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Chef preparing fresh vegetables on a cutting board in a restaurant kitchen

Knowing how to reduce food waste in restaurants is one of the most valuable skills a restaurant owner can develop. The average restaurant wastes 4–10% of the food it purchases before it ever reaches a customer’s plate. Add what customers leave behind, and the losses climb even higher.

Nationwide, U.S. restaurants generate between 22 and 33 billion pounds — roughly 10 to 15 million tons — of food waste every year, costing the industry an estimated $162 billion annually. That’s money walking out the door in the form of spoiled produce, over-prepped dishes, and half-eaten plates.

The upside: for every $1 you invest in reducing food waste, you can expect around $8 back in cost savings. That’s one of the strongest returns on investment available to any restaurant.

This guide covers 12 practical strategies to reduce food waste in restaurants — from running a food waste audit to optimizing your menu, training your team, and handling surplus food the right way.

Why Food Waste Costs Your Restaurant More Than You Think

Food costs already represent 28–35% of your total sales. When you throw food away, you lose more than just the ingredient — you also lose the labor that went into preparing it, the storage space used to hold it, and the energy required to refrigerate or cook it.

Here’s what the data shows:

Food Waste Impact Data Point
Annual industry cost (U.S.) ~$162 billion
Food wasted before reaching a customer 4–10% of purchases
Share of surplus food from plate waste ~70%
ROI on food waste reduction programs ~$8 saved per $1 spent
Consumers who factor in waste practices when choosing a restaurant 55%

Food waste also carries a significant environmental cost. When food ends up in a landfill, it decomposes and releases methane — a greenhouse gas more than 80 times as potent as carbon dioxide over a 20-year period. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency identifies food loss and waste as one of the leading contributors to greenhouse gas emissions in the United States, with direct links to climate change and damage to the natural environment. The Natural Resources Defense Council estimates that roughly 40% of the U.S. food supply goes to waste each year.

Consumer expectations are shifting alongside the environmental conversation. According to the National Restaurant Association, sustainability is increasingly a factor in where diners choose to eat — making waste minimization a real marketing differentiator for restaurants that take it seriously. A study by Unilever showed that 72 percent of restaurant guests say a restaurant’s sustainability practices influence their dining decisions — and 68% believe restaurants should have active food waste reduction programs in place.

Reducing food waste in restaurants isn’t just a back-of-house concern. It affects your food costs, your contribution to greenhouse gas emissions, and your reputation with customers who care about sustainability.

If you’re not already tracking where your money is going, start with a food cost calculator to get a baseline before you start making changes.

The Two Types of Restaurant Food Waste

Before you can address the problem, you need to know what kind of waste you’re dealing with. Restaurant food waste falls into two categories:

Type What It Is Examples
Pre-consumer waste Waste created in the kitchen before food reaches the customer Spoiled produce, over-prepped dishes, trim waste, cooking mistakes
Post-consumer waste Food that customers leave on their plates Unfinished entrees, uneaten sides, food left on serving platters

Post-consumer plate waste makes up about 70% of all food surplus in restaurants. But pre-consumer waste is easier to control — which is why most waste reduction programs start in the kitchen.

How to Reduce Food Waste in Restaurants: 12 Tips

These strategies work across all food service businesses — restaurants, cafes, catering operations, and food trucks.

1. Conduct a Food Waste Audit

A food waste audit is the starting point for any serious waste reduction effort. Consistent waste tracking is the only way to understand how much food loss is actually happening in your kitchen — and where it’s coming from.

To run a basic audit:

  1. Set up labeled waste containers for three categories: spoilage (food that expired before use), prep waste (trimmings, mistakes during prep), and plate waste (food returned uneaten by customers).
  2. Weigh or estimate the volume in each category daily for at least one week.
  3. Log results by day and by meal period — lunch vs. dinner often show very different patterns.
  4. Look for patterns: Which items spoil most often? Which dishes come back barely touched?

Your audit doesn’t need to be high-tech. A spreadsheet works. What matters is consistency — tracking the same categories, at the same times, every day.

Most restaurants are surprised by their results. Common findings: certain proteins spoil every Monday because the kitchen over-ordered for the weekend rush, or one side dish is almost always returned unfinished. Once you see the data, you can fix the right problems instead of guessing.

2. Improve Your Inventory Management

Poor inventory management is one of the leading drivers of pre-consumer food waste. When you order more than you need — or lose track of what you already have — food sits in the walk-in until it expires. Smarter supply chain decisions, starting with how and when you order from your suppliers — whether that’s a local farm, a wholesale distributor, or a grocery store — are the foundation of any food waste reduction program.

