Research & Sources for Restaurant Fee Hub
The data and information in the following links served as the basis for information presented throughout this website. We aim to update this list frequently.
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Government & Legal Actions
Full text of proposed federal rule requiring delivery apps to disclose all fees. Covers the Grubhub $25M consent order, DoorDash Chicago $18M settlement, and Instacart FTC action. Public comment deadline: May 18, 2026.
FTC Bureau of Consumer Protection Director Christopher Mufarrige describes delivery fees as 'unclear, inconsistently disclosed, or revealed only at the last moment.' Former FTC Chair Lina Khan said Grubhub 'tricked its customers, deceived its drivers and unfairly damaged the reputation and revenues of restaurants.'
Documents how DoorDash and Uber Eats moved tip prompts to after delivery, costing workers $554 million in lost earnings. Average tip dropped from $3.66 to $0.76 per delivery in one week. Full report PDF also available.
Full PDF report with methodology, data, and findings on how platform design changes cost delivery workers $554 million in tips.
NYC establishes minimum pay rates for delivery workers. Details the regulatory history and what the new protections mean for gig workers.
All three major platforms reached settlements with New York City over delivery fee cap disputes, signaling growing regulatory momentum against uncapped platform fees.
Portland permanently caps delivery commissions at 15% for delivery orders and 4% for pickup orders. One of the strongest restaurant-protective ordinances in the U.S.
Official Portland portal for restaurants to file complaints about delivery app fee violations.
Coverage of Portland's commission cap ordinance, the debate around it, and its impact on local independent restaurants.
Statewide Oregon coverage of commission cap legislation and what it means for restaurant operators across the state.
Impact on Delivery Customers
Analyzed delivery orders from five major restaurant chains across the 10 largest U.S. cities. Found ordering delivery costs 79.5% more on average than picking up — an additional $9.30 per order. Atlanta shoppers pay the most: 92.2% more than pickup.
Found Instacart was charging different customers up to 23% more for identical items using AI pricing software. Nearly three-quarters of grocery items tested were offered at multiple prices simultaneously. Instacart stopped the practice following the investigation on December 22, 2025.
Complete report with full methodology, data, and findings. Average price variations could cost a household of four about $1,200 per year. Study involved 437 participants across four U.S. cities.
Details of Seattle's landmark law requiring minimum pay rates for delivery workers — and the platform surcharges that followed.
Documents how Uber Eats extended its Seattle regulatory fee to neighboring cities that have no such law — charging consumers more in areas where no worker protections were passed.
Side-by-side breakdown of what consumers actually pay on each major delivery platform, including all fees layered on top of menu prices.
Consumer-focused breakdown of how much each platform adds to the cost of a meal, including markup and fee comparisons.
Restaurant Industry Research & Data
42% of operators reported their restaurant was not profitable in 2025. Menu prices up 31% since 2020. Annual industry sales projected at $1.55 trillion in 2026.
Full-service menu prices up 4.3% year over year as of March 2026. Limited-service up 3.2%. Both segments significantly moderated from 2022 peaks.
Food and labor costs each up 35% in the last five years. Average restaurant pre-tax profit margin: 3–5%. 90% of full-service restaurants expected to raise menu prices in 2026.
Academic analysis of platform competition and margin pressure on independent restaurants. Examines the structural power imbalance between large platforms and small operators.
Industry data shows actual cost of third-party delivery can exceed 40% of revenue when all fees and indirect costs are included. One restaurant owner found a $7–8 burrito yielded only $4 after platform fees.
Key data on consumer ordering habits, platform usage, and what restaurant operators need to understand about the digital ordering landscape.
Secret shopper study placing 600 delivery orders across DoorDash, Uber Eats, and Grubhub. Found 49% of orders had a discount attached. Average delivery and other fees declined from $6.87 in 2022 to $5.96.
Based on 1.2 billion restaurant transactions. Full-service tips averaged 19.4%, quick-service 15.8%. ⚠️ Note: Cornell Sun 2025 delivery app pricing analysis (average 15% menu markup) is cited in secondary sources. Best available secondary source: https://www.getsauce.com/post/why-restaurants-charge-more-on-doordash
Delivery App Fees & Commission Structures
Uber Eats raises Lite tier from 15% to 20% — first rate increase in nearly 10 years. Plus tier restaurants now pay 30% on Uber One member orders. Restaurant owner Stella Dennig called it 'extortion,' saying a 3% increase could represent 100% of her annual profits.
Rave Restaurant Group (Pizza Inn and Pie Five) leaves Uber Eats after commission increase left operators with little to no profit per order. CEO Brandon Solano: 'At some point, enough's enough.'
As of March 2026, Plus plan restaurants pay 30% commission on orders from Uber One members — 5% more than on regular orders. Restaurants are effectively subsidizing Uber's subscription program out of their own margin.
