Why catering matters in 2026
The latest NRN On-Target Strategies report shows over half of surveyed restaurant operators are increasing capital spend on catering. The reason is simple: catering tickets are 5-10× the size of an average dine-in check, with pre-known volumes the kitchen can prep against, and minimal table-turnover risk.
The trend isn’t just about volume. Off-premise revenue — catering, takeout, drop-off lunches — is now a structural pillar for most concepts, not a side hustle. If your operation isn’t set up to capture it, you’re leaving 20-40% of total revenue on the table.
The economics of catering
Three numbers tell the story:
- Average catering ticket: $400–$2,500. Compare that to a $35 dine-in average and the leverage is obvious.
- Margin: 60–70% gross. Higher than dine-in because labor scales sub-linearly — one prep cook makes 50 sandwiches in not much more time than 10.
- Lead time: 24 hours to 2 weeks. Predictable volumes let you pre-order ingredients, schedule prep around service, and avoid 86’d items.
What catering operations actually require
Catering isn’t ‘a big takeout order.’ It’s a logistical workflow with five distinct phases that each need their own tooling: order capture, deposit collection, kitchen pacing, fulfilment / delivery, and invoicing. The reason most restaurants struggle is they jam catering into a workflow designed for walk-in service.
If catering shows up in your POS as a regular ticket dropped into the line during peak service, it’s already failing — the kitchen treats it as urgent, prep happens reactively, and quality suffers.
The tech stack for catering at scale
A catering program at scale needs four integrated pieces. They can be separate vendors, but every additional vendor adds a reconciliation tax. Native integration — like Katalyst’s catering management built into the same POS — means one ticket, one source of truth, zero manual stitching.
Online ordering and pre-orders
A dedicated catering storefront where customers book without calling. Should support per-package lead-time minimums (so a 100-person order can’t be booked for tomorrow), customisations, and automatic upsells (drinks, desserts, sides). See our online ordering system for the parent product.
Payments and deposits
A 30-50% deposit at booking is non-negotiable for catering at scale. It covers your food cost if the customer cancels, and it filters out tire-kickers. Native payments — see Katalyst Payments — let you collect, refund, and reconcile without bouncing between Stripe and your POS.
Kitchen pacing and lead times
Catering orders need to drop into the kitchen workflow at the right time — typically the morning of service, not when the order was booked three days ago. A kitchen display system that supports scheduled tickets, with prep recipes broken down by component, is what separates a working catering program from a stressful one.
Delivery and logistics
Decide early: in-house delivery, third-party (Uber Direct, DoorDash Drive), or customer pick-up. In-house gives the best experience but eats margin. Most successful catering programs run a hybrid — in-house for the corporate accounts that tip, third-party for one-offs.
Common pitfalls (and how to avoid them)
- No deposits. A canceled $5,000 order without a deposit is a disaster. Always enforce 30-50% upfront.
- Mixing catering and dine-in tickets. They need separate lanes — separate KDS routing, separate prep schedules, separate accounting.
- No lead-time enforcement. Customers will book 100 people for tomorrow if your software lets them. Block it at the source.
- Manual invoicing. If your team is generating invoices in Word for corporate clients, your scaling ceiling is roughly $200K/year. Native invoicing in the POS removes that ceiling.
- Under-pricing. Catering should be priced 20-30% above dine-in retail to account for delivery, setup, and risk. Most operators just use dine-in prices.
Building a catering program from zero
You don’t need a separate kitchen, separate staff, or new vendors. You need three things in this order:
- A dedicated menu. Three to five packages, priced for scale (not dine-in retail), with clear minimums (e.g. minimum 10 people).
- An ordering system. 24/7 self-serve storefront — no phone calls, no email back-and-forth. This is where most operators fail; phone-based catering caps at $300K/year.
- One internal owner. Someone whose job is catering — even half-time. Without an owner, catering gets deprioritised every busy Friday.
How to market your catering
We have a complete playbook in 9 game-changing strategies to market your restaurant’s catering, but the headline: your best customers are already in your community. Office managers at the 5-10 largest companies in your delivery zone, preferred-vendor lists at local event venues, and table tents in your dining room beat any paid-ad strategy on a 12-month ROI basis.
Frequently asked questions
Is catering profitable for a restaurant?
Yes — when run on dedicated systems. Catering tickets average 5–10× the size of a dine-in check, with predictable lead times and lower table-turnover risk. The pitfall is running catering on the same workflow as walk-in service: that hides the true margin and creates kitchen chaos. With proper online ordering, deposits, and lead-time management, catering routinely runs at 60–70% gross margin, well above the typical 50–55% on dine-in.
Do I need a separate POS for catering?
No. You need a POS that handles catering as a first-class workflow — pre-orders, deposits, kitchen pacing, invoicing — without bolt-ons. Katalyst’s native catering management is built into the same platform that runs your front-of-house, so you don’t reconcile across multiple systems.
How much lead time should I require for catering orders?
It depends on order size. A 20-person lunch box order might be 24-hour lead time; a 200-person wedding could need 1–2 weeks. The key is enforcing it in software so customers can’t book a 100-person order for 2pm tomorrow when your kitchen can’t physically prep it. Katalyst lets you set per-package lead times and the storefront blocks impossible bookings automatically.
Should I take deposits on catering orders?
Yes, always. A 30–50% deposit at booking covers your food costs if the customer cancels and signals seriousness — no-show cancellations on $5,000+ orders without a deposit are devastating. Build automatic deposit collection into the booking flow.
How is catering different from delivery / DoorDash orders?
Catering is scheduled, large-format, often B2B, and requires kitchen pacing. DoorDash-style orders are immediate, small-format, B2C, and routed through your line cooks. Trying to handle both on the same screen in real time creates chaos. A dedicated catering pipeline keeps both efficient.
What’s the best way to find catering customers?
Three highest-leverage channels: (1) office managers and admins at the 5–10 largest companies in your delivery zone — drop off menus and free samples; (2) preferred-vendor lists at local event venues that don’t have an in-house caterer; (3) post-meal table tents and to-go bag inserts that say ‘we cater’ with a QR code. We have a full guide on this — see the marketing section above.
Built into Katalyst
Catering management, native to your POS
Katalyst includes the catering storefront, deposit handling, kitchen pacing, and invoicing as one connected system — not a bolt-on. See it on a 30-minute call.



