Need some last-minute, cheap sides for Thanksgiving? Here are the most unfussy recipes to make on a budget.
Thanksgiving cooking has a way of enchanting the whole house: the warmth of the oven, the scent of melting butter, the familiar rhythm of everyone drifting toward the kitchen. But even the most comforting holiday traditions can feel a touch stressful when you’re navigating rising grocery prices or stretching your budget to feed a bigger table.
In restaurant kitchens, chefs keep a close eye on food costs by focusing on the main elements of each dish and assuming pantry staples—like cooking fats, milk and spices—are already on hand and shared across the menu. Home cooks do the same thing without thinking about it! The butter that enriches your rolls also glosses the green beans. The milk or cream in the mashed potatoes comes from the same carton you’re using for tomorrow’s coffee.
Luckily, most of the traditional Thanksgiving dishes we love are quite simple and use components we already have in our kitchens (like oils, butter, seasonings and spices). This makes it easier than you’d think to feed a crowd. When we focus on the cost of key components, a full spread of sides under $5 becomes entirely possible.
Below, you’ll find 10 cheap Thanksgiving side dishes that prove a warm, memorable Thanksgiving doesn’t require a big budget, just a little careful planning.
1 / 10
DAN ROBERTS FOR TASTE OF HOME
Recipes Mashed Potatoes
The potatoes are the star of everyone’s favorite Thanksgiving side dish, and they’re wonderfully affordable: about $1 worth of russets for a full batch. Everything else—milk, butter, salt and pepper—comes straight from the fridge or pantry. Altogether, a standard recipe costs around $2.50 for a six-serving batch. Double the recipe for 12 people, and you’ll be at about $5.
A 3-pound bag of sweet potatoes generally runs a little over $3. This recipe uses 2 pounds, so the sweet potatoes themselves are just over $2. Even with the added butter, maple syrup, brown sugar and a generous sprinkle of cinnamon, this gloriously sticky-sweet side dish costs about $3.50 for a five-person serving.
Carrots have remained one of the most consistent bargains in the produce aisle—usually $1 to $1.50 per pound—and they carry this dish. The thyme, oil, honey and salt are tiny amounts pulled from staples you likely already have in the pantry, keeping this side around $2 to $2.50 for a four-person serving. When doubled for eight people, this dish will still be around $5 or less.
Fresh green beans usually cost around $2 per pound, and that’s your biggest cost for this recipe. The butter and seasonings only add a small fraction to the overall cost, which means the whole dish will cost about $2.50 to $3 for a small family-sized batch.
Cranberries themselves are surprisingly affordable—usually $2 to $3 per bag in November—and they make up almost the entire cost of a standard cranberry sauce recipe. The sugar and the liquid (water or a splash of orange juice) are probably already in your kitchen, keeping this bright, tart sauce around $2.50 to $3.50 for a 12-person serving.
A small butternut squash (about 2 pounds) typically costs $2.50 to $3, and that makes up nearly the full cost of this dish. Staples like a pat of butter, a little brown sugar and a few warming spices finish the recipe, bringing the six-serving batch to about $4 or less.
Brussels sprouts remain one of the best-value vegetables on the holiday table, usually around $2 to $2.50 per pound. Tossing the sprouts in ingredients like honey, lemon juice, olive oil and garlic salt adds pennies to the final total. Altogether, a six-serving sheet pan recipe lands right around the $5 mark.
Two cans of corn—one whole kernel, one cream-style—account for about $2 to $2.50, making them the main driver of the cost of this dish. The other ingredients (milk, eggs, butter, sugar, flour and seasonings) are common staples, so the total for this sweet dish comes to $4.50 or less for 10 people.
Flour is the hero of this recipe, and even a generous amount costs only a few cents when portioned from a larger bag. Milk, eggs and butter round things out using ingredients most cooks always have on hand. And because these rolls are homemade—not pulled from the freezer section—you get something that feels genuinely special without spending any extra. A two-dozen batch of warm dinner rolls typically lands around $3 to $4 total.
In a recipe like this, the greens make up most of the cost; using a 5-ounce bag comes out to about $3 for the base. Pecans, Parmesan and a pear add a bit more, but since the dressing uses pantry staples, the full salad still comes in around $4 to $5 for six people.
Forty-eight teams started these World Cup finals a month ago — now only six remain. Tomorrow that will be whittled down to a final four. Morocco became the first quarter-finalists to be knocked out, losing 2-0 to the seemingly unstoppable France on Thursday, before brave Belgium finally succumbed to Spain in Los Angeles on Friday
Erling Haaland stands at 6 feet, 5 inches, an intimidating force who can make fellow soccer players look tiny in stature and talent. Scoring seven goals across four World Cup matches entering Saturday, the Norwegian player has been described as a machine. But if you ask some loyal new fans, he’s also a babygirl and
One way to get an edge in fantasy football? By keeping a close eye on offseason chatter. Which players are impressing reporters in OTAs? Which roster battles could go a different way than the average fan expects? Which rookie is going to end up rocketing up draft boards by August? These five players are fairly
On June 23, ESPN NFL Draft analyst Matt Miller revealed that he was in a car crash and was brutally injured. The accident nearly caused him to lose his life, as his arm had to be amputated to keep him alive. Now that he is making his way back after a drastic change, Miller announced
Forty-eight teams started these World Cup finals a month ago — now only six remain. Tomorrow that will be whittled down to a final four. Morocco became the first quarter-finalists to be knocked out, losing 2-0 to the seemingly unstoppable France on Thursday, before brave Belgium finally succumbed to Spain in Los Angeles on Friday
Erling Haaland stands at 6 feet, 5 inches, an intimidating force who can make fellow soccer players look tiny in stature and talent. Scoring seven goals across four World Cup matches entering Saturday, the Norwegian player has been described as a machine. But if you ask some loyal new fans, he’s also a babygirl and
One way to get an edge in fantasy football? By keeping a close eye on offseason chatter. Which players are impressing reporters in OTAs? Which roster battles could go a different way than the average fan expects? Which rookie is going to end up rocketing up draft boards by August? These five players are fairly
On June 23, ESPN NFL Draft analyst Matt Miller revealed that he was in a car crash and was brutally injured. The accident nearly caused him to lose his life, as his arm had to be amputated to keep him alive. Now that he is making his way back after a drastic change, Miller announced
Colton Nussmeier has run out of options to fix his eligibility for 2026. On July 9, the UIL State Executive Committee voted 4–1 to reject his appeal, a decision first shared by 247Sports’ Mike Roach. With that, his plan to play his senior season at Denton Ryan is over. The door at his old school
Weekly Wrap: Making It Rain with Trump Bills Welcome back to Friday! This is the Breitbart Business Digest weekly wrap, our septidialogic sweep through the economic and financial news. This week the economy failed to get indigestion from the high price of gas, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told us about getting fed at the Fed, Trump
Business seminar in Munich highlights Hong Kong's strategic roles amidst global shifts (with photos) ****************************************************************************************** The Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office, Berlin (HKETO Berlin), promoted Hong Kong's unique advantages and strategic roles at the seminar "Hong Kong's strategic role amidst geopolitical tensions" on June 18 (Munich time) in Munich, Germany. Senior executives, investors