Modèle de Liste de Courses Gratuit
Un modèle imprimable de liste de courses hebdomadaire à partager avec les clients. Organisé par catégorie d'aliments pour des achats efficaces. Imprimez ou enregistrez en PDF gratuitement.
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Weekly Grocery List
Vegetables
Fruit
Protein (meat, fish, eggs)
Plant protein (tofu, legumes, tempeh)
Dairy and alternatives
Grains, bread and cereals
Healthy fats (nuts, oils, avocado)
Pantry and condiments
Frozen foods
Snacks
Beverages
Other
Notes (budget, store, preferences):
Auto-generate grocery lists from meal plans
With Foodzilla, grocery lists are generated automatically from your client's meal plan. They update in real time when you swap ingredients or adjust portions. Clients can view their list on their phone and tick items off as they shop.
How to pair your grocery list with your meal plan
A grocery list works best as a direct extension of the meal plan. Once you have finalised your client's weekly meals, go through each recipe and meal and transfer every ingredient to the appropriate category on the grocery list. Note the quantity needed for the full week, not just per meal, to save clients from buying multiple small quantities of the same item.
Organising the list by food category mirrors how most supermarkets are laid out. This saves time at the shop and reduces the likelihood of clients wandering through sections full of processed foods or impulse purchases. It is a small structural choice that has a real impact on adherence.
Grocery list strategies that support better nutrition adherence
- Fill out the grocery list before clients do their weekly shop, not after.
- Include quantities for each item so clients buy the right amount and reduce food waste.
- Highlight any new or unfamiliar ingredients to prevent clients from skipping them.
- Group ingredients that are used across multiple meals to simplify bulk buying.
- Add a notes section for substitutions clients can make if something is out of stock.
- Send the grocery list and meal plan together so clients can reference both while shopping.
Frequently asked questions
Why should nutritionists give clients a grocery list template?
A structured grocery list helps clients translate their meal plan into action. Without a shopping list, clients often rely on existing habits at the supermarket, which can undermine the dietary changes you have recommended. A categorised grocery list organises shopping by food group, reduces impulse buying, and makes it easier for clients to stick to their nutrition programme.
How should a nutrition grocery list be organised?
The most effective grocery lists are organised by food category rather than by meal. Categories such as vegetables, fruit, protein foods, dairy and alternatives, grains, healthy fats, and pantry staples mirror supermarket layout and make shopping faster. The template on this page uses this structure to keep the list practical and easy to use.
Can I use this template for clients on specific diets?
Yes. This is a blank template you can fill in with foods appropriate to your client's dietary pattern, whether that is a Mediterranean diet, low FODMAP, vegan, gluten-free, or any other approach. Simply fill in the relevant items under each category and leave sections blank if they are not applicable.
How do I connect the grocery list to the meal plan?
After completing the weekly meal plan, work through each meal and compile the ingredients into the grocery list by category. Group similar ingredients together (for example, all produce in the vegetables and fruit sections) and note the quantity needed for the week. This ensures clients buy exactly what they need without waste.
Is there a digital version of this grocery list?
Foodzilla automatically generates grocery lists from your client's meal plan. When you build or update a meal plan in Foodzilla, a shopping list is created instantly with all ingredients organised by category. Clients can view and tick off items on their phone as they shop.