Have you ever let a work email decide what you eat and then wondered if that choice was worth the wait? I did. I broke a fast during Lent because a job need gave me an excuse to test a famous menu item.
I had gone two weeks without fast food, then an offer popped into my inbox during my first week of the challenge. It felt like the perfect moment to give this famous sandwich a try.
Finding time for a quick meal matters, especially when work pulls you in a dozen directions. This one item seemed like the ideal way to end my fast and judge local food quality.
I write from experience and curiosity. Over the next pages, I’ll explain why this choice mattered to me and why every fast food fan should evaluate the sandwiches near them.
Key Takeaways
- I paused fast food for weeks before making this choice.
- A work-related email gave me the nudge to try the item.
- Short breaks from routine can sharpen how we judge food.
- Timing and convenience often shape our meals more than taste alone.
- I took this as a chance to evaluate quality at a local chain.
My Experience with the Arby’s Reuben Sandwich
After years away from this seasonal offering, I finally tracked it down again. I admitted in a recent post that a goofy commercial gave me NRNS — Need Reuben Now Syndrome — and I couldn’t shake the craving.
My visit in San Diego made one thing clear: this is a fast food take on a classic. The meal arrived quickly, but the overall experience felt thin compared with the memory I’d built over the years.
I waited two weeks with real anticipation, hoping time would make the tasting better. Instead, the result landed squarely in my latest post as “Shameless.” I searched for bright spots but found few.
On balance, this was a disappointing food run. For readers tracking seasonal returns or deciding whether to try an arby reuben after long gaps, my experience suggests tempering your expectations.
- Seasonal item—not year-round.
- Quick service, underwhelming quality.
- High nostalgia, low payoff.
Breaking Down the Ingredients of the Arby’s Reuben Sandwich

I unwrapped the roll and checked the layers, hoping seven ounces of meat would tell a clear story. I wanted to judge each element on its own and see if the parts added up to a memorable whole.
The Quality of the Corned Beef
The Double Stacked Reuben packs seven ounces of thinly sliced corned beef, a hefty amount for fast food. Still, the beef lacked depth; the corned slices tasted bland and overly processed.
The Role of Thousand Island Dressing
The sandwich comes dressed with generous thousand island dressing. The sauce was so heavy that it eclipsed flavors from the meat and cheese.
Result: the island dressing dominated rather than balanced the other ingredients.
The Texture of the Marble Rye Bread
The toasted marble rye looked right but was barely warm and soft to the bite. Sauerkraut had almost no tang, and the Swiss cheese was hard to assess amid the strong dressing.
- Meat: large portion, weak flavor.
- Bread: under-toasted rye bread that failed to add texture.
- Toppings: dressing overwhelmed; sauerkraut muted.
Assessing the Value and Convenience of the Arby’s Reuben Sandwich

I walked in on impulse during a short window and focused on how price, deals, and time stacked up.
For a quick fast food meal, the regular reuben runs $4.99. The Double Stacked version is $7.49. You can get a combo with a side and drink for about $10.59.
Pricing and Promotional Offers
Smart buys: coupons and occasional buy-one-get-one deals make these sandwiches easier on the wallet. I used a website coupon that cut my cost noticeably.
- Regular: $4.99
- Double: $7.49
- Combo: $10.59
Extras like curly fries and soda raised my bill. The store locator also saved me time, which matters when you have one short break.
Overall, price feels competitive for fast food, but true value depends on your taste. If flavor is king, the math may not add up for you.
Conclusion
My short visit left me deciding if speed and accessibility outweighed the gaps in flavor.
Bottom line: the reuben sandwich can be a convenient, seasonal choice for people who value quick deli-style options on the go.
I found the $4.99 price appealing, but the corned beef and rye preparation varied across locations. Heavy thousand island tended to mask the sauerkraut and meat more than enhance them.
If you need a fast, familiar lunch between meetings, the chain’s store locator makes grabbing one easy. Ultimately, pick this option if convenience matters most; lower expectations help the most when judging fast-food takes on classics.

