Last updated: April 2026
Why Every Restaurant Owner Must Understand Their P&L
A restaurant Profit and Loss (P&L) statement is more than a document your accountant hands you at tax time. It is a weekly operational compass that tells you exactly how your business is performing and where you need to take action.
According to a Toast and Restaurant.org 2025 survey, 67% of restaurant owners say they do not fully understand their P&L, yet the same owners acknowledge that financial visibility is their number one challenge. This gap between not knowing and not acting costs restaurants thousands of dollars per year in missed opportunities and undetected problems.
If you cannot read your P&L, you cannot manage your restaurant. The numbers tell you the truth about your business.
The Basic Structure of a Restaurant P&L
A restaurant P&L has three main sections:
The formula: Revenue minus Expenses equals Net Profit.
Revenue: Where Your Sales Come From
Revenue Breakdown by Category
| Category | Description | Healthy Range |
|---|---|---|
| Dine-In | On-premises dining sales | 50-70 percent |
| Takeout | Phone and walk-in takeout orders | 15-25 percent |
| Delivery | Third-party delivery | 10-20 percent |
| Catering | Off-premises event orders | 5-15 percent |
Key Revenue Metrics
- Average check – Total revenue divided by number of covers
- Cover count – Total number of guests served
- Sales per labor hour – Revenue divided by labor hours
Key stat: A 2 dollar increase in average check can increase annual profit by 50,000-100,000 dollars without serving a single additional customer.
Cost of Goods Sold (COGS)
Food costs should be 28-35 percent of revenue. Here is how to calculate actual food cost percentage:
- Beginning Inventory + Purchases – Ending Inventory equals Actual Usage
- Actual Usage divided by Total Food Sales equals Actual Food Cost Percent
Red flag: If food cost is above 38 percent, investigate immediately.
Labor Costs
Labor is typically the second-largest expense. Target labor cost is 25-35 percent of revenue.
| Category | Target Percent |
|---|---|
| Hourly Wages | 15-20 percent |
| Salaried Management | 5-8 percent |
| Payroll Taxes | 7-10 percent of payroll |
| Benefits and Workers Comp | 3-5 percent |
Key stat: Reducing labor cost by just 1 percent of revenue in a 1 million dollar restaurant is an additional 10,000 dollars in profit per year.
Net Profit Margins
How Your POS System Makes P&L Easy
Modern POS systems automate most of this analysis:
- Real-time food cost tracking
- Labor scheduling integration
- Category-level reporting
- Weekly and monthly comparison
- Variance reporting
Conclusion
Reading your P&L is a weekly habit. Set aside 30 minutes every week to review your numbers. The restaurant owners who build profitable businesses pay attention to their numbers and take action before small problems become big ones.
About OrderPin
OrderPin POS system includes comprehensive financial reporting that makes reading your P&L effortless.