A smarter approach:

  • Order to your actual sales. Review your sales data from the past two to four weeks before placing orders. Order based on what you sell, not what you think you might sell.
  • Use demand forecasting. Track whether specific days, seasons, or events drive higher or lower traffic. A restaurant near a stadium has very different Friday needs than a typical week.
  • Set par levels. Define the minimum and maximum quantity you should have on hand for each ingredient. Only reorder when you hit the minimum.
  • Count inventory regularly. Weekly counts (at minimum) keep you from being surprised by what’s expired or missing.

Knowing exactly what’s in your walk-in before you place an order is one of the simplest ways to improve kitchen efficiency, cut waste, and control your food costs at the same time.

3. Use the FIFO Method

FIFO stands for “first in, first out.” It’s an inventory management method used across the food industry: always use your oldest ingredients before your newer ones.

How to make FIFO work in practice:

  1. Label everything with the date it was received or prepared.
  2. Stock shelves with new items at the back and move older items to the front.
  3. Train all staff to always pull from the front (oldest) first — every time.
  4. Apply FIFO to prepped items too. Soups, sauces, and marinated proteins should be used in the order they were made.

It sounds straightforward, but most food spoilage happens because someone grabbed a new container instead of using the one that was already open. FIFO prevents that from happening.

4. Store Food Properly

Even with FIFO in place, food spoilage happens faster when ingredients are stored incorrectly. Proper storage extends shelf life — keeping ingredients usable for longer — and reduces wasted food before it ever reaches a customer. It also prevents food safety issues, which can be far more costly than spoilage alone.

Key practices:

  • Keep refrigerators between 35–38°F and freezers at 0°F or below. Check temperatures at the start of every shift.
  • Store raw proteins on the lowest shelves — below ready-to-eat items — to prevent cross-contamination.
  • Use airtight containers to prevent moisture loss and odor transfer between ingredients.
  • Label everything with both the prep date and the use-by date — not just when it arrived.
  • Don’t overpack refrigerators. Air needs to circulate to maintain consistent temperatures.

Equipment matters here too. Malfunctioning refrigeration is a fast path to spoilage. Read about restaurant equipment maintenance to make sure your systems are working as they should.

5. Optimize Your Menu to Reduce Waste

Your menu has a direct effect on how much food you waste. The longer and more complex your menu, the more unique ingredients you need to stock — and the more likely some of those ingredients are to go unused.

Shrink your menu. Research consistently shows that smaller menus lead to less food waste. With fewer dishes, you need fewer unique ingredients, which makes inventory much simpler to manage. A limited menu isn’t a downgrade — many of the most profitable restaurants are built around tight, focused offerings.

Cross-utilize ingredients. Design your menu so the same ingredient appears in multiple dishes. Roasted chicken thighs used in a dinner entrée can also anchor a lunch grain bowl and form the base of a daily soup. That way, every ingredient has multiple uses regardless of which dishes sell that day.

Switch to seasonal menus. A seasonal menu lets you order ingredients at their peak — when supply is high and quality is better — and avoid holding perishables that are out of season.

Apply menu engineering. Menu engineering is the process of analyzing which dishes are both popular and profitable. Removing low-selling dishes cuts ingredient complexity and eliminates the need to stock items for recipes that rarely get ordered.

6. Don’t Over-Prep

Over-prepping is one of the most common — and most preventable — sources of kitchen waste. When cooks prep too much at the start of a service, whatever doesn’t get used often ends up in the trash.

How to prep smarter:

  • Use a kitchen prep list that estimates how much of each item you’ll actually need based on expected covers for that service — not based on habit or rough guesses.
  • Prep in smaller batches. Make a small batch first and prep more as needed, rather than loading up at the beginning of service.
  • Track your end-of-service waste. If you consistently throw away 20% of your prepped chicken at the end of every lunch, prep less.

The goal isn’t zero prep waste — it’s a level of prep waste you can measure and improve over time.

7. Control Portion Sizes

Post-consumer waste — food that customers leave behind — makes up the majority of restaurant food surplus. Portion size is one of the biggest drivers.

  • Standardize your recipes. Written recipes with exact weights and portion sizes make every dish consistent. This also lets you calculate your food cost per recipe accurately.
  • Offer smaller portion options. Half portions, small plates, or à la carte options give customers control over how much they order. When people can order the right amount for their appetite, they’re less likely to leave food on the table.
  • Look at your side portions. If data or observation shows that most customers don’t finish a particular side, consider reducing the portion or making it an optional add-on rather than a default.

Use a recipe cost calculator to model the financial impact of adjusting portion sizes across your menu before you make the changes.

8. Train Your Staff on Food Waste Reduction

Your team is on the front line of food waste. No system works if the people responsible for it don’t understand why it matters.

