What does my loved one eat in aged care?

How much aged care homes spend on food, what to look for on a tour, and how to use food spend data to compare providers.

Updated 8 March 20266 min readGovernment-verified figures

Key takeaways

  • The national average food spend in aged care is $13.26 per resident per day — that’s about $4.42 per meal.
  • Not-for-profit providers spend 17% more on food than for-profit providers on average ($14.12 vs $11.84/day).
  • You can check any facility’s food budget in our provider search — it’s one of the most revealing quality indicators.

Why food matters

Food in aged care is about far more than nutrition. It’s routine, comfort, social connection, and dignity. For many residents, mealtimes are the highlight of the day — a chance to sit with others, enjoy something familiar, and feel cared for.

The reality, however, is confronting. Research from Dietitians Australia suggests that malnutrition affects between 22% and 50% of aged care residents. Inadequate food budgets are a significant contributor. When facilities cut costs, food is often the first casualty.

Food quality is also one of the first things families notice during visits. The smell of the dining room, the presentation of meals, whether residents are eating in a communal setting or alone in their rooms — these are powerful signals about the culture of care.

The numbers

Here’s what Australian aged care homes actually spend on food, based on mandatory annual financial reports:

Provider typeAverage food spendPer meal (approx.)
National average$13.26/resident/day~$4.42
Not-for-profit$14.12/resident/day~$4.71
For-profit$11.84/resident/day~$3.95
Government$15.43/resident/day~$5.14

To put this in perspective: $13.26 per day covers breakfast, lunch, dinner, and snacks. That’s less than the cost of a single takeaway coffee and sandwich in most Australian cities. A basic café meal costs $8–$12.

The gap between provider types is significant. Not-for-profit homes spend approximately $2.28 more per resident per day than for-profit homes. Over a year, that’s an extra $832 invested in each resident’s meals — enough for meaningfully better ingredients, more variety, and fresher preparation.

What to look for on a tour

Data tells you the budget. Your visit tells you how it’s used. Here are five signs of a facility that takes food seriously:

5 signs of good food culture:
  1. Fresh ingredients visible — a working kitchen, not just a reheating station. Look for fresh fruit, vegetables, and evidence of on-site cooking.
  2. Menu variety — ask to see the current menu rotation. Good facilities offer choice at each meal and rotate menus on a 4–6 week cycle.
  3. Residents eating in dining rooms — communal dining is a sign of social engagement. If many residents are eating alone in their rooms, ask why.
  4. Dietary accommodations posted — the kitchen should know each resident’s dietary needs. Look for posted dietary boards or ask how they manage allergies and cultural requirements.
  5. A chef on staff — facilities with a dedicated cook or chef (not just reheated catering) generally deliver better food. Ask who prepares the meals.

If you can, try the food. Many facilities will offer a meal during your tour if you ask. Nothing tells you more about food quality than tasting it yourself.

Questions to ask providers

When visiting or speaking with aged care providers, these eight questions will give you a clear picture of their approach to food:

  1. What is your daily food budget per resident? — If they won’t answer, that’s a red flag.
  2. Do you have a dietitian on staff or on contract? — Facilities with dietitian oversight tend to manage nutrition better.
  3. How often does the menu rotate? — A 4–6 week rotation is standard; shorter can mean repetitive meals.
  4. How do you accommodate cultural and religious dietary needs? — Ask for specific examples, not just “we can manage that.”
  5. How do you handle texture-modified meals? — Residents who need puréed or soft food deserve the same flavour and variety.
  6. Can residents eat outside standard mealtimes? — Flexibility matters, especially for residents who may not be hungry at set times.
  7. What snacks are available between meals? — Good facilities offer a range of snacks, fresh fruit, and drinks throughout the day.
  8. Can families join for meals? — Family dining is a positive sign of openness and community.

How to compare food spend

In our provider search, every facility profile includes food spend data in the Services tab. You can use this to compare facilities on your shortlist side by side.

Context matters: Low food spend doesn’t always mean bad food. Some facilities reduce costs through bulk buying, onsite gardens, or partnerships with local suppliers. Conversely, high spend doesn’t guarantee quality if the money goes to expensive catering contracts rather than fresh ingredients. That said, consistently low food spend (below $10/day) is a red flag that warrants questions.

When comparing, look at food spend alongside other quality indicators:

  • Care minutes — good staffing and good food together signal a facility that invests in residents.
  • Star Ratings — the overall quality score reflects multiple dimensions including resident experience.
  • Provider type — as the data shows, NFP and government providers spend more on food on average.

What’s changing

The Aged Care Act 2024 strengthens requirements around food quality in residential aged care. Under the new framework, providers will face stronger obligations to deliver nutritionally adequate meals that meet residents’ cultural, medical, and personal preferences.

The Aged Care Quality and Safety Commission has also increased its focus on food quality during assessments. Facilities are now expected to demonstrate not just adequate nutrition, but that food service contributes to residents’ quality of life and dignity.

For families, this means food quality data will become even more transparent and comparable in coming years. In the meantime, the data and tour observations described in this guide are your best tools for making an informed choice.

Frequently Asked Questions

Disclaimer: This guide is for general information only and does not constitute financial, legal, or medical advice. Government rates and thresholds change periodically — always verify figures with Services Australia or a qualified aged care financial adviser before making decisions. Last verified: 8 March 2026.