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Best Cheap Lunch in Manchester  -  Under £10 │ MCR

Best Cheap Lunch in Manchester – Under £10

Under £10 for Lunch in Manchester – What’s Actually Possible

The city centre has plenty of places to spend £15 on a mediocre lunch and come away feeling robbed. It also has places where £7 or £8 gets you something genuinely good. The trick is knowing which category things fall into, because the price signal is unreliable – cheap doesn’t mean good and expensive doesn’t mean worth it. Here’s what £10 or less actually buys you in Manchester in 2026, and where to spend it.

This & That, Soap Street – The Best Value Lunch in Manchester

This & That is the answer to the question of where to eat lunch in Manchester if you have strong opinions about value. It’s a curry cafe on Soap Street, near the Arndale end of the Northern Quarter, and it has been trading in largely the same format since 1984. The model is straightforward: rice and three (curry, rice, three dishes) for around £7, or rice and two for slightly less. The curries are genuine – not the watered-down, crowd-pleasing versions you get at some city centre curry houses – with actual spice, proper depth, and portions that constitute a proper meal.

The room is small, seating is shared, and the service is fast. You order at the counter, point at what you want from the trays, pay, find a seat, eat quickly, and leave. It is not a restaurant experience in the contemporary sense. It is the best value lunch in Manchester city centre and has been for decades. The queues on weekday lunchtimes are a signal worth heeding: it’s full of people who work in the Northern Quarter and eat there multiple times a week, which is the most reliable possible endorsement.

Mackie Mayor – On a Budget

Mackie Mayor on Eagle Street is a food market hall in a converted Victorian market building. The individual trader prices are not all budget – some of the options push past £10 – but with some navigation you can eat well for less. The key is knowing which traders offer value. The pizza and pasta options can be done for around £9-10 with a drink. The general approach: treat it as a lunch market rather than a restaurant, walk around before committing, and avoid the options that have clearly positioned themselves at the upper end of the price range.

The quality across Mackie Mayor’s traders is generally high and the setting is genuinely good. Even when the price is at the top end of the budget range, you’re getting better food than an equivalent spend at a city centre chain would give you.

Bundobust

Bundobust on Oxford Street does Indian street food and craft beer – an unusual combination that works. The small plates format means you can eat well at around £8-10 if you’re selecting carefully: two or three small plates is a proper lunch, and some of the best dishes (the bhel puri, the fried okra) are at the lower end of the price range. Avoid going overboard on portions and you’re well within budget. The room is casual and doesn’t require booking at lunchtime outside peak hours.

Sandwich Shops and Delis

Several independent delis and sandwich shops in the Northern Quarter and around Piccadilly do proper sandwiches for £5-7. The standard is higher than chain sandwich shops – proper bread, ingredients that have been considered rather than assembled. Look along Tib Street and the side streets off Oldham Street for independent options; several have changed in recent years so it’s worth checking what’s current, but the principle holds that the NQ has better independent sandwich options than most parts of the city centre.

What £10 Doesn’t Buy You

Be realistic about what a budget lunch can’t do. Sit-down service at a restaurant with table service in the city centre will almost always push past £10 once you add a drink and a tip. The options above are all counter service or market format, which is how the price is contained. That’s not a problem – counter service at This & That or Bundobust is a fine experience – but if you need a sit-down table-service lunch for under a tenner in the city centre, the options are very limited and the quality at that price point at table-service venues is generally poor. Spend the £10 well at a counter and save the table service for a more generous budget.

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