Food Cost Calculator
Food cost percentage is one of the most critical metrics in restaurant management. It measures how much of your revenue goes to ingredient costs. Industry benchmarks vary by restaurant type, but most full-service restaurants target 28–35% food cost. This calculator helps you determine menu prices, evaluate margins, and compare pricing strategies.
Calculate Food Cost & Menu Price
Food cost percentages are estimates based on industry averages from the National Restaurant Association. Actual costs vary by location, supplier contracts, menu mix, seasonality, and operational efficiency. This calculator is for planning purposes only.
Industry Food Cost Benchmarks
| Restaurant Type | Typical Food Cost % | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Quick Service / Fast Food | 25–30% | High volume, low ingredient cost, standardized portions |
| Fast Casual | 26–32% | Fresh ingredients, moderate pricing, efficient kitchens |
| Casual Dining | 28–35% | Full-service, varied menu, moderate waste |
| Upscale Casual | 30–35% | Higher-quality ingredients, skilled prep, larger portions |
| Fine Dining | 32–40% | Premium ingredients offset by high menu prices |
| Steakhouse / Seafood | 35–42% | High protein cost, market-price volatility |
| Buffet | 35–45% | Volume purchasing offsets higher waste rates |
| Catering / Banquet | 28–35% | Predictable counts reduce waste; per-person pricing |
Key Food Cost Formulas
- Food Cost % = (Cost of Ingredients ÷ Menu Price) × 100
- Menu Price = Cost of Ingredients ÷ Target Food Cost %
- Markup Multiplier = 1 ÷ Target Food Cost % (e.g., 30% → 3.33x)
- Gross Profit per Plate = Menu Price − Ingredient Cost
- Contribution Margin = (Menu Price − Ingredient Cost) ÷ Menu Price
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a good food cost percentage?
Most successful restaurants operate between 28% and 35% food cost. Fast-casual concepts can achieve 25–28%, while fine dining and steakhouses may run 35–40% and compensate with higher average checks. The key is balancing food cost against labor cost — combined “prime cost” (food + labor) should stay below 60–65% of revenue.
How do I lower my food cost without raising prices?
Reduce waste through better portioning and inventory management. Cross-utilize ingredients across multiple menu items. Negotiate with suppliers or join a purchasing co-op. Adjust your menu mix to feature higher-margin items more prominently. Implement a first-in-first-out (FIFO) inventory system to reduce spoilage. Conduct regular waste audits.
Should I price based on food cost or contribution margin?
Smart operators use contribution margin, not just food cost percentage. A $40 steak at 38% food cost yields $24.80 gross profit, while a $14 pasta at 22% food cost yields only $10.92. The steak is more profitable despite the higher food cost percentage. Menu engineering uses both metrics to optimize your overall menu profitability.