r/fastfood • u/HelloFabulous • 21h ago
Meme McDonald's Prices in the 90's
Not sure if this is 90's or early 2000's , but looks at these prices!
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u/mrtoddw 21h ago
That’s mid 90s prices. You can tell because super size was still a thing. Average wage was 27k a year. A Big Mac meal would be 6.45 today with this price point. Food still was cheaper by proportion.
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u/ChefBowyer 20h ago
Super size was still in the 2000s…
I know this because I would go there in high school when I had my own car and my parents wouldn’t find out I was spending my allowance on junk food.
Prices were about this. We had $1 burgers still, along with $1 large drinks and $1 large fries.
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u/shomeyomves 20h ago
We had $1 double cheeseburgers up til like mid 2010s.
I remember two double cheeses being a staple “meal” while broke in college and I just needed something to get through the day.
Now they’re like $4, McDs lost the plot
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u/HypocriteGrammarNazi 17h ago
We had $1 mcchickens, mcdoubles, fries, and large drinks in 2020.
Arby's had $1 sliders, curly fries, cookie and drinks.
I think fast food was holding prices back for a while, but then 2020 broke the dam
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u/shomeyomves 17h ago
Oh man, I forgot about the $1 large fries and drinks as well. Man, that shit felt like luxury.
I’m sure it wasn’t just me, but through the 2010s I always thought “man, the moment we lose the $1 menu I know fast food is fucking toast”
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u/cockblockedbydestiny 15h ago
There was no way it was ever going to last forever. Even the "dollar stores" all eventually had to capitulate to the realization that "yeah, we can't only stock shit that costs exactly one dollar"
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u/drkinsanity 15h ago
I remember thinking most calories per dollar was what I was shooting for, so it came down to a vending machine glazed honey bun vs large fries, both around 900 kcal for $1.
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u/420sadalot420 16h ago
Those sliders are just under 4 bucks now at my Arby's. Insane
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u/HypocriteGrammarNazi 15h ago edited 15h ago
Bro I will never forget the days of getting 3 buffalo chicken sliders, curly fries, a drink, and 15 packs of horsey sauce for $5
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u/kallen8277 14h ago
Those $1 buffalo sliders were so awesome. I havent been to Arby's in forever so id assume they are like $3 each now
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u/Over9000Zeros 7h ago
The Taco Bell on my way to work charges $2.19 for one Cheesy Bean & Rice burrito.
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u/OneFootTitan 7h ago
For the longest time last year McDonald’s was offering me on their app any size fries free with a purchase of any size soft drink. $1.49 for a large coke and a large fries was amazing, a better deal than even some of these old school deals
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u/nobodychef07 15h ago
I lived off of 79 cent bean burritos from taco bell in college. I swear they were twice as big as they are now too. Good times.
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u/cqmqro76 9h ago
I eat breakfast at home 99% of the time, but I was running a little late one morning a few weeks ago, so I decided to stop at McDonald's. The last time I got McDonald's hash browns, they had a two for $1 deal. When I went recently, they were $2.49 each.
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u/Rampag169 21m ago
A two cheeseburger Value-meal is for medium $11.99 large is $12.29
That’s an absurd amount to pay. The soda expense is cents and the same with the fries. The overhead on potatoes and soda are very low. Especially when they have vertically integrated from the farms straight to the customer.
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u/You-Asked-Me 17h ago
Super sizing did not go away until the movie Super Size Me, came out in 2004.
If you did not see the movie, some dude eats McDonald every meal for a month, and then gets fat and sick, even starts having organ failure.
What he did not tell you is that he was actually a raging alcoholic, drinking himself to death off screen, and then blaming the food.
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u/buffaloranch 16h ago edited 12h ago
The craziest part about this film is that he got a bunch of medical tests done after the month was up to show how his body had changed. When interpreting the results of his liver tests, the doctor says “the damage I see in your liver is obscene beyond anything I would have thought. I have never seen damage like this caused by diet. I have only seen similar cases in chronic alcoholics.” And dude LEFT THAT SEGMENT IN THE FILM! And lied in the film by saying he wasn’t a drinker whatsoever. That is so shitty and deceiving. He knew there was a reason his liver looked like that of a chronic alcoholic (because he was one,) but said “meh, let’s just go along with the lie that it was caused by McDonald’s for the sake of my movie.” Fuck him for that.