What effective staff training looks like:

  • Show them the numbers. Share what food waste costs the restaurant each week in real dollars. When people see specific figures, habits change faster.
  • Make FIFO, labeling, and proper storage part of onboarding — not a one-time mention at hire, but a core skill taught to every new team member.
  • Hold brief daily walk-in checks. A two-minute look at what’s close to its use-by date before service can prevent a lot of end-of-week spoilage.
  • Recognize good behavior. If a prep cook consistently uses close-dated ingredients creatively, acknowledge it. Culture follows what you reward.

Waste reduction doesn’t happen from a memo. It happens when everyone on your team understands the stakes and feels responsible for the result.

9. Repurpose Ingredients Creatively

Before throwing something away, ask: can this be used somewhere else?

A lot of what ends up in the trash is actually an ingredient with potential:

  • Day-old bread → croutons, bread pudding, or breadcrumbs
  • Vegetable trimmings → stocks and broths
  • Overripe fruit → sauces, compotes, or smoothies
  • Leftover proteins → soups, grain bowls, or specials

This approach — sometimes called whole ingredient utilization — is standard practice in zero-waste kitchens, but any restaurant can apply the mindset. Work with your head chef to identify the five ingredients that get partially used most often, and build a standing plan for what to do with the remainder of each.

10. Run Daily Specials to Move Surplus Ingredients

A daily special is one of the most practical tools for reducing kitchen waste. Instead of discarding a product that’s close to its use-by date, you put it on the menu at a compelling price and sell it.

Ideas that work:

  • Chef’s special built around what needs to move from the walk-in that day
  • Staff meals made from surplus ingredients — this reduces waste and boosts team morale
  • End-of-night discounts on menu items that won’t carry over to the next service

For your menu pricing strategy, price specials to at least cover your food cost. Even at a thin margin, it’s better than a total loss from discarding the ingredient.

11. Donate Surplus Food

When surplus food can’t be repurposed or sold as a special, donation is the next best option.

Donating surplus food:

  • Helps address food insecurity and food security — over 40 million people in the United States face hunger, and restaurants have edible food that can make a real difference
  • Keeps excess food out of landfills, supports the food supply, and contributes to a more sustainable food system
  • May be tax-deductible — confirm the details with your accountant

In the U.S., the Bill Emerson Good Samaritan Food Donation Act protects restaurants that donate food in good faith from liability if a recipient becomes ill — removing one of the biggest concerns restaurateurs have about donating edible food to those in need.

According to ReFED — a nonprofit focused on ending food loss and waste in the U.S. food system — food donation is among the highest-impact ways for food service operations to divert surplus from landfills. Partner with a local food bank, soup kitchen, or food rescue organization to get started.

Apps like Too Good To Go and Food For All let you sell surplus meals at a discount just before closing — turning potential waste into last-minute revenue while helping people access affordable food.

12. Compost Food Scraps

Some food waste is unavoidable — vegetable peels, meat bones, coffee grounds, bread scraps, eggshells, fruit rinds. Composting turns those food scraps into something useful instead of sending them to a landfill, where they would decompose and release methane into the atmosphere — contributing to greenhouse gas emissions and climate change.

Several states and cities now require commercial food businesses to separate organic waste. Vermont became the first state to ban food waste from landfills in 2020. California, Massachusetts, and New York City have all passed legislation restricting the amount of food waste restaurants and other businesses can send to landfills. Check the laws in your area — in many places, composting isn’t just a sustainability goal, it’s a legal requirement.

Options for restaurants:

  • Commercial composting pickup: Many cities offer organic waste collection for food businesses. This is the simplest starting point — check what programs are available in your area.
  • Partner with a local farm or community garden: Some farms will take your food scraps in exchange for produce, which benefits both sides.
  • On-site composting: Only practical for operations with outdoor space, but worth considering where feasible.

Composting fits into the broader food waste hierarchy: first reduce, then repurpose, then donate, then compost — with landfill disposal as the last resort.

Implementing even a few of these practices will make a measurable difference. Together, they form a solid foundation for any restaurant that’s serious about cutting waste and improving its bottom line.

What to Do with Leftover Food from Customers

Post-consumer waste — what customers leave on their plates — is harder to prevent, but there are real ways to reduce it.

  • Normalize takeout containers for leftovers. Train servers to proactively offer to box up uneaten food. When it’s part of the routine, customers are more likely to take their leftovers home instead of leaving them behind.
  • Use eco-friendly packaging. Compostable or recyclable containers — and making recycling easy for customers — make it easier for diners to feel good about taking food home and disposing of it responsibly.
  • Partner with food rescue platforms. Apps like Too Good To Go let you list surplus end-of-day meals at a discount, converting food that would go to waste into last-minute revenue.
  • Offer flexible portions. When customers can order exactly what they want — half portions, sides only, small plates — they’re less likely to leave food on the table.

