Food costs across the United States have risen roughly 29% over the past four years, and labor costs have jumped 31% in the same period. Between supply chain disruptions, inflation, and a post-pandemic economy that keeps pushing expenses higher, many restaurants in the restaurant industry are feeling the squeeze. For most restaurant owners, the math is simple: if your costs go up but your prices remain the same, your profit disappears.
Yet raising your prices feels risky. You worry about regulars walking out, negative reviews, or losing ground to cheaper competitors. The good news? You can increase menu prices and keep your customers — if you do it the right way. The key is finding the right restaurant menu pricing approach that balances profitability with customer perception.
This guide walks you through when to raise prices, how to calculate the right increase, proven menu pricing strategies that protect customer loyalty, how to communicate changes, and the mistakes that drive diners away. By the end, you’ll have a clear plan to raise your menu prices with confidence.
Running a restaurant on thin margins has always been tough, but recent years have made it harder. Wholesale food prices increased by 7% in 2024 alone, and food-away-from-home prices are expected to keep climbing in 2025 and beyond. Meanwhile, 88% of restaurant operators reported higher labor costs last year. Minimum wage increases in several states have pushed payroll expenses even higher, and supply chain disruptions continue to drive up the cost of goods sold.
Here’s the breakdown of where every dollar of restaurant revenue goes:
| Expense Category | Percentage of Revenue |
|---|---|
| Food costs (cost of goods sold) | 28–35% |
| Labor costs (wage, payroll taxes) | 25–35% |
| Overhead (rent, utility bills, insurance) | 25–30% |
| Profit | 3–9% |
With profit margins between 3% and 9%, even a small rise in ingredient or labor costs can push a restaurant into the red. The consumer price index for food away from home has climbed steadily, and restaurant prices across the board have had to keep pace. That’s why 57% of restaurant operators said they plan to raise menu prices this year. If your costs have gone up, your prices should too — not out of greed, but out of necessity. Your prices need to cover costs for ingredients, labor, rent, and every other expense that keeps your kitchen running.
The key is making smart pricing decisions so your customers perceive the prices as fair and keep coming back.
Timing matters almost as much as the increase itself. Raise prices at the wrong moment, and you’ll get pushback. Raise them at the right moment, and most customers won’t even notice.
Don’t make pricing decisions blindly. Use data from your point-of-sale system and sales analytics to identify the right timing. Here are the strongest signals that it’s time to adjust your prices:
Avoid raising prices during slow seasons, right after receiving negative press, or immediately after opening a new location. Context and customer expectations matter.
Before changing any prices, you need to know your numbers. The right menu pricing starts with accurate costing. Guessing leads to either undercharging (losing money) or overcharging (losing customers). Here are three pricing methods every restaurateur should use when finding the right price for each menu item.
This is the foundation of menu pricing and the most common restaurant pricing strategy. It tells you what percentage of a dish’s selling price goes to the costs to make it.
Food Cost % = (Cost of Ingredients ÷ Selling Price) × 100
If your chicken pasta costs $4.50 in ingredients and you sell it for $15, your food cost percentage is 30%. Most restaurants aim for an ideal food cost percentage between 28% and 35%. If a dish is above 35%, it’s a candidate for a price increase. Any menu item below that ideal food cost range already has a high profit margin.
Use a food cost calculator to quickly check each item on your menu.
Cost-plus pricing is the simplest pricing method to set prices for your restaurant menu. To find the price that hits your target food cost percentage:
Ideal Price = Cost of Ingredients ÷ Target Food Cost %
If your ingredients cost $4.50 and you want a 30% food cost, divide $4.50 by 0.30 to get $15.00. If ingredient costs have risen to $5.25, the new ideal price is $17.50. This pricing based on direct cost of goods gives you a clear baseline, though you may adjust up or down based on perceived value and what competitors charge.
Contribution margin shows the actual dollar amount each dish contributes to covering your overhead and generating profit. It’s a key factor in revenue management because it tells you which items actually drive profitability.
Contribution Margin = Selling Price − Cost of Ingredients
A $15 dish with $4.50 in ingredients has a contribution margin of $10.50. When you raise the price to $16, the margin becomes $11.50 — an extra dollar per plate. Sell 100 of those per week, and that’s $5,200 more per year from one menu item. Across thousands of orders per year, even a small price increase has a major impact on your bottom line.
Run these calculations for every item on your menu. Your menu analysis will reveal which items need adjustment and which are already priced well. Use a profit margin calculator to model different scenarios before making changes.
The math tells you how much to raise prices. These strategies determine how to do it in a way that keeps customers coming back.
A $0.25 to $0.50 increase is far less noticeable than jumping from $10.95 to $12.95 all at once. Raise prices by small amounts more frequently — quarterly or twice a year — rather than making one large annual jump. Customers adapt to gradual changes. They notice sudden ones.
