Calculate the ideal menu price for any dish using recipe cost and your target food cost percentage. Ensure every item is profitable.
Setting the right menu price is a balancing act between profitability and guest perception. This calculator uses the most fundamental pricing method in the restaurant industry: dividing your recipe cost by your target food cost percentage to determine the minimum menu price that supports your profit goals.
If a dish costs $5.00 to make and your target food cost is 30%, the math says your menu price should be at least $16.67. From there, you round to a psychologically appealing price point. This method ensures every dish on your menu contributes to covering overhead, labor, and profit — not just ingredient costs.
Whether you operate a diner, a gastropub, or a catering business, this calculator removes guesswork from menu pricing and gives you a data-driven starting point for every dish.
Restaurant owners, hotel managers, and event coordinators depend on accurate menu price from target food cost 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.
Pricing by intuition or by copying competitors leads to inconsistent margins. This calculator ensures every menu item meets your profitability target. It also lets you quickly re-price dishes when ingredient costs change, keeping your margins stable without constant manual recalculation. Instant results let you test multiple scenarios so you can align pricing, staffing, and inventory decisions with current demand and cost pressures.
Menu Price = Recipe Cost ÷ (Target Food Cost % ÷ 100) Example: $5.00 ÷ 0.30 = $16.67
Result: $16.67
A dish costing $5.00 to prepare, with a 30% food cost target, should be priced at $5.00 ÷ 0.30 = $16.67 or higher. Rounding to $16.95 or $17.00 is common.
This pricing method is the most widely taught approach in culinary and hospitality programs. It guarantees that every item covers its ingredient costs within your margin targets. However, it should be used as a starting point, not the final word — guest perception and competitive positioning may require adjustments.
Research shows that prices ending in .95 or .99 feel significantly lower than rounded numbers. $16.95 feels cheaper than $17.00 even though the difference is five cents. Many upscale restaurants drop cents entirely and list $17 for cleaner aesthetics; casual dining tends to use .99 endings.
Once you have calculated prices, classify items using menu engineering: plot each dish by popularity (number sold) and profitability (contribution margin). Stars are high-popularity, high-profit items to feature. Dogs are low-popularity, low-profit items to consider removing or reformulating.
Most full-service restaurants target 28-35%. Fast-casual aims for 25-30%. Fine dining may accept 35-40% because higher prices yield larger dollar margins. Your target should balance with labor and overhead costs.
Yes, and you should. Appetizers and desserts often have lower food costs (20-25%) while proteins and entrées may run higher (30-38%). Blending across categories lets you hit an overall target.
Either reformulate the recipe to lower costs (smaller protein portion, cheaper starch) or accept a higher food cost on that item and offset it with lower-cost items elsewhere on the menu. Use this calculator to model different scenarios and find the best approach.
Not in this formula. Food cost percentage traditionally covers ingredients only. Labor is tracked separately as a percentage of revenue. Including labor would mix two different metrics.
Cost each special individually with current ingredient prices. Seasonal items may have volatile costs, so build in a buffer by targeting a slightly lower food cost percentage during peak-price seasons.
It provides a solid floor price. Complete menu pricing also considers competitor prices, guest willingness to pay, perceived value, menu positioning, and contribution margin analysis.