Can a School Canteen App Make Kids Eat Healthier — And Is It Worth the Cost?
A first-of-its-kind economic analysis of Australia’s ‘Click & Crunch’ program shows that nudging children toward healthier lunch choices online costs just cents per student — and the results are compelling.
What if you could nudge thousands of children toward healthier school lunches — automatically, at scale, for less than a dollar per child? That is exactly what researchers in Australia set out to test, and their findings may reshape how schools, governments, and health services think about digital food environments.
Published in Public Health Nutrition, a new study from the University of Newcastle delivers the first-ever economic evaluation of a public health nutrition intervention delivered through an online school canteen ordering system. The verdict: it works, and it is remarkably affordable.
The Problem: Children’s Diets Are Getting Worse, Not Better
Poor diet is one of the leading preventable causes of disease worldwide, contributing to more than 11 million deaths annually and costing OECD countries an estimated USD $311 billion per year in diet- and obesity-related conditions. The habits formed during childhood are particularly consequential — research consistently shows that dietary patterns established early in life track into adulthood and shape the risk of chronic disease decades later.
Yet the majority of children in developed countries, including Australia, fall short of dietary guidelines. They eat too little fruit and vegetables and consume excess saturated fat, sugar, and salt. The question is not whether we need to act — it is how, and at what cost.
Diet-related disease costs OECD countries USD $311 billion annually. In Australia alone, the majority of children fail to meet dietary guidelines for core food groups — making school-based interventions a critical opportunity for early, population-wide impact.
Enter Click & Crunch: Healthy Eating Built Into the App
The ‘Click & Crunch’ intervention did not require new classes, new teachers, or new school programs. Instead, it embedded a set of smart behavioural nudges directly into an existing online canteen ordering system already used by schools — making healthier choices easier and more visible for parents and students placing lunch orders.
The intervention used five evidence-based choice architecture strategies, all delivered through the digital menu:
Every item was colour-coded as ‘Everyday’, ‘Occasional’, or ‘Should Not Be Sold’ — making nutritional quality instantly visible at a glance
Healthier ‘Everyday’ items and categories were placed at the top of the menu list, taking advantage of how people naturally browse choices
Visual prompts encouraged users to add fruit, vegetables, or water when selecting less healthy items — a digital nudge toward better add-ons
Before confirming an order, users saw a real-time pie chart showing the proportion of healthy items in their basket, prompting last-minute swaps
Orders containing 100% ‘Everyday’ items earned a congratulatory cartoon character printed right on the child’s lunch bag label
Canteen managers also received a menu audit report and a phone call before the changes went live, helping them understand the strategy and its rationale.
How the Study Was Run
The intervention was tested through a cluster randomised controlled trial across 17 Australian primary schools — nine receiving the Click & Crunch intervention and eight acting as controls using the standard online ordering system. In total, 2,207 students from Kindergarten to Grade 5 placed at least one online lunch order during the baseline period.
- 17 non-government primary schools — 9 intervention, 8 control — across varied regions of New South Wales, Australia
- 2,207 students from Kindergarten to Grade 5 with at least one online lunch order at baseline
- Data collected across two 8-week periods, 12 months apart, using objective purchasing data automatically recorded by the canteen system
- Economic analysis calculated from both a health service perspective and a societal perspective (which includes costs to schools)
- Bootstrapped uncertainty analysis with over 1,000 iterations to model cost-effectiveness probability across different willingness-to-pay thresholds
Did It Actually Work?
Yes — and the effects were statistically significant. Compared to students in control schools, students in intervention schools showed:
When the analysis was restricted to the five schools where all intervention strategies were fully applied (a per-protocol analysis), the energy reduction grew to 89 kJ per order — suggesting that complete implementation drives even stronger results.
What Did It Cost — And Was It Worth It?
