Ask a TBC raid leader what separates their best players from the rest and consumable discipline comes up before parses do. Here is the complete weekly burn of a serious progression raider, itemized.

The non-negotiables

  • Flask or double elixir: one flask per raid night survives death; elixir users burn a Battle plus Guardian combo per attempt-heavy session. Two raid nights: 2 flasks or 4-6 elixir pairs.
  • Food buff: 20-30 buff foods weekly counting wipes and repops.
  • Weapon consumables: oils and stones — casters and melee alike, reapplied through the night.
  • Combat potions: Haste, Destruction or Ironshield potions on cooldown for serious attempts — this is the line item casuals skip and hardcore logs show.
  • Health/mana potions and runes: Super Healing, Super Mana, Dark or Demonic Runes for the mana classes.

The weekly bill

Progression weeks with wipe-heavy nights land between 150 and 300 gold per character depending on class and how honest you are about potion cooldowns. Farm-content weeks halve that. Multiply by an alt and a Season of arena consumables, and the quiet monthly burn crosses four digits for many players.

Cutting costs without cutting output

Buy materials on weekend dips and craft raid-week; guild cauldrons and feast-style sharing where available; alchemist alts with the right specializations. What NOT to do: skip potion cooldowns to save gold — the DPS loss extends progression, and extra wipe nights cost more consumables than the potions did.

The takeaway

Consumables are a subscription paid in gold, and the sub price is set by your ambition tier. Budget it like rent: farmed, crafted or simply bought outright when the weekly circuit does not fit your life. The raiders who show up stocked every single week are not richer — they are just never surprised by the bill.