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She Decided to Stick to the $30 Meal Policy…And Made It a Rule Every. Single. Time

by Sunny Nguyen
November 10, 2025
in Social Issues

For a frequent traveler on business, food often becomes an afterthought. This 30-year-old employee spends most of the day in transit or in meetings, sometimes skipping meals entirely, or surviving on a coffee or two.

The company has a $30 daily meal allowance, which worked fine most of the time, especially when flights or remote locations left few options. But after going just $1.50 over the limit one month, and having a new, inflexible approval team reject the expense, she decided to take the rule literally. Every meal. Every day.

What started as a minor annoyance turned into a quiet act of defiance. Now, her per diem is fully spent, sometimes twice or three times over what she used to claim, and she even carves out extra time to make sure she eats.

She Decided to Stick to the $30 Meal Policy…And Made It a Rule Every. Single. Time
Not the actual photo

Here’s how she turned a petty policy into her own little rebellion.

Sure, I'll keep my meals under $30 as per the policy. I'll make sure it's $30 Every. Single. Time?

I do a lot of fly-in fly-out travel for my job. Usually I am so busy with work while onsite or I am stationed somewhere with food options I don't...

Our employee expenses policy at work is $30 a day which is mostly fine. But there are some high cost of living cities and sometimes my meals go above that...

especially if I want to eat healthy which is important when you are constantly on the road. Plus so many airports have completely shut down their food courts and haven't...

So I submit my expenses one month and I have gone $1.50 over the daily limit because I treated myself to a coffee that morning as well as a lunch...

The company had recently changed their policy and now a different set of people are approving expenses.

The previous people didn't mind going over by a few bucks because it balances out with trips where I didn't eat anything but this new group are absolute sticklers and...

I tried to argue I had 10 other visits that month in which I didn't eat a single thing but they still weren't budging. It really left a sour taste...

Now every single visit I force myself to spend as close to $30 as I can because f__k them. My husband is happy because it means I now bring back...

I feel bad for wasting food but often I just buy a meal and eat a few bites and throw it in the bin. However, the expense policy is $30...

While in the past I might have billed $100 for the entire month because I didn't bother to eat, I am now billing twice or three times that.

I also used to push myself to keep working all day but now I religiously take my 30 minutes to go and buy some food so that's 30 mins less...

The Frustration

The traveler often finds herself in cities where healthy food options are scarce and airport food courts remain shut or limited. She used to eat lightly or skip meals entirely to save money and calories.

But when the new expense team rejected her claim for exceeding $30 by $1.50, even after she explained that some days she hadn’t eaten at all, they refused to budge.

Previously, the older approval team would balance overages with underages, seeing the whole month’s spending, but the new team operated with rigid precision.

The rejection left her frustrated. It wasn’t about the money, it was about principle. “If I’m expected to stay under $30, fine,” she thought, “but I’ll stick to it religiously. Every. Single. Time.”

The Malicious Compliance

From that moment on, she deliberately spent as close to $30 as possible each day. On short trips, she bought slightly over-priced meals or coffees just to hit the maximum.

At airports, if the only option was fast food, she ensured her choices still maxed out the per diem. If she brought back extra food, it was for her husband – free, slightly squished leftovers but she made sure the full allowance was used.

She also started taking her meal breaks fully, no rushing. A 30-minute lunch meant 30 minutes away from work, reducing the amount of productive hours she could bill, another tiny act of rebellion.

What had once been $100 for the month in total meal expenses now easily doubled or tripled, all within policy.

Reflection and Strategy

The result is a mix of efficiency, principle, and minor chaos for the approval team. She isn’t wasting food maliciously – mostly – but she does spend a few bites before discarding the rest if it can’t be saved.

She’s found small ways to bend the system while remaining fully compliant. Reddit commenters suggested clever tactics like converting remaining allowance to gift cards, donating meals to strangers, or even spending just enough to trigger automatic company reimbursements.

