Make the New Year Magic Transformer - $1...

Lose 10% in 6 months!

Make the New Year Magic Transformer - $10,000 in prizes!

Jan 01 - Jun 30/Game Closed
Hosted by WayBetter Kristin
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$40

BET PER MONTH

3,777

PLAYERS

$765,840

POT

Jan 01

START DATE

DETAILS

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It's time to create your own magic in the biggest game of the year! Play to lose 10% of your weight in 6 months for a chance at $10,000 in prizes, including trips to Disney & Universal!

IMPORTANT DATES

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Game Begins

Jan 01

Last Day to Join

Jan 14

Weigh-Ins

1st and 2nd of every month

HOW DO YOU PLAY?

Bet $40

per month

Lose 10%

in 6 months

Win!

Split the pot

10% is easier when you break it up, so each round has its own goal - and its own pot to split.
Check out the FAQ to learn more!

How do you verify the weight loss?

For all official weigh-ins, you'll be prompted to submit your official starting weight. Our standard weigh-in process involves you submitting 2 photos: one of you standing on a scale in lightweight clothing (no shoes, hats, belts, watches, coats, or outerwear), and another of the scale’s readout with your weigh-in word written on a piece of paper.

What you'll need

  • A scale (preferably digital)
  • A digital camera or smartphone
  • A full-length mirror or someone to take your photo
  1. Privacy FAQ +
  2. How we prevent cheating +
  3. Disqualification Limits +

Does this actually work?

Out of 1,039,224 DietBetters, 93.3% have lost weight during their challenges. Combined, they've lost 19,534,204 lbs and won $101,121,996. In other words...yes.

All results shown on DietBet are from actual users. Individual results may vary.

Don't take our word for it

Mezzie

02/09/2024 5:05PM
Trader Joe's has the only soy milk without additives within a short distance from home, so I go there every month or so to stock up.

Today, I made the mistake of going there hungry. The first thing I saw when I walked in was salsa verde, which I like, then I grabbed some carrots and hummus, gluten-free hamburger buns, pretty much every frozen vegetable they offer, hot chocolate sticks, and frozen mini-tacos (to go with the salsa, obviously), some ground beef, and the mochi cake mix a friend said was worth trying.

It'll all last a while and do no damage to my calorie budget, but, man, that was expensive! I spent as much on all that as I do on two weeks of groceries! Yeesh.

Deanna D. , WayBetter Kristin and like this comment.

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Abi

How weird! I just had the exact opposite happen! I bought pizza dough, sauce, cheese, vegan pepperoni, cauliflower rice, broccoli gratin, Korean beef-less bulgogi, and some chocolates as a treat and it was only $27, which I thought was so cheap! That food is enough to last me all week. Crazy how shopping at the same store leads to different experiences. Love Trader Joe's though! They always have such cool new things to try.

Mezzie

I make 99% of my food from scratch and only buy meat probably every other month or so. I also live near a store with a wide selection of bulk bins, so my beans and rice and nuts and spices cost even less than they would coming in pre-measured bags. My average meal cost these days for one shopping trip (21 meals) is $1.43. I just calculated the number of meals this Trader Joe's run will get me (13, including some unnecessary dessert servings), and it's $5.33/per meal. Better than eating out, but definitely a splurge.

I started being a bit obsessive about my per-meal cost when I was financially tight as a college student and only had $12 for groceries a week (included in that budget was hygeine items). I was averaging 40 cents/meal (food was much cheaper then!). My parents had had to think about such things when I was growing up because we were a big family living on a small salary, so I was fairly well prepared for living on my own.

At today's fast-food prices, a ready-made meal at Trader Joe's or any other grocery store is easily half the price and healthier. Homemade, though, is often half that or less.

I really wish schools in my area still had home economics classes. I'd love to help students explore food and other budgeting scenarios before they're sent into the world to fend for themselves, often woefully unprepared.

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