Multiply that by every order, every day, every week. For a restaurant doing $25,000/month in delivery, that's $7,500/month in commissions. $90,000/year. Enough to hire two full-time employees, renovate the dining room, or fund an entire year of marketing.
Customers order on your website. You process the payment. The delivery app collects nothing.
The Commission Math Every Restaurant Owner Should See
Delivery platforms have convinced restaurants that 30% commission is a fair exchange for access to their customer base. It isn't.
Consider the economics. A restaurant with a $12 average food cost on a $35 order has roughly $23 in gross margin before labor and overhead. After a 30% commission, that same order returns $24.50 in revenue, leaving $12.50 in gross margin. The platform kept nearly as much gross profit on that order as the restaurant did. Restaurant industry data consistently shows delivery commissions as one of the top margin pressures for independent operators.
$25,000/month in delivery revenue. 30% commission = $7,500/month to Uber Eats or DoorDash. Annual commission cost: $90,000/year. Cost of a direct restaurant online ordering system: $1,997 one-time. If even 15% of those delivery orders shift to direct, that's $1,125/month in commission savings. Break-even: 1.7 months.
Priya owns a 52-seat Indian restaurant in Boston. In 2024, her monthly Uber Eats volume averaged $31,000. Her commission bill was $9,300/month. She'd been treating it as fixed overhead for three years — the same way she treated rent. Her accountant showed her the annual total: $111,600 in delivery commissions in 2023 alone. She installed a direct ordering system and ran a "10% off when you order direct" campaign via her email list and Instagram. Within 60 days, 22% of her delivery volume had shifted to her own ordering page, recovering $2,046/month in commission savings. The ordering system had cost her $1,997.
See our commission-free restaurant ordering system packages to run this calculation for your restaurant volume.
What a Restaurant Online Ordering System Actually Does
A direct restaurant online ordering system is software embedded in your own website that allows customers to browse your menu, customize their order, select pickup or delivery, and pay — without leaving your domain or touching a third-party platform. You receive the order. You process the payment. You own the customer data.
What it is not: a DoorDash or Uber Eats integration. Those redirect customers to a third-party platform and charge commission on every transaction. What you need for it to work: a restaurant website to host the ordering page, a payment processor (credit card, Apple Pay, Google Pay), and a way to receive incoming orders. Most independent restaurants can have all three operational within two weeks.
What Your Ordering System Must Do
Real-Time Menu Management
Your menu needs to reflect what's actually available. If you sell out of a special, it should be removable in seconds. If you add a seasonal item, it should be live immediately. A system that requires a developer to update the menu is a system that will fall behind your kitchen.
Mobile-Optimized Checkout
60% of restaurant searches happen on mobile. Your ordering flow needs to work on a phone screen, with large buttons, minimal required fields, and a checkout process that takes under two minutes. A desktop-only ordering system loses the majority of your potential online customers before they reach payment.
Multiple Payment Methods
Credit card, Apple Pay, Google Pay — at minimum. The fewer steps between "I want this" and "order confirmed," the higher your conversion rate. Payment friction is the most common reason online orders are abandoned mid-checkout.
Order Confirmation and Receipts
Automated confirmation emails and SMS notifications. Customers need to know their order was received. Your kitchen needs a clear, organized record. These shouldn't require manual steps from your team.
Direct Ordering Incentives
Give customers a reason to order direct instead of defaulting to the app they already have installed. A 10% direct discount costs you $3.50 on a $35 order. The alternative is paying $10.50 to Uber Eats on that same order. The discount wins by $7 every time.
What You Do NOT Need to Get Started
You do not need a custom-built app. You do not need a full POS integration on day one. You do not need a third-party ordering platform that charges per-order fees. You do not need a three-month implementation project.
Diego runs a 30-seat Peruvian restaurant in Denver. An app developer quoted him $22,000 for a custom ordering app with a 4-month build timeline. He declined. Instead, he had a restaurant-specific WordPress website with a direct ordering integration built for $3,994 total. It launched in three weeks. His first direct order came in on day four after launch.
The complexity that tech vendors pitch is complexity that serves their billing model. A restaurant ordering system needs to do exactly five things: show the menu, take the order, process the payment, confirm the order, and notify the kitchen. That does not require a $22,000 app.
How to Evaluate a Restaurant Ordering System Without Getting Sold To
- What is the total cost, including setup and monthly fees? Some platforms charge low setup fees but 2–5% of every order processed. On $25,000/month in direct orders, a 3% fee costs $750/month. That's commission by another name.
- Is there a per-order fee? Any per-order fee compounds the same way OTA commissions do. A fixed-price, one-time system has no per-order fees.
- Can I run my own promotions? You need to create discount codes, set direct-order pricing, and run loyalty campaigns independently. A platform that restricts promotional flexibility limits your ability to drive customers off delivery apps.
- How does mobile checkout perform? Ask to see a live demo on a phone before committing. You can verify page load speeds using Google PageSpeed Insights before you go live.
- Who owns the customer data? Every direct order should add the customer's email and order history to your own records, not a platform database. Guest data ownership is the entire point of going direct.
Getting Your Restaurant Online Ordering Running
A restaurant online ordering system is the piece of infrastructure that makes every other restaurant marketing strategy pay off. Google Ads for restaurants drive traffic, but only a direct ordering system converts that traffic into revenue you keep. Social media builds awareness, but without a direct ordering option, every engaged follower still ends up paying DoorDash commission.
The system itself doesn't need to be expensive. It needs to work on mobile, process payments without friction, and connect to a professionally designed restaurant website built for hospitality.
We've launched 50+ hospitality ordering and booking systems as part of Designodin's track record of 200+ projects since 2014.
Or reach us at contact@dohospitality.co
Results vary by business, market, and implementation.