Increasing prices across your entire menu at once is the fastest way to trigger customer backlash. Customers feel the hit immediately when every item on the check is higher. Instead, stagger your increases across 2–3 menu updates. Start with certain menu items that have the largest gap between current price and target margin, and work through the rest over several months.
Your top-selling items have proven demand. Customers already love them and are willing to pay for them. A 5–10% increase on your five best sellers can have a bigger impact on your bottom line than raising every item by 2%. Test this first and monitor sales volume for 2–4 weeks.
Every restaurant has anchor items — the dishes people come specifically for. These are your most price-sensitive items. If your $5 fish tacos are what gets people in the door, leave them alone and raise prices on other items instead. Think of anchor items as loss leaders that drive traffic.
This is value-based pricing in action. If you’re raising the price of a burger from $14 to $16, upgrade the bun, add a better cheese, or include a side salad that wasn’t included before. When customers can see or taste the improvement, they perceive the prices as fair. A $16 burger with premium toppings feels like a good value. A $16 burger that’s the same as last month’s $14 burger feels like a rip-off. Frame the change as an upgrade, not a markup — and new customers who never saw the old price won’t question it at all.
Menu engineering is the practice of designing your menu layout to guide customers toward higher-margin items. Place your most profitable dishes in the top-right corner of the menu (where eyes go first), use boxes or bold text to draw attention, and position a higher-priced item near a mid-range option to make the mid-range feel more affordable.
You can also use the menu engineering matrix to categorize every dish by popularity and profitability. Focus price increases on “plow horses” (popular but low-margin items) where small adjustments add up fast. Consumer behavior research shows that how items are positioned on a menu can significantly influence what people order — sometimes more than the price itself.
Not every price increase needs to show up on the menu. Slightly reducing portion sizes on items where customers consistently leave food on the plate is a practical alternative. Track plate waste for a week before making changes. If 40% of customers leave fries uneaten, you can safely reduce the portion without impacting satisfaction.
Sometimes the better move isn’t raising prices at all — it’s controlling your food costs by swapping expensive ingredients for comparable alternatives. Replace imported olive oil with a quality domestic option. Use chicken thighs instead of breasts in dishes where the cut doesn’t matter. Negotiate better rates with suppliers by comparing quotes.
Adding premium dishes at higher price points can shift your average check size upward without changing existing prices. A new grilled ribeye at $32 makes your $22 salmon look more affordable by comparison. This anchoring effect is a proven psychological pricing technique that plays on how consumers perceive value relative to the options around it. Your brand strategy should include at least one premium anchor item per menu category.
Research from Cornell University found that removing dollar signs from menus leads diners to spend more. Instead of “$15.00,” list the price as “15” or “15.00.” It reduces the mental association with spending money and makes the dining experience feel less transactional. Pair this with strong menu design for the best results.
Transparency builds trust. Trying to sneak in large price increases without explanation can backfire, especially with regulars who know your restaurant’s menu by heart. Good customer service extends to how you handle pricing changes.
You don’t need to apologize or over-explain. Give customers a clear reason for the change. A simple, direct message works best: “Due to rising ingredient costs, we’ve adjusted some of our prices. We remain committed to serving you delicious food at fair prices.” Customers understand inflation. They deal with it everywhere. Share that information openly and most people will respond with understanding, not frustration.
If you’ve improved ingredients, added new dishes, or upgraded any part of the dining experience, lead with that. “We’re now using 100% grass-fed beef from a local farm” is a much better story than “prices went up.” Write menu descriptions that emphasize the quality behind each dish.
Your servers are the front line. If a regular asks about a price change, your staff should be able to explain it calmly and positively: “We switched to a higher-quality supplier for our steaks, so you’ll notice an even better flavor.” Give your team clear, honest talking points — not scripts.
Share updates on social media, your website, and email newsletters. A short post explaining your commitment to quality and the reality of rising costs goes a long way. Every restaurateur should treat this as part of their brand — restaurant marketing isn’t just about promotions. It’s about building relationships through honest communication. Pay attention to customer feedback on these posts to gauge how your audience is responding.
The best time to introduce price changes is alongside a menu update. New dishes, updated photos, and a fresh layout shift customer attention from price comparisons to the excitement of trying something new. When you redesign your menu, customers focus on what’s new rather than what’s changed.
How your menu looks and reads directly affects how customers perceive your prices. Psychological pricing plays a major role in determining whether diners see your restaurant as expensive or a great deal. These menu psychology principles are backed by consumer behaviour research and used by restaurants of every size — from fast food chains to fine dining. Pricing requires more than math; it requires an understanding of how people think.
