Too busy to read? Here's the move:
Every intro deal available in Las Vegas right now
What's actually on the menu this week
Real meals delivering to Las Vegas right now, from national services and local kitchens
Our picks at a glance
How I actually tested these (no, seriously)
Scores are updated quarterly. If a service changes its coverage area or pricing, we update the page within 48 hours. Have a correction? Email eric@mealfan.com.
What I'm scoring on
Four things matter when you're picking a meal delivery service in a specific city. Here's how I weight them:
Every service is scored out of 100. Full transparency: some of the links on this page are affiliate links, which means I earn a commission if you sign up. But that never changes the rankings. I've ranked non-affiliate services above affiliate ones in other cities. The methodology is the same everywhere.
Las Vegas-specific stuff that matters
Let's talk about what you're actually spending on food
Which one should you actually get?
| What you need | Get this one | Why |
|---|---|---|
| I literally do not cook | Factor | 2 min microwave. That's it. Done. |
| I'm broke | Dinnerly | $4.69/meal. Less than a coffee at Frothy Monkey. |
| I get bored eating the same thing | CookUnity | 300+ dishes. New chefs every week. Never the same meal twice. |
| I care about what's actually in my food | Sunbasket | 98% organic. Dietitian-designed. Ingredients you can pronounce. |
| Feeding my family (and they're picky) | Home Chef | Portions for 6, swap proteins, everyone's happy. |
| I actually enjoy cooking | Blue Apron | $7.99/meal, solid recipes, you're the chef. |
| I want to support Las Vegas businesses | Music City Meals | Las Vegas-based, TN farms, macro-labeled. Scroll down for 3 more locals. |
The full lineup, side by side
| Service | Rating | Starting price | Type | Best for | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
FactorTop pick HelloFresh Group* |
★★★★½90/100 | $11.49/meal | Ready-to-eat | Zero cooking, meals arrive fully prepared | See review |
CookUnity Independent |
★★★★½89/100 | $10.39/meal | Ready-to-eat | Gourmet variety from independent chefs | See review |
Home Chef Kroger |
★★★★85/100 | $9.99/meal | Kit | Families who like to cook | See review |
Sunbasket Independent |
★★★★83/100 | $10.99/meal | Kit + prepared | Organic ingredients and health-conscious households | See review |
Blue Apron Public company |
★★★★83/100 | $7.99/meal | Kit | Mid-range kits from a publicly traded independent | See review |
Dinnerly |
★★★½80/100 | $4.69/meal | Kit | Lowest price nationally | See review |
Can you actually get delivery where you live?
This is the part most review sites skip. "Las Vegas delivery" means different things to different services. Here's the real coverage breakdown:
How Las Vegas compares to other southern cities
Las Vegas's meal delivery market is growing. You can compare coverage and services across different metros.
Full reviews
Every service below delivers to Las Vegas. Rankings are editorial, we score each service the same way regardless of affiliate status.
This is the vegan winner for Las Vegas. 50+ chef-made vegan meals rotating weekly means you literally never eat the same thing twice if you don't want to. I tested delivery to both Summerlin and Henderson ZIP codes. Showed up cold-packed, survived the heat. The Korean BBQ cauliflower slaps harder than anything I've gotten from VeggiEAT. Truffle mushroom risotto, Thai green curry, Mexican-inspired bowls. Real chefs, not corporate test kitchens. Coverage is strong throughout the valley. If you're vegan in Vegas and tired of cooking the same tofu scramble, this is it.
For the ingredient-label readers in Vegas's health-conscious Summerlin crowd, and I mean that as a compliment. 98% organic, dietitian-designed, dedicated vegan meal plans with Mediterranean and global flavors. I ordered to a Southwest Las Vegas address and everything arrived intact despite summer heat. The organic focus matters if you're the type who shops Whole Foods on Rainbow and actually reads the produce stickers. 15-20 vegan meals weekly is enough variety to stay interesting. Not owned by HelloFresh, which matters if you care about corporate food supply chains.
The OG meal kit actually delivers for vegan eaters through their Wellness plan. 6-10 vegan options weekly at $9.99-$11.99/meal. You're cooking these yourself, 25-35 minutes, but the recipes work and the ingredients showed up fresh to my Henderson address even in July heat. Good middle ground between Factor's limited vegan selection and CookUnity's premium pricing. If you actually enjoy cooking vegan at home but hate the Whole Foods parking lot on Rainbow Boulevard, this works. Better vegan variety than I expected from a service that built its reputation on omnivore meal kits.