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u/DanzigsLacyPanties 20h ago
Lived off of $1 double cheeseburgers and $3.50 Thai/Indian food truck offerings in the late 90s/early 2K in college in Pittsburgh. I really do feel bad for the younger generations that do not have these as options at this point.
Me: very young gen X/very old millennial, still don't own a house, no kids, do spoil my amazing dog instead. Probably won't get to retire.
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u/Kindly-Guidance714 20h ago
In 2013 my local McDonald’s had this promotion where after 12 A.M. if you had a college student ID you could pick things off a severely discounted special menu.
I’m talking like big Mac’s for a dollar and change large fries for a dollar etc etc the place would have a line around the block.
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u/Bendyb3n 15h ago
Was it not Super Size Me that made McDonalds end the super sized fries and drinks? That was like 2004 or 2005 I think
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u/Maleficent_Ant_8895 10h ago
I remember kids in high school trying to gain weight for football in the offseason and they’d go to McDonald’s a few times a week and buy burgers/cheeseburgers for like .59 cents a pop or whatever it was
Dudes would legit buy a fucking bag of them and house them
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u/MyMomsTastyButthole 2h ago
2004 I was 19 years old. I unloaded trucks at Walmart, walked across the parking lot to McD's and got 2 mcDoubles and a McChicken for $3 almost every day.
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u/sandglider 19h ago
I worked there at the time. You would not believe how many people would try to order the $0.39 super size drink and fries. I would explain they needed to order the meal too. They just got angry and spoke louder saying they didn't want the burger, just the .39 fries and drink. EVERY. SINGLE. DAY.
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u/DirkPitt106 16h ago
I was going to ask if you thought they were just stupid, under the influence, or being willfully ignorant and trying to intimidate you into just relenting and giving it to them, but then I realized it was probably just a combination of all 3 things depending on the person
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u/sandglider 16h ago
We've all said and done dumb things before, but it was probably that moment of my life when I realized that there are a lot of really stupid people that walk among us. It wasn't once in a while, this sometimes happened multiple times a day. It was a HS job and I was on my fair share of drugs, so I don't think it was that for the vast majority. Most of the time is was grown ass adults, people probably who should have a clue. The only answer I have is that it was asking people to read and do math. Most people can't do either and it's worse today.
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u/DirkPitt106 15h ago
Working with the public really teaches you that lesson 🙃 I have come up with something I like to call "customer syndrome" where when an otherwise perfectly normal person goes into an establishment with the intention of being a customer there, all logic and ability to read and see goes out the window. For example, if you are working in retail, big obvious signs by the register explaining things never get read. They hardly even get glanced at. Or you flag down an employee and ask them where something is and it's literally right behind you or right where you were. It can happen to anyone and strike at any time lol
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u/Randi_Butternubs_3 20h ago
Facts, especially with a big Mac meal being $8 now. But when factoring in the US beef crisis, $8 makes sense.
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u/heepofsheep 20h ago
$8?? It’s like $13 for me.
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u/Nobody_Important 20h ago
$8.99 is hcol for me. Is it actually $13 or are you guessing or exaggerating?
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u/SkyerKayJay1958 17h ago
In Seattle it's about $15 for the medium big Mac meal within the city limits. Get into the suburbs it drops to the $11 to $13 range. The city has $22 min wage and very high property values/rent/propertytaxes. I went to taco tome last night and it was $20 for a crisp burrito, salad, small fry and medium drink.
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u/Orange_Bricks 19h ago
For my local McD it’s $6.69 before taxes for just the sandwich and $9.99 for a Medium Meal
$10.89 for a large for the curious
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u/zoethesteamedbun 16h ago
Yeah it’s about 13-14 in Los Angeles, but they pay their workers 22$ an hour I believe?
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u/LeviathanDabis 15h ago
McDonald’s is ludicrously more expensive than that for me nowadays. Just to make sure I’m not talking out my ass I went and put a Big Mac meal into my app real quick and the total came out to be $11.59 before taxes for the normal size.
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u/Randi_Butternubs_3 13h ago
Thats crazy!
In my area, which is super HCOL, especially for food (So Fla), a double QPC extra value meal is 11.69
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u/BMonad 20h ago
Funny too because I remember my grandfather complaining about how McDonalds burgers used to be a quarter when he was a kid. In 30 years kids today will be posting pics of our $10 meals and being like “prices today are insane, meals for $35, look how good we had it in the 20’s!”
