McDonald’s is making a direct play for your wallet this spring.
The world’s largest fast-food chain is set to launch “McValue 2.0” in April — an updated value strategy that includes a new menu of items priced at $3 or less and a $4 breakfast meal deal. The announcement, first reported by the Wall Street Journal, comes as McDonald’s works to repair its reputation as an affordable option after years of post-pandemic price increases pushed customers away.
Franchisees have already aligned on the plan, with internal communications showing “unanimous alignment” on addressing what the company itself has called an affordability gap.
What’s on the McValue 2.0 Menu
The new lineup is built around two tiers of deals.
The $3-and-under menu will feature all-day items including a 4-piece Chicken McNuggets and a Sausage Biscuit, among others. These items are designed to give budget-conscious customers something substantial without requiring a full meal purchase.
The $4 breakfast meal deal will bundle a McMuffin, hash brown, and coffee — a solid morning combo at a price that undercuts most competitors’ comparable offerings.
Both tiers replace the current McValue menu’s buy-one-add-one-for-$1 promotion, which launched in 2025. McDonald’s is betting this updated approach gives customers more flexibility and clearer value at a glance.
Why McDonald’s Is Doing This Now
The timing is no accident.
McDonald’s has spent nearly two years trying to win back customers who felt priced out after inflation-era price increases made a basic burger combo feel like a splurge. The chain’s $5 meal deal, introduced in the summer of 2024 and extended due to strong demand, helped stabilize traffic — particularly among lower-income customers — but the company has been signaling it wanted to go further.
CEO Chris Kempczinski said during the company’s February earnings call that McDonald’s would double down on value and deeper discounts. “McDonald’s is not going to get beat on value and affordability,” he told investors.
The urgency behind that statement reflects a tough fast-food environment. A Pew Research survey cited in coverage of the announcement found that 72% of Americans rate current economic conditions as fair or poor. Consumers who have already pulled back on discretionary spending are increasingly selective about where they eat out — and $10+ burgers, even from a legacy chain, are a hard sell.
How It Stacks Up Against the Competition
McDonald’s isn’t alone in its value push. Wendy’s, Burger King, and Taco Bell have all rolled out aggressive discount promotions over the past year, competing for the same pool of budget-conscious diners. The fast-food value wars are very much ongoing — and McDonald’s McValue 2.0 is its most aggressive move in that battle yet.
What gives McDonald’s an edge is sheer scale. With thousands of locations nationwide, a $3 price point backed by the Golden Arches carries a different kind of weight than the same price at a regional chain.
What Customers Are Actually Saying
Not everyone is impressed.
On Reddit and social media, reactions to the McValue 2.0 news have been mixed. Some customers pointed out that McDonald’s once offered items like cheeseburgers and McChickens on a dollar menu — a price point that feels like a distant memory in 2026. A $3 McNuggets, for some, isn’t the return to affordability they were hoping for.
That sentiment reflects a broader challenge for McDonald’s: the bar for what counts as “value” has shifted after years of inflation, and winning back diners means more than just announcing lower prices. Execution at the store level — speed, accuracy, and consistency — will matter as much as the price tag.
The Bottom Line
McDonald’s McValue 2.0 launches in April with a new $3-and-under menu featuring items like 4-piece Chicken McNuggets and a Sausage Biscuit, plus a $4 breakfast meal deal with a McMuffin, hash brown, and coffee. The update replaces the existing buy-one-add-one-for-$1 structure and represents the chain’s most direct response yet to years of customer frustration over rising prices.
Whether $3 McNuggets are enough to change minds — that’s a question April will answer.