Now that you understand the strategies and psychology behind a successful price increase, let’s cover the practical steps for actually updating your menu — and the mistakes you need to avoid.
Once you’ve decided on new prices, you need to update every version of your menu — printed, online, and on delivery platforms. Missing even one creates confusion and erodes trust. Technology makes this much easier than it used to be.
If you use printed menus, reprinting every time you adjust prices adds up fast. A single reprint can cost $200–$500 depending on your menu size and print quality. Over a year with quarterly adjustments, that’s $800–$2,000 spent just on paper — an expense that adds no value to your customers’ meal.
A digital menu solves this problem. With a tool like Menubly, you can update prices instantly from your phone or computer — no reprinting, no waiting for a designer, and no outdated menus floating around. Changes go live immediately on your digital menu, your QR code menu, and your online orders page all at once. Unlike a traditional point-of-sale system that only handles payment processing, Menubly manages your entire pricing structure in one place.
This is especially important if you’re making frequent, small price adjustments (which is the recommended approach). At $9.99/month, Menubly pays for itself after a single reprint cycle. Customers can pay by credit card, debit card, or any of 100+ payment methods worldwide.
Here’s a quick checklist for updating your menu after a price change:
Even smart restaurant owners make pricing mistakes. Here are the key factors that trip up many restaurants — and the ones that cost you the most money.
Most restaurant consultants recommend reviewing prices quarterly and making small adjustments of 3–5% as needed. Frequent, small increases are far better received by customers than one large annual increase. Track your food cost percentage monthly to know when adjustments are due.
A 3–5% increase per adjustment is considered reasonable by most consumers, especially when food and labor costs are rising. Anything above 10% at once tends to generate pushback unless paired with clear quality improvements or new menu items. The complexity of your dishes and your restaurant’s positioning also play a role — a fast casual restaurant has less room to raise prices than a fine dining venue where customers already expect higher prices and lower prices would actually hurt perceived value.
Be direct and honest. A short message on social media, your website, or a table card works well: “We’ve updated some of our prices to reflect rising ingredient costs while maintaining the quality you expect.” Don’t apologize — just explain. Most customers respect transparency.
Yes, but carefully. Your best sellers have proven demand, which means customers are willing to pay for them. A 5–10% increase on top sellers often has minimal impact on order volume. But protect truly iconic items — the dishes people come specifically for — and raise prices on the rest of your menu instead.
Check your food cost percentage for each dish. If it’s consistently above 35%, your prices are too low. Also compare with local competitors. If similar restaurants charge 15–20% more for comparable items, you likely have room to increase. Use menu engineering to identify which items are underpriced.
Menu engineering is a broader strategy that includes adjusting prices, redesigning menu layout, rewriting descriptions, and changing which items you promote. Raising prices is just one tactic within menu engineering. A well-engineered menu can increase restaurant sales without changing any prices at all.
Yes, but be more cautious. Focus on small, gradual increases rather than large jumps. Lead with value by highlighting portion sizes, ingredient quality, and the overall dining experience. Customers still eat out during recessions — they just pay closer attention to what they’re getting for their money.
Food trucks have a simpler menu, which makes price adjustments easier to manage. Since most food truck menus are displayed on boards or digital screens, changes are instant and low-cost. The same incremental approach works — small, frequent adjustments rather than big jumps. A well-designed food truck menu with clear value positioning makes price increases smoother.
Surcharges (like a 4% credit card or debit card processing surcharge) are legal in 44 states but tend to frustrate customers more than a straightforward price increase. Most diners prefer transparent pricing where the menu price is the final price — they want to know that the prices they see are the prices they’ll pay at payment. If you add a surcharge, make sure it’s clearly disclosed before ordering.
Start by reducing food waste — most restaurants waste 4–10% of purchased food. Negotiate better supplier rates, buy seasonal ingredients, reduce portion sizes on items with high plate waste, and swap expensive ingredients for comparable alternatives. These tactics can save 5–15% on food costs without touching your menu prices.
Raising menu prices doesn’t have to mean losing customers. The restaurants that handle it well share three things in common: they know their numbers, they make small price changes often, and they communicate honestly.
Start by calculating your food cost percentage for every dish. Identify the items that need adjustment most, raise those prices first by small amounts, and tell your customers why. Pair your price changes with a menu refresh to shift focus from cost to perceived value.
And if you’re still updating prices by reprinting paper menus, you’re spending money you don’t need to spend.
Ready to make menu updates instant and free? Menubly gives you a mobile-friendly online menu, QR code menu, and commission-free online ordering — all for $9.99/month. Try Menubly free for 30 days, no credit card required.
Turn your paper menu into an interactive online menu that your customers can browse and order from anywhere.