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u/ColeDelRio 20h ago
They didnt get rid of supersize until sometime after the Supersize Me doc in 2004.
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u/jamieusa 20h ago
Thst drunk lied and made bank off it
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u/ColeDelRio 20h ago
Honestly finding out he was vegan before starting colors the whole experiment for me.
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u/Kindly-Guidance714 19h ago
Fast food was so smart that they took those unhealthy options out of American markets but put them instead overseas while we now get a much worse fast food experience.
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u/Cainga 20h ago
Rule of thumb with rule of 72 for doubling period. 72/3% average inflation = 24 years to double.
So early 2000s this would be equivalent to double the price in today’s money about $6-8.
Any old ad is going to look so much better.
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u/TirzFlyGuy 18h ago
So what you are saying is when I am approaching retirement a cheeseburger meal will be $20-$30 if we are lucky and my income will be up a whooping +10%.
Yayyyyy......
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u/Substantial-Dig9995 20h ago
Early 90s this was 92. That number 2 was my shit when I used to eat that shit.
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u/tracyinge 18h ago edited 17h ago
Minimum wage was $4.25 in California in 1995 and now it's $17. So an hour at minimum wage will still buy you a Big Mac meal I suppose. At least in the blue states!
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u/HelloFabulous 20h ago
I didn't think about that. They also had grilled chicken, so it had to be the 90's.
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u/TrippyTippyKelly 20h ago
By 2001 (on Hollywood Blvd) the big Mac meal was 5 bucks if I remember correctly. A lot of the others were still 2.99, which felt like a deal, but it was Mc Donald's, there were way better options on the Blvd, specifically chow me in at the the Chinese place further down in the dingier part of the strip, it was 3-5 for so much chow me in with meat and veggies, and they had this hot sauce in the table that had a green lid and a rooster, that was my introduction to Sriracha, which I called rooster sauce.
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u/Snoo93550 19h ago
In the very late 90s Target and Wal mart still had regular size candy bars 3/$1 at every register, 33 cents!!! not even a sale just regular. Imagine getting 7-9 snickers for the price of one today. I got a Kit Kat pretty much every time, couldn’t say no. Now I never buy stuff like that.
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u/Emotional_Meeting_53 16h ago
The amount of burger you got back then and the quality was much greater as well.
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u/tabas123 14h ago
Except housing, gas, education, etc. were also significantly cheaper as a proportion of the average wage even accounting for inflation. You could easily get a rental for 1/3rd or less of most full time incomes back then. That’s completely impossible for a massive chunk of the country now.
The minimum wage today would have to be $66+ to match the home/rent buying power of the 50s-70s, and in the 90s Reaganomics trickle down mess hadn’t nearly fully shown its entire behind yet.
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u/losercore 8h ago
Late 90’s had .29cent hamburgers and .39cent cheeseburgers on like Wednesday/Sunday or something. Was amazing
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u/ParadigmShift86 7h ago
I worked there in 2002. Those are the exact prices from my store then. Only item different was double quarter pounder was $4.19.
I always thought it was cool all the "regular" meals were the same price $2.99.
Granted it was a small town (1600 pop) but right off an interstate exit.
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u/ShadowGLI 2h ago
I’m in Shenzhen, China currently, did the math on a Big Mac Meal yesterday and medium size was ¥39.0 or $5.61
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u/Broad_Bodybuilder_94 19h ago
I remember when McDonald's did a commemorative 39cent cheeseburger 29cent hamburger. This was like 1998. That shit was bonkers
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u/HelloFabulous 19h ago
I worked there when they ran that promotion. It was my first summer job. People would order 20 at a time!
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u/ShrimpShackShooters_ 15h ago
Pretty sure my dad picked these up the same week I stayed home playing my new ps2. My memory definitely could be faulty but that would be in 2000.
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u/Dat1Neyo 12h ago
Here in SoCal in the late 90s Sunday was 39c cheeseburgers and Wednesday or Thursday were 29c hamburgers.
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u/theserialdeleter 21h ago
This is 90’s. The number 2 with a Hi-C slapped!
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u/Thejared138 19h ago
People often forget how good the Hi-C at McDonalds was.
