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Healthy Lunchboxes On Budget: 10 Easy Fibre Swaps

The National Tribune
The National Tribune
The National Tribune
  • Health
  • 2 Feb 2026 9:09 am AEST Date Time
  • Share
Courtesy of Cancer Council WA

With children heading back to school, a new price and nutrition analysis shows that simple supermarket swaps can significantly boost kids’ fibre intake without increasing grocery bills.

Our latest analysis shows that replacing highly processed lunchbox foods with wholegrain and vegetable-based options can more than double fibre intake, using familiar foods available at most supermarkets.

Small swaps, big health benefits

We found that a low-fibre lunchbox costing around $5.00, typically made up of white bread, wraps or rolls, packaged snacks such as Shapes, Jatz, LCM bars and Jumpys, plus an apple, provides an average of seven grams of fibre.

By making simple swaps for wholemeal and wholegrain options, and choosing snacks like wholegrain crackers, roasted legumes, popcorn, hummus and vegetables, families can pack a high-fibre lunchbox for a similar price that delivers an average of 18 grams of fibre.

Fibre plays a vital role in children’s digestion, gut health, sustained energy levels and classroom concentration. It helps children feel fuller for longer and supports long-term health.

How much fibre do kids need?

  • Children aged 4-8 years need around 18 grams of fibre per day
  • Children aged 9-13 years need 20-24 grams per day

Ten easy lunchbox swaps to boost fibre

  • Swap white bread for wholemeal or wholegrain varieties
  • Replace sugary spreads like jam with hummus, avocado or nut butters (if nuts are allowed at school)
  • Swap sugary snack bars for wholegrain cereal bites
  • Choose plain popcorn instead of packets of chips or salty snacks
  • Pack carrot sticks with hummus instead of packaged snacks
  • Use wholemeal wraps instead of white wraps
  • Replace flavoured yoghurt pouches with plain yoghurt and fresh fruit
  • Use wholegrain crackers instead of refined varieties
  • Swap processed snacks for trail mix, fruit bread or roasted legume snacks
  • Use canned legumes such as baked beans instead of frozen pastry or party foods like chicken nuggets

Lunchbox comparison: processed vs healthier swaps

Our analysis compared two lunchboxes per day, one highly processed and one using healthier swaps across a school week. Each lunchbox included a main item, two snacks, an apple and a drink, with an average cost of $5.00.

Monday

Processed lunchbox

White bread sandwich with jam

LCM bar

Shapes

Juice box

Apple

Cost: $3.70 | Fibre: 7.3g

Healthier swap

Fruit bread with ricotta

Weet-Bix Bites

Carrot sticks, hummus and wholegrain rice crackers

Water

Apple

Cost: $4.16 | Fibre: 26.9g

One serve of vegetables

Tuesday

Processed lunchbox

Bacon and cheese scroll

Flavoured yoghurt pouch

Jumpys potato snacks

Juice box

Apple

Cost: $6.16 | Fibre: 7g

Healthier swap

Wholemeal roll with chicken, cheese and tomato

Plain yoghurt with strawberries

Popcorn and carrot sticks

Water

Apple

Cost: $6.03 | Fibre: 14.5g

One serve of vegetables

Wednesday

Processed lunchbox

White wrap with ham and cheese

Le Snak

Iddy Biddy Fruit Snacks

Juice box

Apple

Cost: $5.53 | Fibre: 8.7g

Healthier swap

Wholemeal chicken and grated carrot wrap

Vita-Wheats with cheese

Sultanas

Water

Apple

Cost: $4.14 | Fibre: 15.9g

One serve of vegetables

Thursday

Processed lunchbox

Salami stick, cheese stringer and Jatz

Roll-Up

Jumpys potato snack

Juice box

Apple

Cost: $6.12 | Fibre: 7.6g

Healthier swap

Boiled eggs, sliced cheese, wholegrain rice crackers, cucumber and carrot sticks

Fruit bread

Roasted fava beans

Water

Apple

Cost: $5.24 | Fibre: 17.7g

Two serves of vegetables

Friday

Processed lunchbox

Chicken nuggets

Tiny Teddies

Potato Stix

Juice box

Apple

Cost: $4.49 | Fibre: 6.1g

Healthier swap

Baked beans

Plain yoghurt with strawberries

Popcorn and carrot sticks

Water

Apple

Cost: $4.48 | Fibre: 18.9g

Two serves of vegetables

Lunchbox cost and nutritional comparison used product information and full-price supermarket data sourced from Coles and Woolworths online in December 2025.

Looking for more healthy lunchbox ideas? Find recipes, tips, and resources on the Crunch&Sip® website.

/Public Release. View in full here.
Tags:cancer council, Cancer Council WA, Coles, energy, gut health, internet, legumes, nutrition, school, supermarket, Woolworths

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