Building a culture where taking leftovers home is the default (not an afterthought) takes time, but small operational nudges make a real difference over time.

How a Digital Menu Helps Reduce Food Waste

One tool that’s often overlooked in waste reduction conversations is the menu itself — specifically, how quickly you can update it.

With a printed menu, you’re locked into serving dishes based on what you had when the menu went to print, even if an ingredient is running low, nearing expiration, or temporarily unavailable. Updating a printed menu takes days or weeks and costs money to reprint.

A digital menu lets you update in real time. If you run low on a key ingredient mid-service, you can mark a dish as sold out instantly — before customers order it and before your kitchen over-preps to meet demand that isn’t there.

That same real-time control lets you:

  • Add daily specials quickly to move surplus ingredients before they expire
  • Remove dishes that depend on ingredients you’re trying to use up or have run out of
  • Adjust your offerings on slow days to reflect what’s actually available in the kitchen

With Menubly, you can make those changes from your phone in under a minute. Your menu updates immediately across every device — no reprinting, no confusion between the front of house and the kitchen. Some restaurants also use dedicated waste tracking software to log and measure food waste data; a digital menu that updates in real time pairs well with that kind of software, giving your team the information they need to prep smarter. For restaurants working to cut waste and protect margins at the same time, that combination is genuinely useful.

Managing your menu digitally also supports better menu analysis over time — you can track which dishes get ordered and which don’t, which informs smarter prep decisions and inventory ordering going forward.

Frequently Asked Questions About Food Waste in Restaurants

How much food do restaurants waste?

U.S. restaurants generate an estimated 22 to 33 billion pounds of food waste per year. On average, restaurants waste 4–10% of the food they purchase before it ever reaches a customer. Full-service restaurants generate roughly 3,050 pounds of food waste per employee per year.

What percentage of restaurant food is wasted?

Around 4–10% of food purchased by restaurants is wasted in the kitchen as pre-consumer waste. On the customer side, plate waste (food left uneaten) accounts for about 70% of all food surplus generated at the restaurant level. Both types add up to significant financial losses.

What are the main causes of food waste in restaurants?

The most common causes are over-ordering, poor inventory management, over-prepping before service, improper food storage, and oversized portions that customers can’t finish. Most of these are addressable with operational changes that don’t require major investment — just consistency and measurement.

What do restaurants do with leftover food?

Options include repurposing surplus into daily specials or staff meals, donating to food banks and rescue organizations, selling discounted end-of-day meals through platforms like Too Good To Go, composting organic scraps, or offering take-home containers to customers. The goal is to keep as much food as possible out of the landfill.

Is investing in food waste reduction worth it?

Yes — the ROI is clear. For every $1 spent on food waste reduction programs, restaurants typically save around $8 in costs. With food costs representing 28–35% of revenue, reducing waste has a direct impact on your profit margin. The investment pays back quickly and compounds over time.

What is the FIFO method in restaurants?

FIFO stands for “first in, first out.” It’s an inventory management method where you always use the oldest ingredients before newer ones. In practice: label everything with a date, store new stock at the back of shelves, and always pull from the front. FIFO is one of the most reliable methods for preventing spoilage in a commercial kitchen.

How long does it take to see results from a food waste reduction program?

Most restaurants start seeing measurable results within 4–8 weeks of consistently tracking and acting on food waste data. The first audit will surface your biggest problem areas, and addressing those first typically yields the fastest savings. Long-term programs improve further as habits and systems become routine.

How do restaurants dispose of food waste?

Most restaurant food waste currently ends up in landfills, where it decomposes and generates methane — a greenhouse gas with significant climate implications. Better alternatives include composting food scraps, donating edible food to food banks serving people experiencing food insecurity, and selling surplus through food rescue apps. States like Vermont (the first state to ban food waste from landfills), California, and Massachusetts — along with cities like New York City — have passed laws restricting how commercial food waste must be handled. Check your local regulations to make sure your waste management practices are compliant.

Start Reducing Food Waste in Your Restaurant Today

Reducing food waste in restaurants is an ongoing practice, not a one-time fix. Start with a food waste audit to find out where your biggest losses are. Then work through inventory management, menu optimization, portion control, and staff training. Track your results, adjust over time, and the savings compound.

Less waste means a lower food cost percentage, more money left over at the end of each month, and a restaurant that operates as part of a more sustainable food system. If you want to go deeper on measurement and reduction strategy, ReFED (refed.org) offers free data tools and guides built specifically for food service operations. For more ways to strengthen your restaurant overall, check out our guide to restaurant improvement ideas.

And if managing your menu in real time sounds like something your kitchen could use — marking dishes sold out instantly, adding specials in seconds, and keeping your front of house in sync with what’s actually available — try Menubly free for 30 days and see how much easier it is when everything is digital.