12 Meal Prep Snacks That Keep You Full Between Meals

You prepped lunch. You prepped dinner. And then 3pm hits and you demolish a bag of chips from the vending machine because you forgot about snacks.

Snack prep takes 15 minutes and costs almost nothing. Here are 12 snacks I rotate through that actually keep me full until the next meal.

The Rule: Protein or Fiber (or Both)

A handful of crackers won't keep you full for 30 minutes. A snack with protein or fiber lasts 2-3 hours. Every snack on this list has one or both.

Quick Prep (Under 5 Minutes)

1. Greek Yogurt + Berries — 150 cal

Scoop Greek yogurt into small containers. Add berries day-of (they get mushy if stored in yogurt). 15g protein per serving.

Buy: Plain Greek yogurt in a big tub ($4), not individual cups ($1.50 each). Add your own honey if you want sweetness.

2. Hard-Boiled Eggs — 140 cal (2 eggs)

Boil a dozen on Sunday. They last 5 days in the fridge. Peel them all at once and store in a container with a damp paper towel.

The peeling trick: Add a teaspoon of baking soda to the boiling water. Makes peeling 10x easier.

3. String Cheese + Apple Slices — 170 cal

No prep required. Buy string cheese in bulk. Slice apples day-of (they brown if pre-sliced, unless you dip in lemon water).

4. Trail Mix (DIY) — 200 cal per 1/4 cup

Store-bought trail mix costs $8 per bag. Make your own for half:

  • Almonds + walnuts + dried cranberries + dark chocolate chips
  • Portion into small zip bags (1/4 cup each)

Warning: Trail mix is calorie-dense. The portion matters. A "handful" could be 500 calories.

Medium Prep (5-15 Minutes)

5. Energy Balls — 120 cal each

Mix in a bowl, roll into balls, refrigerate:

  • 1 cup oats
  • 1/2 cup peanut butter
  • 1/3 cup honey
  • 1/2 cup chocolate chips

Makes 20 balls. They last a week in the fridge, a month in the freezer.

My favorite variation: Replace chocolate chips with shredded coconut and add a tablespoon of chia seeds.

6. Hummus + Veggie Sticks — 160 cal

Buy hummus (or make it — one can of chickpeas + tahini + lemon + garlic in a blender). Pre-cut carrots, celery, and bell peppers. Store veggies in water to keep them crisp.

Hummus lasts: 7 days in the fridge after opening. Pre-portioned into small containers = grab and go.

7. Banana Peanut Butter Roll-Ups — 250 cal

Spread peanut butter on a tortilla, place a banana, roll, slice into rounds. Wrap in plastic wrap.

Lasts: 2 days before the banana browns. Make 2-3 at a time, not a week's worth.

8. Cottage Cheese + Fruit — 170 cal

Cottage cheese is the underrated meal prep snack. 14g protein per half cup. Add peaches, pineapple, or berries.

Tip: Buy the full-fat version. It tastes significantly better and the extra 30 calories are worth it.

Weekend Batch Prep (15+ Minutes)

9. Protein Muffins — 150 cal each

  • 2 bananas (mashed)
  • 2 eggs
  • 1 cup oats
  • 1 scoop protein powder
  • 1/2 cup Greek yogurt

Mix, pour into muffin tin, bake at 350°F for 18 minutes. Makes 12 muffins.

Freezer friendly: These freeze perfectly. Grab one from the freezer in the morning, it thaws by snack time.

10. Roasted Chickpeas — 120 cal per 1/3 cup

Drain a can of chickpeas, pat dry, toss with olive oil and seasoning (smoked paprika + garlic powder is my go-to). Bake at 400°F for 25 minutes until crunchy.

Lasts: 3-4 days in an airtight container. They soften after that.

11. Turkey + Cheese Pinwheels — 180 cal (3 pinwheels)

Lay out a tortilla. Layer turkey slices and cheese. Roll tight. Slice into 1-inch rounds. Store flat in a container.

Lasts: 4 days. This is basically a deconstructed sandwich that's easier to eat at your desk.

12. Overnight Chia Pudding — 190 cal

  • 3 tbsp chia seeds
  • 1 cup milk (any kind)
  • 1 tsp honey
  • Vanilla extract

Mix in a jar. Fridge overnight. Top with fruit in the morning.

Texture warning: Some people love chia pudding, some think it's like eating frog eggs. Try one jar before making five.

The Weekly Snack Prep Plan

Sunday, 15 minutes:

  1. Boil 12 eggs (5 min active, 10 min waiting)
  2. Make a batch of energy balls (10 min)
  3. Pre-cut veggies and portion hummus (5 min)

Total cost: ~$8 for a week of snacks. That's $1.60/day vs $3-5/day on vending machine snacks.

Snack Storage Cheat Sheet

Snack Fridge Life Freezer Life Container
Hard-boiled eggs 5 days Don't freeze Container with damp paper towel
Energy balls 7 days 1 month Container or zip bag
Cut veggies 5 days (in water) Don't freeze Container with water
Hummus 7 days 1 month Small containers
Protein muffins 5 days 2 months Zip bag
Roasted chickpeas 3-4 days Don't freeze (get soft) Airtight container
Chia pudding 4 days Don't freeze Mason jars

The single best investment for snack prep is a pack of 4 oz containers with lids. They're the perfect single-serving size for hummus, yogurt, trail mix, and dressings. $10 for a 20-pack on Amazon.


Rachel Torres spends more on snack prep than she'd like to admit, mostly because she keeps eating the energy balls before they make it into the container. She considers this quality control.

Leave a Comment