

$25 for Six Donuts? Uber Eats and Krispy Kreme Have Officially Lost Their Minds
I’m not even kidding when I say this — I am literally lost for words. I went on the Uber Eats app today just to treat myself to something simple. Nothing fancy, nothing over the top — just a box of donuts. I figured I’d grab half a dozen from Krispy Kreme, something light and sweet to go with my coffee. But when I tell you my jaw dropped at the total, I mean it hit the floor. Six donuts, y’all. Six. The total came up to $15.99 before any taxes, fees, or tips. I stared at that screen for a good minute thinking maybe I accidentally added two boxes. Nope. Just one.
Now, I get it — inflation is real. Everything has gone up: groceries, gas, rent, you name it. But donuts? Donuts too? This is getting ridiculous. When did it become normal for six glazed circles of dough to cost nearly $16? I can remember when you could walk into Krispy Kreme and get a whole dozen for around $8 or $9, maybe $10 if you added some fancy ones. Now, it feels like you need a small loan just to satisfy a sugar craving.
And here’s the real kicker — after the $15.99 for the donuts, Uber Eats slapped on the taxes, a delivery fee, and of course, the service fee that they sneak in like it’s small change. Add all that up and suddenly, your $15 donuts are now creeping up to nearly $25 by the time you hit “Place Order.” I’m sorry, but that’s outrageous. We’re talking about half a dozen donuts that probably cost them less than a dollar to make.
Let’s just break it down for a second. Krispy Kreme gets their ingredients in bulk, so the cost of sugar, flour, and oil is low for them. They’re not handcrafting pastries with gold flakes and imported cocoa. They’re frying dough and glazing it. I love Krispy Kreme just as much as anyone else, but $25 for six donuts after fees? I can’t justify that, no matter how light and fluffy they are.
And you know what’s crazy? I can’t even be mad at Uber Eats alone. The whole system is broken. Tariffs, rising costs, fuel surcharges — all of it is trickling down to the consumer. Businesses are struggling, so they raise their prices. The delivery apps want their cut, so they tack on more fees. The government gets its share with taxes. And at the end of the day, it’s us — the regular people just trying to get something to eat — who end up paying double what something is worth.
It’s sad because it used to be that ordering through Uber Eats was a convenience. You paid a few extra dollars for the luxury of not leaving your house. Now, that “convenience” is practically a punishment. You’re paying restaurant-level prices for fast food — and not even the full meal, just dessert! Imagine trying to get a dozen donuts now — you’re easily looking at $30 before fees. That’s absurd.
What really gets me is how numb people are becoming to it. We’ve gotten so used to seeing inflated prices that no one even blinks anymore. But I can’t sit here and normalize this. It’s donuts today, but what’s next? $20 for a burger? $10 for a small fry? We’re already halfway there.
At this point, I might as well get up, drive to Krispy Kreme myself, and save the extra $10 to put toward gas — though even that’s expensive now. But it makes more sense than letting these apps nickel-and-dime us over basic food. We’re in a place where luxury has disguised itself as convenience, and most people are too tired to fight it.
Something’s got to give. Either these companies need to rethink their pricing models, or people are going to stop ordering altogether. Because if I’m paying $25 for six donuts, I expect them to come with a lifetime supply of glaze, a handwritten thank-you note, and maybe a sermon about how to budget through the apocalypse.
This is beyond inflation — it’s robbery disguised as convenience.
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You’re absolutely right — these prices are getting out of hand. I went to grab a simple dozen from Krispy Kreme last week, and I almost walked right back out when I saw the total. It’s crazy because people think it’s just “inflation” or “greedy companies,” but a lot of this really is connected to Trump’s tariffs. When you start taxing imports, it doesn’t just hit big corporations — it trickles all the way down to something as small as a donut.
The flour, the sugar, the oil — even the boxes they come in — a lot of those materials are tied to imported goods or rely on industries affected by tariffs. Once those costs go up, companies like Krispy Kreme have no choice but to pass that cost down to us. So now we’re paying $3 or $4 for what used to be $1.25.
And it’s not just donuts. We’re seeing the same pattern across food chains, groceries, and even coffee. When the price of goods keeps climbing, people start cutting back, which hurts small businesses, delivery workers, and local economies. It’s like a domino effect — one policy decision ends up affecting millions of everyday Americans.
At the end of the day, it’s not just about a donut. It’s about how policies at the top are slowly squeezing the middle and working class. The truth is, we’re paying for it whether we realize it or not — and it’s only going to get worse if these tariffs keep rolling out.