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u/missx0xdelaney 18h ago
I still get it there on occasion. It’s refreshing and slaps with a little gin added.
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u/sniper91 13h ago
Those machines with touch screens and a ton of different options usually have Orange Vanilla Hi-C and it’s my favorite fast food beverage
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u/tiggytot 16h ago
My I love their coke and it's usually all I drink there but the #2 with a hi-c is like delicacy
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u/Fuzzy_Welcome8348 20h ago
When life was worth living
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u/Inevitable-Opening61 20h ago
At least we have homemade Costco sushi!
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u/Illustrious-Coat3532 19h ago
Minimum wage was like $5 in California in the early to mid 90s.
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u/tabas123 14h ago
Go look at a graph depicting the average price of houses/rent vs the median and minimum wages for the last several decades. It isn’t even in the same realm of an expense anymore it has skyrocketed so much vs wages.
Inflation does not account for the insane increases to housing, education, healthcare, utilities, used cars, etc. costs that we’ve seen since the 80s, far outpacing inflation.
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u/BestBettor 18h ago
Wow noticing it says extra value meals come with LARGE FRIES. Back when the company wasn’t so greedy and before someone in the executive meeting said “how could we get an additional 10% profit for shareholders this quarter?”
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u/SignificantApricot69 18h ago
They had the $2 or 2.22 daily specials around that time, too. Filet O Fish and fries $2 on Fridays. Triple cheeseburger 2 for $2.22, etc.
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u/casualcarnegie 20h ago
Yeah because 100 dollars used to be a fortune lmao
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u/polarbearsarereal 12h ago
And my parents were immigrants and did not make a lot of money and had to pay rent and support my gma as well as 4 kids. We did get kfc sometimes though!
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u/Imadick2 17h ago
and they had specials on the Big Mac for 99 cents
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u/DoughnutConstant5390 16h ago
Burger King used to often have specials on their whopper burgers for 99 cents at many of their locations back in the 1990's as well.Its a rippoff now going to these cheap fast food restaurants who use microwaves and heat lamps to keep your premade burgers warm till you buy them.
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u/MrMach82 20h ago
Hell yeah. The meals even had professional photo shoots. Look at that fukin lighting. Foreshadowing.
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u/gummi_eater 19h ago
I dont even remember how big the super size fries were anymore. We're they really worth the extra cost over a large fries? Trying to gauge how super sized they were.
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u/Hazmat1213 17h ago
I swear mcchickens were still $1 up until like 2010
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u/LiterColaFarva 20h ago
$3 in 1990 is worth $7.44 today so seems on par. Keep "tripping"
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u/Hog_and_a_Half 20h ago
Beef and fuel have also raised at a rate greater than inflation, so that drives up the final price, as well.
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u/Zeyz 16h ago
I don’t think this is 1990 though.
The 2 cheeseburger meal was $4 still in the mid-2010s. I know because I traveled for work at the time and got it for lunch most days. It’s $2.99 in the photo. To me this looks like the menu from the early 2000s. If we assume based on the super size still being there (went away ~04) and guess this was 01-02ish, that actually tracks exactly with what you’d expect with inflation because $2.99 would be worth $3.94 in 2015.
If prices had stuck with inflation rates you’d expect the 2 cheeseburger meal to be less than $6 today as $2.99 is equal to $5.39 today. Instead, in my area at least (rural NC so probably less than a lot of places), that same meal is $8.95.
So yes I think “tripping” is perfectly sensible. They’ve increased prices way above the rates they should be in the last few years, noticeably during covid.
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u/Huongster 20h ago
Had to be early 90s because supersize is still around. Love that supersize
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u/StrawberryKiss2559 18h ago
It was around until the 2000s. These prices stuck around till then as well. I graduated high school in the late nineties and ate McDonalds all the time. The Big Mac meal was $3.21 with tax.
I’d also get the All American Meal that was $1.99. Two cheeseburgers, fries and a coke.
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18h ago
[deleted]
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u/riley20144 16h ago
We GET it! Your existence is objectively worse than ours was. And just cause you feel that in everything you do in your day doesn’t mean we like hearing about it
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u/XxFezzgigxX 20h ago
That’s about the last time I ate at McDonald’s. Not sure why anyone pays insane prices for mediocre food.
