BETA APP IN DEVELOPMENT HACCP and more are available in your dashboard — currently in beta, so minor bugs may occur. The updated app with full integration is coming soon.
📝 Pricing & menu revision · ⏱️ 2 min read

How do I calculate the selling price of a dish I offer both in-house and for takeaway?

📝 KitchenNmbrs · updated 14 Mar 2026

A pasta carbonara costs €3.50 to make, but should you charge €12.95 for dine-in and €17.50 for takeaway? Each sales channel carries distinct cost structures that directly impact profitability. You'll need separate pricing strategies for the same dish.

Why different prices for the same dish?

A dish sold across multiple channels faces completely different cost structures:

  • In-house: service, dishwashing, table setting, but no packaging
  • Takeaway: packaging costs, no service, but platform fees from delivery services
  • VAT: both 9% for food (no difference)

Most restaurant owners make the critical error of using identical pricing. This guarantees losses on one channel.

⚠️ Watch out:

Platform fees from Deliveroo or Uber Eats can run up to 30% of your order value. You need to compensate for this in your price, otherwise you'll make a loss.

First calculate your base cost price

Start with the dish's core cost price - identical across both channels:

  • Main ingredients
  • Garnishes and side dishes
  • Sauces and oils
  • Everything that goes on the plate

💡 Example: Pasta Carbonara

Ingredient costs per portion:

  • Pasta: €0.45
  • Bacon: €1.20
  • Eggs: €0.60
  • Parmesan: €0.85
  • Cream, herbs, oil: €0.40

Base cost price: €3.50

Calculate the selling price for in-house consumption

For dine-in service, you'll work with your standard food cost percentage. Most restaurants target 28-35%.

Formula: Minimum selling price = Cost price ÷ (Desired food cost ÷ 100)

💡 Calculation for in-house:

Cost price: €3.50
Desired food cost: 30%

€3.50 ÷ 0.30 = €11.67 excl. VAT
€11.67 × 1.09 = €12.72 incl. VAT

Menu price: €12.95

Calculate the selling price for takeaway

Takeaway introduces additional costs while eliminating others:

  • Extra costs: packaging (containers, bags, cutlery)
  • Platform fees: 15-30% from delivery services
  • Eliminated costs: service, dishwashing, table setting

From analyzing actual purchasing data across different restaurant types, packaging typically adds €0.25-€0.50 per dish. But platform fees create the real pricing challenge.

💡 Calculation for takeaway:

Base cost price: €3.50
Packaging: €0.35
Total cost price: €3.85

With 25% platform fee your margin needs to be 25% higher:
€3.85 ÷ 0.30 = €12.83 base
€12.83 × 1.25 = €16.04 excl. VAT

Takeaway price: €17.50 incl. VAT

Communicating different prices

You can handle price variations through several approaches:

  • Separate menus: different prices for dine-in and takeaway
  • Mention surcharge: "All prices +15% for takeaway"
  • Platform-specific: higher prices only on Deliveroo/Uber Eats

⚠️ Watch out:

Be transparent about price differences. Customers understand that takeaway has different costs, but don't surprise them with unexpected surcharges.

Check: are both channels profitable?

You'll need regular price reviews since costs fluctuate:

  • Platform fees can change
  • Packaging costs rise regularly
  • Ingredient prices fluctuate

Track your actual food cost for both channels quarterly. Are they both hitting your target percentage? Then your pricing strategy works.

How do you calculate different selling prices? (step by step)

1

Calculate the base cost price of the dish

Add up all ingredient costs: main ingredients, garnishes, sauces and everything that goes on the plate. This is the same for both channels.

2

Determine the price for in-house consumption

Divide the cost price by your desired food cost percentage (for example 30%). Multiply by 1.09 for the price including 9% VAT.

3

Add packaging costs for takeaway

Calculate €0.25-€0.50 per portion for containers, bags and cutlery. This becomes your new cost price for takeaway.

4

Compensate for platform fees in your takeaway price

With 25% platform fee your final price needs to be 25% higher. First calculate your normal margin, then increase it by the platform fee percentage.

5

Test both prices for profitability

Check if both channels stay below your desired food cost percentage. Adjust if one of them is too high.

✨ Pro tip

Track your top 8 dual-channel dishes weekly for the next 6 weeks. Platform fees and packaging costs shift monthly, so your pricing needs constant fine-tuning.

Calculate this yourself?

In the KitchenNmbrs app you can do this in just a few clicks. 7 days free, no credit card.

Try KitchenNmbrs free →

Was this article helpful?

Share this article

WhatsApp LinkedIn

Frequently asked questions

Am I allowed to charge different prices for the same dish?

Yes, you are. As long as you're transparent about the price differences. Many restaurants charge different prices for dine-in and takeaway.

How high can platform fees be that I pass on?

Platform fees from delivery services can run up to 30% of your order value. You can pass these on completely in your takeaway price.

Do I need to calculate different VAT percentages?

No, for food both dine-in and takeaway have 9% VAT. Only alcoholic beverages are 21%, but that applies to both channels.

What if customers complain about the price difference?

Explain that takeaway has different costs: packaging and platform fees. Most customers understand this if you communicate it clearly.

Can I use the same price and absorb the difference?

You can, but then you'll make a loss on one of the two channels. Better to use fair prices that are profitable for both.

Should I adjust prices when platform commission rates change?

Absolutely. Platform fees change frequently, sometimes with just 30 days notice. Review your takeaway pricing within 48 hours of any commission rate updates to maintain profitability.

ℹ️ This article was prepared based on official sources and professional expertise. While we strive for current and accurate information, the content may differ from the most recent regulations. Always consult the official authorities for binding standards.

📚 Sources consulted

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.

JS

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.

🏆 8 years kitchen manager at 1NUL8 Group Rotterdam
Expertise: food cost management HACCP kitchen management restaurant operations food safety compliance

Set selling prices based on facts

Guessing at prices? KitchenNmbrs calculates the ideal selling price based on your actual food cost and desired margin. Test it free for 14 days.

Start free trial →
Disclaimer & terms of use

Table of Contents

💬 in 𝕏