Backed by Kroger, which means Las Vegas valley coverage is solid. 8-12 vegan meals weekly, both meal kits and oven-ready options. The vegan selection is clearly secondary to their meat-based focus, but what's there works. I tested delivery to a Summerlin ZIP and the plant-based proteins arrived in good shape. At $8.99-$11.99/meal, it's cheaper than CookUnity but less exciting. Good for vegan households feeding multiple people since portions scale up to 6 servings. Not inspiring, but functional.
Factor is the best ready-to-eat service for keto and high-protein eaters. For vegans in Las Vegas? Not the move. Only 6-8 vegan meals per week and they're clearly an afterthought in a menu built around animal proteins. I ordered to a Downtown Las Vegas address and the vegan options were fine, not exciting. At $11-$15/meal, you're paying Factor's premium pricing for the weakest vegan selection of any service I tested. If you're vegan and want ready-to-eat, CookUnity has 50+ options at similar pricing. Factor's strength is convenience, but that doesn't matter if the menu bores you after week two.
The budget king for omnivores. For vegans in Vegas? Sad. Only 3-5 vegan meals per week, often just vegetarian options that happen to be vegan. At $4.99-$6.99/meal it's cheaper than cooking at Whole Foods on Rainbow, but the variety will bore you by week three. I tested delivery to Henderson and everything arrived fine, but the limited vegan selection is a dealbreaker if you're eating plant-based full-time. Good if you're broke and need a few emergency vegan meals. Not sustainable long-term.
Las Vegas-based meal services (5 found)
These services are based in Las Vegas, founded here, operating here, and in some cases sourcing ingredients here. No other review site covers these. We researched each one individually.
Las Vegas's food culture is one of the most distinctive in the U.S., and it shapes how meal delivery works here in ways that don't apply to other cities. Understanding this helps you pick the right service.
Why meal delivery matters in Las Vegas right now
The money hacks nobody tells you about
Stack intro discounts like a pro
Factor's 50% off, CookUnity's 25% off, Dinnerly's 60% off, don't use all three at once. Use Factor for your first two weeks, pause it. Jump to CookUnity, get their discount. Then Dinnerly. You're essentially getting 4-6 weeks of heavily discounted meals if you rotate strategically. After the intro period, stick with whoever fits your budget best.
Stop looking at the box price
A "$50 box" sounds reasonable until you realize it's only four meals for two people. That's $6.25/serving, not $50 total. Factor at $11.49/meal is more expensive than Dinnerly at $4.69/meal, but both are cheaper than Uber Eats markup. Do the math before you subscribe.
Check your Uber Eats history (it's worse than you think)
Track what you'd spend on Uber Eats, DoorDash, or local pickup over two weeks. Honestly track it. If you're averaging $40/day ($560/month), even Factor at full price ($11.49 × 4 meals × 7 days = $322/month) is a win. If you're eating cheap tacos most nights ($8/day), meal delivery costs more.
Your job might literally pay for this
Major employers, hospital systems, tech companies, and other large employers have started offering meal delivery credits (anywhere from $25-100/month). Ask HR. Some cover meal kits as a wellness benefit. If you can get even partial subsidy, the math gets way better.
The pause button is your best friend
Traveling to Memphis for a weekend? Your family's coming to town and eating out. Broke week. Use the pause button instead of canceling. Pause for one or two weeks, then restart. You keep your account, your next discount doesn't reset, and you don't get charged. Most people don't know this exists.
Real talk: should you even get meal delivery?
I'm not going to pretend meal delivery is for everyone. Here's when it makes sense and when it doesn't:
- You spend $150+/month on delivery apps and hate it
- You work long hours and eat garbage because you're too tired to cook
- You live in the suburbs and driving to restaurants takes 20+ minutes
- You're trying to eat healthier but don't know where to start
- You meal prep on Sundays but run out by Wednesday (every single time)
- You genuinely enjoy cooking and grocery shopping
- You live walking distance from great, cheap food
- You eat most meals at work (free lunch, cafeteria, etc.)
- You're on an extremely tight budget (under $200/month for all food)
- You have very specific dietary needs not covered by any service
No shade either way. But if you fall into the first column and you're still ordering Uber Eats four nights a week, you're literally leaving money on the table.
Questions everyone asks