| Junior Cookout Tray | $6.39 | Varies | Best complete meal under $7 |
The college student Cookout guide
Cookout’s core customer is the college student who wants real food, not a gas station hot dog, at 1 AM on a Friday. If you’re working with a tight weekly food budget, here’s how to get the most from Cookout:
The weekly Cookout rotation
- Post-class weekday: Junior Tray ($6.39) — small burger, fries, drink. Under seven dollars, fills you up for hours.
- Friday night: Regular Tray with milkshake upgrade (~$8.99). The weekly treat that costs less than a single drink at most bars.
- Post-game or late-night: Two Chicken Quesadillas ($3.98) + any milkshake ($3.69). Under $8, satisfying, and you’re ordering off the value items intentionally.
- Group run (4 people): Each person orders a Junior Tray ($6.39). Total: $25.56 for four full meals. Split an Oreo Shake ($4.49) between two people for dessert.
The Cookout double-up trick
The Tray lets you “double up” on a single side instead of choosing two different ones. Doubling the Cajun Fries ($2.39 side × 2 quantity within the Tray) costs no extra — it’s the same Tray price. If you love a particular side, you don’t have to pick two different ones just to fill the two-side slot.
The milkshake math
A regular milkshake costs $3.69 standalone. Upgrading your Tray drink to a milkshake costs only $1.60 extra. If you’re getting a Tray and want a milkshake, always upgrade rather than order the milkshake separately — you save $2.09 on the same shake. You can see the full variety of flavors on the milkshake menu.
Cookout’s Regular Tray ($7.39) feeds one person better than any comparable fast-food combo meal in 2026. Two Junior Trays ($12.78) feed two people for less than one Chick-fil-A combo. Three Junior Trays ($19.17) feed three people for less than two McDonald’s combos. The value math at every level points in the same direction.



