[Survey on Rising Food Costs and Menu Price Revisions] Over 40% of Restaurants Facing Rising Costs Absorb the Pain
A survey by Infomart of 309 restaurant employees reveals that over 40% of restaurants facing rising food costs are unable to raise prices and are absorbing the costs. While digital tool users show over 90% cost management accuracy, non-users face concerns over "rough accounting."
📋 Article Processing Timeline
- 📰 Published: May 29, 2026 at 11:10
- 🔍 Collected: June 1, 2026 at 02:42 (63h 32m after Published)
- 🤖 AI Analyzed: June 1, 2026 at 21:04 (18h 21m after Collected)
Infomart Corporation conducted a survey on rising food costs and menu price revisions, targeting 309 individuals who work in restaurants and have final decision-making authority on menu pricing. The survey results show that only 25.6% of restaurants have introduced digital tools for ordering and inventory management, and 43.5% of non-users are unable to accurately grasp the "discrepancy between theoretical and actual costs." While 82.8% of restaurants reported rising procurement costs, only 55.9% were able to implement menu price increases, highlighting that over 40% of restaurants are absorbing the pain of high costs themselves. Furthermore, in relation to the "Food System Act" enacted in April 2026, only 28.8% of restaurants overall can present objective evidence during price negotiations. On the other hand, restaurants that have introduced digital tools have a cost-grasping rate of over 90%, and more than 60% approach price negotiations with evidence, indicating that digitalization is directly linked to management optimization. The food service industry is in an extremely difficult situation, facing headwinds of rising prices and labor costs, with bankruptcy numbers remaining at a high level. This survey reveals a structural dilemma where restaurants at the bottom of the supply chain are unilaterally swallowing the "pain" of rising costs for fear of losing customers.
FAQ
Why are restaurants unable to raise prices?
Due to a structural dilemma where they fear losing customers and are forced to absorb rising costs by sacrificing their own profits.