Origin labeling can increase your selling price, but it also raises your costs. Think organic meat, local products, or sustainably caught fish. The trick is to calculate whether those extra costs outweigh the higher price guests are willing to pay.
Why origin labeling affects your margin
Origin labeling on your menu does two things to your numbers. It raises your purchase price (organic costs more than regular), but it can also increase your selling price (guests pay more for quality).
The question is: which weighs more?
💡 Example:
Your steak with regular meat:
- Purchase price meat: €18/kg
- Portion 200g: €3.60
- Total ingredients: €8.40
- Selling price: €28.00 (excl. VAT: €25.69)
- Food cost: 32.7%
Now you want to switch to organic meat from a local farmer:
💡 Organic example:
- Purchase price organic meat: €28/kg (+55%)
- Portion 200g: €5.60
- Total ingredients: €10.40
- Same selling price €28.00: food cost becomes 40.5%
Result: your margin drops by 7.8 percentage points
Calculate your break-even selling price
To maintain the same margin with more expensive ingredients, you need to adjust your selling price. The formula:
New selling price = New ingredient costs / (Desired food cost % / 100)
💡 Break-even calculation:
To maintain 32.7% food cost:
- €10.40 / 0.327 = €31.80 excl. VAT
- Incl. 9% VAT: €34.66
- Price increase: €6.66 (+24%)
⚠️ Heads up:
A 24% price increase is substantial. Check if your guests will accept this for the origin labeling.
Test your guests' price sensitivity
Not every guest will pay 24% extra for organic meat. Test this carefully:
- Start with 10-15% increase - Set the new price at €31.50 instead of €34.66
- Monitor your sales volume - Are you selling fewer steaks than before?
- Calculate the total impact - Lower volume × higher margin vs. higher volume × lower margin
💡 Impact calculation:
Scenario 1: Price €31.50, sales drop from 50 to 40 portions/week
- Old profit: 50 × (€25.69 - €8.40) = €864.50/week
- New profit: 40 × (€28.90 - €10.40) = €740.00/week
- Loss: €124.50/week = €6,474/year
Alternative strategies
If a full price increase is too risky, try these options:
- Smaller portion - 180g instead of 200g, same price
- Premium variant - Keep the regular dish, add organic as an upgrade
- Menu engineering - Raise the price of side dishes to compensate
An app like KitchenNmbrs helps you calculate different scenarios before you adjust prices.
How do you calculate the margin impact? (step by step)
Calculate your current margin per dish
Add up all ingredient costs and divide by your selling price excl. VAT. This is your baseline food cost percentage.
Calculate the new ingredient costs
Replace the price of the ingredient with origin labeling. Add up all costs again for the new total cost price.
Calculate your break-even selling price
Divide the new ingredient costs by your desired food cost percentage. This is the minimum selling price to maintain the same margin.
✨ Pro tip
Test origin labeling first as a daily special before adding it permanently to your menu. That way you see how guests react without risking your entire menu.
Calculate this yourself?
In the KitchenNmbrs app you can do this in just a few clicks. 7 days free, no credit card.
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Frequently asked questions
How much more do guests pay for origin labeling?
On average 10-20% for organic, 15-25% for local products. It depends on your target audience and location. Test carefully with small increases.
Do I need to switch all ingredients at once?
No, start with your signature dishes or best-selling items. Check the impact before expanding to other dishes.
What if my food cost gets too high?
Consider a smaller portion, raise side dishes, or make it a premium variant alongside your regular dish. Not every upgrade needs to be profitable if it strengthens your brand.
How do I monitor if it's working?
Compare sales volumes before and after the change. Calculate total profit per week: quantity sold × margin per dish. Also pay attention to guest feedback.
When is origin labeling not worth it?
If you need to increase prices by more than 30% for break-even, or if your sales drop by more than 25%. Then it costs you more than it brings in.
📚 Sources consulted
- EU Verordening 852/2004 — Levensmiddelenhygiëne (2004) — Official source
- EU Verordening 853/2004 — Hygiënevoorschriften voor levensmiddelen van dierlijke oorsprong (2004) — Official source
- EU Verordening 1169/2011 — Voedselinformatie aan consumenten (2011) — Official source
- NVWA — Hygiënecode voor de horeca (2024) — Official source
- NVWA — Allergenen in voedsel (2024) — Official source
- Codex Alimentarius — International Food Standards (2024) — Official source
- FSA — Safer food, better business (HACCP) (2024) — Official source
- BVL — Lebensmittelhygiene (HACCP) (2024) — Official source
- Warenwetbesluit Bereiding en behandeling van levensmiddelen (2024) — Official source
- WHO — Foodborne diseases estimates (2024) — Official source
Food Standards Agency (FSA) — https://www.food.gov.uk
The HACCP standards shown in this application are for informational purposes only. KitchenNmbrs does not guarantee that displayed values are current or complete. Always consult the FSA or your local authority for the latest regulations.
Written by
Jeffrey Smit
Founder & CEO of KitchenNmbrs
Jeffrey Smit built KitchenNmbrs from 8 years of hands-on experience as kitchen manager at 1NUL8 Group in Rotterdam. His mission: give every restaurant owner control over food cost.
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