Calculate average kitchen ticket time by dividing total cook time by number of tickets. Track speed of service and kitchen performance.
Average ticket time measures the mean duration from when an order is fired in the kitchen to when it is plated and sent to the guest. Calculated by summing all individual ticket times and dividing by the number of tickets, this metric reveals the overall speed of your kitchen operation.
Speed of service is a top driver of guest satisfaction in restaurants. Studies consistently show that excessive wait times for food are the most common complaint diners report. By tracking average ticket time, you can identify when the kitchen is struggling and diagnose whether the issue is staffing, equipment, menu complexity, or workflow.
This calculator takes the total cumulative cook time across all tickets and divides by the ticket count to produce the average. You can also enter individual times to see the standard deviation and identify outlier tickets that drag down overall performance.
Restaurant owners, hotel managers, and event coordinators depend on accurate average ticket time 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.
Average ticket time connects kitchen performance to guest experience in a single number. When ticket times creep up, tables sit longer, servers can handle fewer covers, and walkaway rates increase. Monitoring this metric daily gives managers an early-warning system for kitchen issues before they escalate into guest complaints or lost revenue.
Average Ticket Time = Σ(Ticket Close Time − Ticket Open Time) ÷ Number of Tickets
Result: 13.2 minutes
If the kitchen accumulated 1,980 total minutes across 150 tickets, the average ticket time is 1,980 ÷ 150 = 13.2 minutes. If the house target is 12 minutes, the team is running about 1.2 minutes behind — potentially 18 extra minutes of wait time for a table of three courses.
Research from the National Restaurant Association shows that 60% of guests who wait more than 20 minutes for an entrée rate their experience negatively, even if the food quality is excellent. Ticket time is therefore not just an operational metric but a hospitality one.
Modern kitchen display systems log exact fire and bump times for every ticket. Exporting this data reveals patterns — specific stations that slow down during peak, certain menu items with consistently long times, and staffing configurations that perform best.
The goal is not to cook faster but to eliminate waste time: waiting for equipment, searching for ingredients, re-firing incorrectly prepared items. Lean kitchen principles — organized mise en place, clear communication protocols, and consistent recipes — reduce ticket time while maintaining quality.
Fast casual targets 5-8 minutes. Casual dining aims for 10-15 minutes from fire to plate. Fine dining service is different — individual course ticket times of 8-12 minutes may be acceptable because courses are paced intentionally.
No. Ticket time measures kitchen performance from fire to plate. The time between guest ordering and the kitchen receiving the ticket is a front-of-house metric related to POS entry and server workflow.
More complex dishes with longer cook times, multiple components, or special finishing steps increase average ticket time. A menu audit to balance prep difficulty across stations can help control this.
Track remakes separately. Including them inflates the average and hides quality issues. Measure remake rate and remake ticket time as their own KPIs alongside standard ticket time.
Common causes include understaffing during rush, equipment failures, running out of prepped items, large party orders that monopolize one station, and new cooks who are still learning the menu. Keep in mind that individual circumstances can significantly affect the outcome.
Faster ticket times contribute to shorter total dining durations, which increases table turnover. Reducing average ticket time by 2 minutes across a three-course meal saves 6 minutes per table, potentially adding an extra turn per night.