Classify menu items into Stars, Plowhorses, Puzzles, and Dogs using popularity and profitability. Optimize your menu with data.
Menu engineering is a systematic approach to evaluating every menu item based on two dimensions: popularity (number sold) and profitability (contribution margin per item). Items are classified into four quadrants: Stars (high popularity, high profit), Plowhorses (high popularity, low profit), Puzzles (low popularity, high profit), and Dogs (low popularity, low profit).
This classification drives strategic menu decisions. Stars should be prominently featured and protected. Plowhorses need recipe re-engineering to improve margins without losing sales. Puzzles need better positioning, descriptions, or server promotion to increase order frequency. Dogs are candidates for removal or complete overhaul.
This calculator takes your item's popularity percentage and contribution margin, compares them against your menu averages, and tells you which quadrant the item falls in — along with strategic recommendations for action.
Restaurant owners, hotel managers, and event coordinators depend on accurate menu engineering matrix numbers to maintain profitability while delivering exceptional guest experiences. Return to this tool whenever menu prices, occupancy rates, or staffing levels shift to keep your operations on track.
Most restaurant menus carry several items that actively hurt profitability. Menu engineering reveals which items are pulling their weight and which are dragging your margins down. This data-driven approach replaces gut-feel menu decisions with strategic analysis that directly improves your bottom line. Instant results let you test multiple scenarios so you can align pricing, staffing, and inventory decisions with current demand and cost pressures.
Menu Mix % = (Item Sales ÷ Total Sales) × 100 Popularity Threshold = 100% ÷ Number of Items × 70% (Kasavana-Smith method) Classification Matrix: • Star = Above-avg popularity + Above-avg margin • Plowhorse = Above-avg popularity + Below-avg margin • Puzzle = Below-avg popularity + Above-avg margin • Dog = Below-avg popularity + Below-avg margin
Result: Star ★
This item represents 15% of total sales (above average) with a $12.50 contribution margin (above the $9.00 average). It classifies as a Star — a high-popularity, high-profit item that should be featured prominently.
Stars are your best items — popular and profitable. Protect their recipes, feature them prominently, and never let them disappear from the menu. Plowhorses bring in volume but thin margins; small adjustments can move them toward Star status. Puzzles have strong margins but need marketing help to sell. Dogs underperform on both dimensions and are prime candidates for replacement.
When redesigning your menu, place Stars in the visual sweet spots — the top right of a two-panel menu, inside call-out boxes, or with descriptive photos. Hide or reposition Dogs to make room. Use eye-tracking research to guide placement: most guests' eyes go to the center of a single-page menu or the top-right of a bi-fold.
Advanced menu engineering adds dimensions like labor intensity, plate presentation time, and ingredient volatility. A Star item that requires 15 minutes of prep per plate may be less valuable than a Star that needs 3 minutes. Some operators also weight the matrix by gross profit dollars (margin × volume) for a more nuanced view.
Food cost percentage shows what fraction of revenue goes to ingredients. Contribution margin shows the dollar profit per item. A $30 steak at 40% food cost yields $18 contribution margin, while a $10 salad at 20% food cost yields only $8. Margin dollars pay the bills.
Research suggests 7-10 items per category (appetizers, entrées, desserts) is optimal. Too many choices overwhelm guests, slow kitchen operations, and increase inventory costs. Menu engineering often reveals that trimming items improves both sales and efficiency.
Plowhorses sell well but have low margins. Reduce portion size slightly, substitute cheaper ingredients, raise the price modestly, or restructure the dish with lower-cost components while maintaining the perceived value that drives popularity.
Puzzles are profitable but don't sell well. Move them to a better menu position, add an appealing description, have servers recommend them, pair with popular items, or rename them. The goal is to increase visibility without changing the recipe.
Not always. Some Dogs serve strategic purposes: a low-margin kids' chicken tenders keeps families coming back, a vegan option may be necessary for group dining. Evaluate each Dog's strategic value before cutting it.
Analyze quarterly at minimum. Also run analysis after menu changes, seasonal transitions, price adjustments, or any significant operational change. The more frequently you analyze, the faster you can optimize.
Absolutely. The same popularity × profitability framework applies to cocktails, wine, beer, and non-alcoholic drinks. Beverage margins are typically higher, making engineering even more impactful.