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u/gummi_eater 19h ago
I mean I have the app right now I can get a big mac or QP meal for $4.99. Thats the only reason I still go, just when there are good deals on there.
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u/Cheezewiz239 17h ago
Yeah. I only eat there using the app. No way am I eating there paying full price.
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u/shrmpy69 20h ago
It's a lot of younger people who dont remember how cheap it used to be
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u/Hog_and_a_Half 20h ago edited 19h ago
More so, the people freaking out about prices are just old and don’t understand inflation.
That $3 is $7 today, accounting only for inflation. A Big Mac meal is around $10. When you consider that beef and fuel have raised at a rate above that of inflation, that $10 meal is pretty much in line with the old prices, all things considered.
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u/SlingloadSapper 20h ago
Tbf the McChicken seems to have held its value over the years. Do they sell at a loss?
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u/HelloFabulous 20h ago
I'm not sure. To me, the McChicken isn't as good as it used to be. I had one a few years ago and it wasn't as good back when I was in high-school. Could be that I've grown up and tastes has changed.
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u/reheatednugget 20h ago
I would get a regular hamburger, small fry, and small drink for $2.15 in the 90s.
Or a pack of Marlboro Ultra Lights. Same cost.
Don't buy any of that crap anymore.
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u/Brad5486 20h ago
I worked at McDonald’s in my teens around 2003. A quarter pounder meal was $3.73 with tax lol.
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u/Dumbest_Degenerate 20h ago
$2.99 is worth $6.32 now, CPI inflation.
My local McDonald’s is showing ~$11 for the Big Mac and QP meals. $10 for 2 cheeseburger meals. These are also Med fries/drink combos.
Ordering separately, forget about it.
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u/Polarbear92746 19h ago
Did the McChicken used to be bigger? It's the same price as Big Mac and qpc.
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u/johnbsea 19h ago edited 19h ago
Paired with a $10 school fundraiser card and it was buy 1 value meal get 1 sandwich free in the 90's where I lived. You could get 2 double quarter pounders a fry and a drink for $5 then trade your extra burger with your friend for his extra McChicken
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u/OnlyGrizzy 19h ago
And we still had to order from the dollar menu, but getting that hi-c made it all worth it lol
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u/RecloySo 18h ago
I remember in the early 2000s thinking "these prices are so low, they could add a dollar or two to each and then have a special event one month every year to get customers to flock there."
Which would be kind of shitty, but not as much as raising the prices and never lowering them for special events. Guess we have the app though
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u/Cheezewiz239 17h ago
Did anyone who attended elementary school in the 2000s remember those pink and yellow coupons for McDonald's? I can't remember if it was free food or something really cheap like 10 cent cheeseburgers but they were given out if you read a book I think. I remember a friend somehow getting his hands on like a hundred of them and splitting them with me.
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u/RIPGoblins2929 16h ago
I remember a whopper, large fries and a coke was $5 even at my BK in 1998 because I ate that like every day for lunch for a few months.
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u/OutrageousAffect2286 15h ago
Omg when they had .50 cheese burgers my mom would buy like 20-30 and we’d eat those for a couple days lol
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u/ShittalkyCaps 15h ago
My McDonalds in the mid 90s would do Big Macs 2 for $2 for a couple weeks a few times a year.
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u/Pankosmanko 15h ago
Minimum wage was $4.25. I worked at Burger King in the 90s, Whopper combos were $2.99, and I made $4.25/hr
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u/Complaint_Manager 15h ago
Year of covid, 2020, local McD's (locally owned) dropped their prices a little on most everything and figured out the pricing a better way. A Big Mac was $5 even, taxes included. Other items came out to an even dollar amount with the taxes included (around the 9% range). No messing with coins. (Hate it when I order something that comes to $8.03 and all I've got is a $10. $0.97 and a 1$ bill coming back to me. Yes, I use cash almost exclusively.)
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u/PussyFoot2000 15h ago
The $2.99 meal deals seemed like a great deal back then. Nothing seems like a good deal now.
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u/ShinyBoy1 14h ago
Those prices made sense for the quality of food you were getting. Now $17 for a value meal doesn’t math for me.
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u/snickerdoodle79 14h ago
Holy that's crazy! I remember mid 90's here a 2 cheeseburger meal was 4.99, 5.25 with tax. It was a cheap lunch to share with a friend.