Comprehensive breakdown of DoorDash, Uber Eats, Grubhub, ChowNow, Toast, Slice, Caviar, ezCater, and Instacart commission structures. Operators increasingly treat marketplace orders as customer acquisition rather than profit channels.
The effective cost per order often ends up closer to 30–40% of revenue once all fees and promotions are factored in — far beyond the advertised headline commission rate.
Practical guide to calculating real ROI from delivery platforms and when to consider alternatives. Practical margin math: a $20 order minus 25% commission minus packaging leaves $8 gross margin.
Side-by-side comparison of commission structures, customer service quality, and subscription program impacts for restaurant operators. Includes practical analysis of DashPass and Uber One margin compression.
Detailed breakdown of DoorDash's full fee structure including hidden costs, tier-by-tier analysis, and the impact of optional add-ons that become functionally mandatory.
Practical margin math: a $20 order minus 25% commission minus packaging leaves $8 gross margin (40%). Under 15–20% net margin per order means you may be losing money. Includes ROI calculator framework.
DoorDash acknowledges that significant menu price discrepancies result in up to 37% fewer sales and a 78% reduction in reorder rates — yet the commission structure that drives those markups remains unchanged.
Delivery contracts have grown from a few pages to 30 pages of legal jargon. Restaurants must now commit to marketing spend in addition to per-order commissions. Orders from subscription members carry different commission rates than standard orders.
Promotions and discounts on delivery apps are now so common they're changing the fundamental economics of the business — often with costs shifted entirely to restaurants.
Nearly a decade after delivery apps exploded, the service has damaged the industry's economics at a time when average profitability isn't thriving. The services are growing dominant, giving them considerable power in negotiations.
As of February 2026, Grubhub permanently waives delivery and service fees on orders of $50 or more — no subscription required, saving an average of $13 per order. Menu markup still applies.
Restaurant Owner Experiences
Omaha restaurateur Javier Trujillo paid $188,000 in delivery app commissions across five restaurants in one year before walking away from all platforms. Details driver no-show losses and the broader margin problem for independent operators.
Original local news story with direct quotes from Javier Trujillo: 'Maybe there was not enough Dashers in the area and they took the order, we get the order, we made the food, but nobody comes to pick it up. That's losses on us.'
Covers the Trujillo story plus Dallas ghost kitchen owner Andrew Kelley's experience: 'After DoorDash takes its commission, and I sell an Italian sandwich for $12, my take-home is less than 10.' Explores hybrid delivery models as alternatives.
Delivery App Market Share & Revenue
Official DoorDash investor release. Annual revenue: $13.717 billion in 2025, up 27.93% year over year. The platform processes approximately 903 million orders annually in the U.S.
Official Uber investor release. Uber Eats revenue reached $13.7 billion in 2024. Combined DoorDash and Uber Eats gross order value exceeded $40 billion in Q4 2024 alone.
DoorDash holds 56% U.S. market share, Uber Eats 23%, Grubhub 16%. Market concentration means independent restaurants effectively have no negotiating power on commission rates.
Comprehensive market data on food delivery app revenue, user growth, and market share across all major platforms.
DoorDash annual revenue: $13.717 billion in 2025, up 27.93% year over year. Historical revenue data going back to IPO.
Uber Eats revenue reached $13.7 billion in 2024. Combined DoorDash and Uber Eats gross order value exceeded $40 billion in Q4 2024 alone.
Impact on Delivery Workers
DoorDash and Uber Eats moved tip prompts to after delivery — the average tip on those apps dropped to $0.76, compared to $2.17 on apps that ask for tips up front. Total tip losses: $554 million.
DoorDash and Uber Eats filed suit against NYC's requirement to show tip prompts at checkout — directly opposing a measure designed to protect driver earnings. The apps argued mandating tip timing violates their constitutional rights.
Seattle's app-based worker minimum payment ordinance is delivering results for workers, countering platform claims that it would hurt drivers and reduce order volume.
Despite wage protections, platforms responded with consumer surcharges that reduced tipping — complicating the picture for driver earnings net of the regulatory response fees.
Platform Alternatives for Restaurants
Flat monthly subscription model ($119/$229/$328/month) with 0% commission on orders. Payment processing at 2.95% + $0.29/transaction. Delivery handled separately at $7.98 flat — restaurant sets how much to pass to the customer.
ChowNow charges restaurants $7.98 per delivery order. The restaurant decides how much of that to pass on to the customer. No platform service fee charged to consumers.
Instacart's official consumer fee disclosure. Service fees start at 5%, typically run closer to 10%. Variable by order size and location.
Official Instacart+ membership pricing. $99/year or $9.99/month. Includes free delivery on qualifying orders. About These Sources All links were verified from live search results as of May 5, 2026. Platform prices and fees can change frequently. Verify current rates directly with each platform before making business decisions.
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