Metadata
Title
Dining Options
Category
undergraduate
UUID
4da1de6b3fad46728edc52e7587695f9
Source URL
https://admission.princeton.edu/community/dining-options
Parent URL
https://admission.princeton.edu/
Crawl Time
2026-03-10T04:32:13+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Dining Options

Source: https://admission.princeton.edu/community/dining-options Parent: https://admission.princeton.edu/

Campus Dining

Four-year Residential Colleges

\ Students have the option to live in a  during their entire time at Princeton. Juniors and seniors who do so may take all of their meals in the college dining hall or, if they join an , may choose a shared meal plan. All juniors and seniors can stay connected to their college. Whether or not they purchase a University meal plan, they are given two extra meals per week to be used in a residential college dining hall.

Cafés

\ Cafés serving a wide variety of foods — sandwiches, home-style food, pizza, ethnic cuisines and more — are located throughout campus. Their hours are flexible, some opening at 7 a.m. and closing at 2 a.m.

Kosher Dining

\ The Center for Jewish Life offers kosher meals for the entire campus community. In addition to the Center for Jewish Life dining operation, students have the option to have a kosher meal in the residential colleges prepared and transported by the Center for Jewish Life staff. The Center for Jewish Life dining operation is under the supervision of Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America, Kashruth Division.

Halal Dining

\ All residential college dining halls offer halal dining options for students. Certified halal meat is prepared on-site in the kitchens of the residential college dining halls. The meat is cooked separately on dedicated grills in keeping with Muslim dietary laws, and a description of the preparation is posted at each grill station. In addition, there is a weekly halal meal offered at the Frist Campus Center.

Student Food Cooperatives

\ Four co-ops, including a vegetarian and international option, operate on campus and provide their members kitchen access and a common food supply. These student groups cook and eat dinners together, sharing chores like cleaning, shopping, baking and even gardening. Since each co-op has several dozen members, each student is only required to cook one night a week. And because they buy in bulk, co-ops are often less expensive than cooking independently. All students are welcome, regardless of cooking experience.

Independent Dining

\ Some students organize their own dining arrangements and cook on their own or eat in campus dining places, such as the Frist Campus Center, and local restaurants, which offer a great variety of cuisines in all price ranges. Many students who are “independents” live in Spelman Hall, which has four-person suites with kitchen facilities.

## BLOG: “Your Complete Guide to the Residential College Dining Halls”

03.05.26

Mia Salas

### BLOG: “Your Complete Guide to the Residential College Dining Halls”

03.05.26

Mia Salas

## BLOG: “Where Do You Eat?”

03.05.26

Grace Masback

### BLOG: “Where Do You Eat?”

03.05.26

Grace Masback

## BLOG: “Did You Say Free Food?”

03.05.26

Gil Joseph

### BLOG: “Did You Say Free Food?”

03.05.26

Gil Joseph

## BLOG: “Being Independent at Princeton”

03.05.26

Andrea Reino

### BLOG: “Being Independent at Princeton”

03.05.26

Andrea Reino

Eating Clubs

Eating clubs are one of many dining options at Princeton. Princeton’s eating clubs have a long historical association with the University. Many students have questions about the eating clubs when they first arrive on campus: Are they simply clubs for eating? How does membership work? What if a student doesn’t want to join?