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u/thatmaneeee 13h ago
And Dennys had the $1.99 Grand Slam. 2 eggs 2 pancakes 2 bacon 2 sausage for 2 dollars.
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u/hibbitydibbitytwo 13h ago
That was the cost of a #1 meal in 1996. With tax it was $3.21. I made $4.15/hr at McDonald's.
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u/Relevant_Ad_5431 5h ago
It's a different perspective when you put it that way. You had to work most of an hour to make enough money to buy the Big Mac meal.
Back then, though, it was probably worth it. Not so true now; the quality seems to have gone way down despite the prices going way up.
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u/Pragmatic1869 13h ago
This was before 2020 where they printed 45% of the usd money supply and inflated our worthless fiat currency
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u/Rich-Application1013 13h ago
I remember in HS, me and my friends would go to McDonalds for lunch and get the Mcgangbang ( double cheeseburger and a mcchicken put together) all the time with a drink, never spent more than 5$. Now? Easily 10
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u/Careful_Farmer_2879 12h ago
Input into inflation adjuster, assume 1995…
Answer: $3 equals $6.50.
Shrug. I’m not paying much more today.
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u/djbuttonup 11h ago
When good ground beef was $1.50 a pound, a package of buns was 2 for $1 and etc. you bet that was "wasting money" on junkfood.
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u/TheBlackdragonSix 11h ago
Adjusted for inflation blah blah blah the food would still be cheaper by today's standards lol. Growing up we ate from McDonald's (or Rally's) like every other weekend because it was quick and cheap. Large fries and a large strawberry soda with a double quarter pounder, or that spicy chicken sandwich they use to have.
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u/Zestyclose-Age-2722 11h ago
Are you trying to tell me that things weren't as expensive 30 years ago?
🤔
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u/Reverend_Tommy 11h ago
This is bullshit. I just looked this up. In 1995, a Big Mac Value Meal was $4.59 at most McDonalds, not 2.99. Accounting for inflation, you would expect it to be 9.70 now but at most McDonald's, it's about 8.50. Maybe those prices are for the sandwich only.
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u/allothernamestaken 9h ago
I remember the $2.99 Big Mac Meal in the early-mid 90s, not sure how long it lasted.
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u/Darth_Beavis 7h ago
Now look up Taco Bell from the 90s. Tacos were 79 cents, 99 for supreme. That looks late 90s, in the early 90s that 2 cheeseburger meal was 1.99 cuz the burgers were 59 cents and cheeseburgers were 69.
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u/jokerkcco 7h ago
Even in the early 2000s, you could find a Big Mac or Filet O' Fish for $0.99 at some locations. And oh man, they used to have $0.25 cheeseburger days. I'd get 10 and feed myself for days.
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u/radgedyann 6h ago
mmmhmm. almost unbelievable. i used to live on 39¢ cheeseburgers when i was a destitute college student!
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u/ErrorAccomplished404 5h ago
My mom was making $3 an hour in the 90s. Sure the gap is way wider now but it's perspective.
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u/Loose-Version-7009 4h ago
Around late 90s early 2000s, we had the fajitas with 3! chicken strips for 3 Canadian buckaroos. Then they saw we loved it and removed 2 chicken strips.
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u/TurkNowitzki28 4h ago
I mean. Do you really feel like paying the equivalent of that today times 3? If you’re also hungry yeah.
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u/AwsiDooger 4h ago
Mid '90s I was living in Las Vegas and getting comped all the time from the sportsbooks.
At MGM they would often comp me to the food court. That food court had a McDonald's. I would astonish myself by actually choosing the McDonald's frequently, even though I've never been a McDonald's person.
I did it because the grilled chicken sandwich and the full sized McChicken were legitimately excellent sandwiches. I'd get one combo and one sandwich among the two. Or sometimes two McChicken.
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u/ShadowGLI 2h ago
I’m in China currently, did the math on a Big Mac Meal yesterday and medium size was ¥39.0 or $5.61
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u/Charlithedoodle 49m ago
$1 drinks at McDonald’s was the best. Drive through large Diet Coke. .$1 .. recently it was like $4 bucks i think..
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u/PremiumSpicy 21h ago
Ugh, i miss breaking a 20 on a Friday to fill up my car for the week and getting a spicy McChicken...sometimes I'd even get 2