The Mediterranean diet sounds expensive and complicated. That’s the most common concern when people consider it as about a quarter of Australians surveyed said cost would be a barrier.
But when University of South Australia researchers actually priced out Mediterranean-style meals using Coles supermarket prices, they found the opposite: a Mediterranean food basket was cheaper than a typical Western diet, potentially saving a family of four around $28 weekly.
The confusion makes sense. “Mediterranean diet” sounds like it requires imported olives and exotic ingredients. In reality, it’s a pattern built around vegetables, fruits, wholegrains, legumes, nuts, olive oil, and fish, with less red meat and fewer processed foods. Australian olive oil, local fish, and supermarket legumes all fit perfectly.

Why Is There So Much Research Interest in the Mediterranean Diet?
The Mediterranean diet has become one of the most thoroughly studied eating patterns because populations around the Mediterranean historically showed lower rates of heart disease and longer lifespans. Researchers wanted to know if diet explained this.
The landmark PREDIMED trial in Spain followed over 7,000 people at high cardiovascular risk. Those eating Mediterranean-style with extra olive oil or nuts had about 31% fewer major cardiovascular events compared to people following low-fat advice. Multiple studies since have found similar results – roughly 23% lower cardiovascular disease risk with higher Mediterranean diet adherence.
For type 2 diabetes, people following Mediterranean patterns show approximately 20% lower risk of developing diabetes, with measurable improvements in blood sugar control for people who already have it.
Growing evidence links Mediterranean eating to cognitive health too, with studies suggesting 11-30% lower risk of age-related cognitive decline, though more research is needed to understand the mechanisms.
How Does the Mediterranean Diet Compare to Other Eating Plans?
If you’re wondering about Mediterranean versus DASH or plant-based diets, a network analysis of 121 trials found that Mediterranean, DASH, and several other evidence-based patterns all produce similar modest benefits for weight (around 4-5 kg loss) and blood pressure. DASH edges ahead slightly for blood pressure; Mediterranean shows particular benefits for blood lipids and blood sugar.
An Israeli trial comparing three diets over two years found Mediterranean and low-carb approaches produced similar weight loss (around 4.5 kg), both outperforming low-fat diets. Among participants with diabetes, Mediterranean produced better blood sugar improvements.
The point isn’t about declaring one diet as the absolute “best” but rather, it’s that several approaches work. The key is finding the approach that fits your lifestyle and that you can maintain consistently over time.
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Practical Tips for Embracing the Mediterranean Diet in Australia
Australian trials have shown Mediterranean eating is achievable here. Older Australians achieved high adherence using local ingredients such as Australian seafood, seasonal produce, familiar cooking methods adapted to Mediterranean principles.
Real barriers exist: fresh fish can be expensive, produce access varies, family preferences differ, time is tight. But the pattern is flexible. Canned fish works. Frozen vegetables work. Legumes are cheap and shelf-stable. A jar of olive oil lasts weeks.
Small changes add up over time. Replacing butter with olive oil, increasing your vegetable intake, and incorporating fish into your meals each week, are manageable adjustments that can lead to lasting improvements in your health and eating habits.

Consult Your GP Before Starting the Mediterranean Diet
If you’re considering dietary changes, particularly with existing health conditions or medications, discuss with your GP or practice nurse. They can help you think through whether Mediterranean eating suits your health situation, how changes might affect medications (especially for blood pressure or diabetes), and whether dietitian support would help.
The Australian dietary guidelines already align closely with Mediterranean principles – both emphasize real food over processed options. The Mediterranean diet’s strength lies in a flexible pattern built around foods that have nourished populations for generations.
Whether the Mediterranean diet is right for you depends on your personal health goals, current circumstances, and what eating habits you can realistically maintain over the long term. It’s an important conversation to have with your healthcare provider to ensure the diet fits your unique needs and supports your overall wellbeing. Taking that step can set you on a path toward healthier eating and improved health outcomes.
Additional Resources for Mediterranean Diet Insights
- Heart Foundation: Mediterranean-style eating – Australian Heart Foundation’s practical guide to Mediterranean eating with local adaptations.
- Eat For Health: Australian Dietary Guidelines – National guidelines that align with Mediterranean principles and provide evidence-based eating recommendations.
- Healthdirect: Healthy Eating – Government health resource covering nutrition fundamentals and practical meal planning strategies.