For her, it’s a satisfying way to reclaim control in a system that once penalized her for minor overages.

See what others had to share with OP:

Most commenters cheered her quiet rebellion. SweetDove suggested using the extra funds to help someone in need, making it a “win-win.” 

SweetDove − Hey man, if you still want to stick it to em, just pay $30 on someone's bill who looks like they could use the help, win win.

night-otter − My first business trip, my manager called me in and pointed out my food expenses were low. "Well I grabbed McDs for breakfast, a sandwich at the convention...

"Your per diem is $75 a day. $15-20-40 B-L-D is the split and you only need receipts if you go over $50. Now what were your food expenses again?

ETA: Holy Bat Guano! 5K upvotes. Thanks.

No_Pineapple6086 − Beautiful. I used to do the same at my last job. If we had to stay past 8pm we got a free meal, delivered and cab expenses. After...

Others shared similar experiences, like night-otter, who recounted being praised for spending near daily allowance.

dezignator − Our expenses policy is $33.33 per meal period (so 3x daily, hundred bucks a day), and we just get the full amount as part of travelling, counted from...

No need for claims, and if you spend less, the difference is a thank you for the pain in the arse that is travelling for work.

If you spend more (in this case, covering any work-related expense, not just over-limit food), the customer just has to sign off on it (since they're billed directly) for that...

No customers we'd bother to travel for would quibble over a rounding error's worth of extra coffees.

TomatilloAccurate475 − I used to expense account the unused balance right on to a gift card at the restaurant to make up the difference up to the allowable amount, did...

Then you have about 3 options here is where it's fun to be malicious: 1. Use gift card toward next meal that you expect exceeds allowance

2. Save all these small gift cards ( a dollar here, five dollars there) to take home and use on your own tabs on a night out away from work.

Or my favorite 3. Use the gift card that your company is paying for to immediately towards your alcohol beverages separate tab, right then and there.

Lord_Schmurda − Ouch $30 a day? I think that is well below most expense policies. 10 years ago it was $75 a day at my first real travel job.

Sometimes if I had money left in my daily budget I'd stop in at a restaurant and get myself a $25 gift card to use later.

I don't don't really have limits now - they just don't want bottles of Dom P showing up on the lunch tab (unless clients are there, then spend whatever).

If Im traveling away from my family, sleeping in a bed that's not mine, I'm going to at least enjoy full service meals.

A few cautioned that leftover funds or overages could appear on record, but the consensus was clear: if a policy is arbitrary and inflexible, playing it to the letter is both satisfying and fair.

igobyluke − At one of the restaurants I worked at, we had a regular guy with a similar deal.

He got so much money a day for food, he rarely spent that much. So whenever he was in town, he'd come in and spend $15 ish on dinner and...

Then he'd ask for a gift card for random amounts of money, like $28.79, and charge it to his company card. He told me he uses the gift cards to...

sandwichsandwich69 − maybe try buying meals and giving them to people on the street! saves getting the food and ending up wasting it aye

epsilon_zed − My old boss had a motto. We travel on the company dime and only on company time. We never had a flight earlier than 8am, and we never...

Caterpillar89 − Thats a ridiculously small number for daily food in the US while traveling.

Sometimes, following the rules to the letter is the most effective way to assert yourself. This traveler turned a minor grievance into a daily ritual that maximized her benefits, carved out personal time, and even shared perks with her family.

It’s a lesson in malicious compliance done smartly: she’s fully within policy, yet she makes the inflexible system work for her. The bigger question remains – how far would you go to stick it to a rule that doesn’t make sense?

Sunny Nguyen

Sunny Nguyen

Sunny Nguyen writes for DailyHighlight.com, focusing on social issues and the stories that matter most to everyday people. She’s passionate about uncovering voices and experiences that often go unheard, blending empathy with insight in every article. Outside of work, Sunny can be found wandering galleries, sipping coffee while people-watching, or snapping photos of everyday life - always chasing moments that reveal the world in a new light.

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