This is where the study breaks genuinely new ground. The total cost to implement Click & Crunch across all nine intervention schools was AUD $5,111 — an average of just $568 per school. Here is how those costs broke down:
| Cost Category | Who Pays | Cost per School |
|---|---|---|
| Collecting menu information (staff time + calls) | Health service + schools | $133 |
| Assessing menus against canteen guidelines | Health service | $134 |
| Executing intervention strategies (software changes + calls) | Health service + schools | $301 |
| Total average cost per school | Health service ($518) + School ($50) | $568 |
The Incremental Cost Effectiveness Ratios (ICERs) — the standard metric for comparing cost against health benefit — were strikingly low:
For context, a comparable NSW initiative called SWAP IT — which targeted lunchboxes brought from home rather than canteen orders — achieved a 57 kJ reduction but at an incremental cost of AUD $0.54 per student per kJ, nearly nine times higher than Click & Crunch’s $0.06.
How Does It Compare to Other School Food Programs?
Previous school-based nutrition programs in NSW required substantially more investment. One study of three interventions targeting school food policy compliance reported average per-school costs of AUD $2,102 (low intensity), $2,216 (medium intensity), and $4,771 (high intensity) — all dramatically higher than Click & Crunch’s $568 per school.
The online delivery model is the key differentiator. Because the nudges are embedded into software infrastructure already being used by thousands of schools, the marginal cost of reaching each additional student is extremely low. This is the scalability advantage that makes digital food environment interventions so promising for population health.
The Biggest Cost Driver — And How to Cut It
The detailed cost breakdown reveals something actionable: the largest share of implementation costs came from menu collection and assessment — the time spent by project staff calculating the precise nutritional composition of every canteen item.
This level of detail was required for the research trial, but it would not be necessary for a real-world rollout. The NSW Government already provides a free ‘Menu Check Service’ that classifies items as ‘Everyday’, ‘Occasional’, or ‘Should Not Be Sold’ — which is all that’s needed to apply the Click & Crunch strategies.
Dropping the detailed menu assessment in favour of the free NSW Menu Check Service would reduce the cost-effectiveness ratio for energy content by 17%. The intervention becomes even cheaper to implement at scale — and the nudge strategies remain equally effective.
What Are the Limitations?
The researchers are transparent about where the findings have edges. The trial included only 17 schools — all non-government (Catholic or Independent) — so it is unclear whether results would be identical in government schools. Costs varied considerably between schools (range $343–$806), largely depending on how many items appeared on each school’s menu.
The study also did not capture changes in food preparation costs at canteens, anecdotal reports that some managers created additional production lists as a result of the intervention. And the analysis covers only items ordered through the online system — over-the-counter purchases at the canteen were not included.
Perhaps most importantly, the long-term cost-effectiveness over multiple school years remains unknown. It is possible that intervention effects strengthen over time, or that they diminish — further research will be needed to answer this.
Why This Matters for the Future of Child Nutrition
The global online food ordering market is growing rapidly, with tens of millions of orders processed annually through platforms like the one used in this study. Australia’s leading online canteen provider alone supports approximately 1,400 schools and processes around 13 million orders per year.
This scale means that even modest improvements in the nutritional quality of individual lunch orders — achieved through smart, low-cost software changes — could translate into meaningful population-level health benefits. The Click & Crunch model demonstrates that choice architecture embedded in digital food environments is not just theoretically promising: it is practically affordable and measurably effective.
Key Takeaways from the Research
- It works: The intervention reduced lunch order energy content by 69 kJ and increased healthy ‘Everyday’ item purchases by 9.8% — both statistically significant effects
- It’s affordable: At just AUD $568 per school and $0.06 per student per kJ reduction, Click & Crunch is dramatically cheaper than comparable school nutrition programs
- It scales easily: Because it is embedded in existing software used across hundreds of schools, rollout costs per additional school are low — and could be reduced further using free government menu classification services
- It’s highly probable to be cost-effective: At a willingness-to-pay of AUD $0.20 per student, the intervention has a 95% probability of being cost-effective; at $1.20, that rises to 99%
- The digital canteen is an untapped public health tool: This is the first economic evaluation of any such intervention — and the results make a strong case for further investment in this space
As online food ordering systems become standard infrastructure in schools across Australia and beyond, the opportunity to embed health-promoting nudges at scale — and at remarkably low cost — should not be overlooked by policymakers, health services, or school administrators.



