Slated builds your weekly dinner menu. You review, the family agrees, and the groceries show up.
Hours of recipe browsing, ingredient checking, schedule juggling, and shopping list building. By the time you have a plan, you're too tired to care.
You're supposed to know what everyone wants—without anyone telling you. Then dinner arrives and suddenly they have opinions. Silence when it matters. Complaints when it's too late.
"What's for dinner?" It arrives every day like clockwork. More of a standing order than a question. It assumes you'll figure it out and deliver.
No recipe browsing required.
Slated automatically creates your weekly meal plan based on your preferences, schedule, and pantry.

Want something spicier? Prefer fish over chicken? Just tell Slated and get an updated recipe.

Send the plan to your family. They tell you what sounds good BEFORE you shop. No more guessing.

Slated creates your grocery list (checking your pantry first) and sends it to Instacart or Amazon.

5 PM arrives. The family is onboard and happy.


A complete weekly plan appears before you even open the app. No browsing. No building. Just approve and move on with your life.

Your meal plan becomes a shopping list. Slated checks your pantry first, then sends it to Instacart or Amazon Fresh. Done.

Set your dietary needs once and every plan respects them automatically. No checking labels, no scanning ingredients.

"Make this dairy-free." "I only have 20 minutes." "Use the pork chops instead." Tell it what changed. It rewrites instantly.
"I used to spend Sunday afternoon planning meals. Now I spend 30 seconds approving the plan. I don't plan dinner anymore. I just sign off on it."
Sarah M.
Marketing Director, Mom of 2
"I used to dread the moment someone said 'I don't want that'—after I'd already planned and shopped. Now they vote on Sunday. I finally know what they actually want before I buy anything."
David K.
Stay-at-home Dad, Family of 5
Start Free
free trial
No credit card required
Then just
$7.99/mo
Less than one takeout order
That moment when everyone knows what's for dinner—because they helped pick it.