Choosing a point-of-sale system for your restaurant is one of the most important technology decisions you’ll make. The wrong POS costs you money, slows your team down, and becomes a daily frustration. The right one becomes the operational backbone of your business.
This guide walks through everything you need to evaluate before signing any contract.
Step 1: Know Your Restaurant Type
Not all POS systems are built the same. A quick-service counter-based restaurant has very different needs than a full-service fine dining room. Before comparing software, get clear on what kind of operation you’re running:
- Full-service restaurants: Need table management, course-by-course ordering, multi-server splits, and two-way kitchen communication.
- Quick-service / fast casual: Need speed. Counter ordering, kiosk support, queue management, and fast ticket printing matter most.
- Bars and nightclubs: Need tab management, tip prompts, bar inventory tracking, and ID verification prompts.
- Food trucks: Need mobile POS that works offline, compact hardware, and a fast checkout flow.
- Catering businesses: Need event and advance order management, deposit collection, and scheduled delivery coordination.
Step 2: Understand the Total Cost of Ownership
The monthly software fee is just one line item. The real cost of a POS includes:
- Hardware: Terminals, receipt printers, kitchen display screens, cash drawers, and handheld devices. Some providers lease, some sell outright.
- Payment processing fees: Most POS companies bundle processing at 2.6% + $0.10 or higher. Over a year, this is often the biggest cost line — and the one most operators underestimate.
- Monthly software fee: Ranges from $0 (Square) to $200+ per month for enterprise systems.
- Setup and training fees: Some providers charge $500–$1,500 for installation and onboarding.
- Support fees: 24/7 support is standard with some providers, a premium add-on with others.
When you add it all up, many “affordable” POS systems cost $3,000–$6,000 per year per location once you factor in processing fees alone.
Step 3: Evaluate the Must-Have Features
Every restaurant POS should handle these core functions reliably:
- Order entry (tableside or counter)
- Kitchen ticket routing (to line stations or a KDS screen)
- Split checks and modifiers
- Payment processing (card, contactless, QR code)
- End-of-day reporting and sales summaries
- Employee management (time clock, role-based access)
Beyond these basics, look for features that match your specific operation:
- Online ordering integration — does it connect to your website, or do you need a third-party tablet?
- Delivery management — built-in dispatch or third-party integrations?
- Loyalty programs and marketing tools
- Inventory tracking — ingredient-level or item-level?
- Reservation management
Step 4: Ask These 5 Questions Before Signing
- Who owns the hardware? If you’re leasing, what happens if you cancel the contract?
- What is the processing rate, and is it negotiable? Many providers won’t advertise this upfront.
- What is the cancellation policy? Month-to-month or multi-year contract with early termination fees?
- What happens if the internet goes down? Does the system work in offline mode?
- What support is included? Is 24/7 phone support standard, or is it extra?
Step 5: Look for a Bundled Solution
Most restaurants end up with multiple vendors — one for POS, one for online ordering, one for their website, one for digital menu boards. Each vendor adds cost, complexity, and support headaches.
Increasingly, restaurant operators are moving to bundled technology providers — one vendor who handles POS, digital signage, online ordering, and the restaurant website under one roof. This simplifies billing, support, and onboarding dramatically.
SpotrOS is built on exactly this model. One contract, one support team, and all your technology on a single platform.
Ready to see how it compares to your current setup? Get a free quote from SpotrOS — no obligation, no sales pressure.