Restaurants struggle as more Canadians look for value, dine out less

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Restaurants are under pressure as consumers steer away from dining out, while rising operational costs squeeze profit margins, a new report shows.

Three in four Canadians are eating out less, often because of the high cost of living, a Restaurants Canada report published Monday found. That share is even higher among those aged 18 to 34 at 81 per cent.

Restaurants Canada chief executive Kelly Higginson said it’s an “alarming” trend for the foodservice industry.

She said the younger generation in particular is “who we’re really going to be targeting more and more as they start to grow into the main consumer of the demographic.”

The report found younger Canadians placed higher importance on price, value and convenience compared with older Canadians.

Restaurant spending has slowed compared with pre-pandemic levels.

Per capita, Canadians are expected to spend $1,035 at full-service restaurants and $1,135 at quick-service restaurants this year. In 2019, they were spending $1,165 and $1,150, respectively.

As fewer people dine in, sales of alcohol at restaurants have also slowed because of rising menu prices and a consumer shift toward wellness, the report found.

Forty-one per cent of Canadians surveyed said their alcohol consumption has decreased over the past year.

“With our operators seeing less drinking or no alcohol, it’s making it even more challenging to be able to focus on those value meals that Canadians need right now, and also be able have some profit at the end of the day,” Higginson said.

Sales in the foodservice industry are projected to reach $124 billion this year. However, when adjusted for inflation, the growth is going to remain relatively muted.

As consumers pull back on spending, businesses are also dealing with rising operational expenses. The cost of food, labour, insurance and utilities, among other expenses, have grown by double digits between 2023 and 2025, the report said.

The report showed 41 per cent of businesses were operating at a loss or breaking even as of June 2025.
Hopefully more immigrants can fix this.

How often do you eat out?
 
Upvote 27
At our favorite restaurant, prices are way up but worse than that they tanked their quality and portion size. We went every year to a place for our anniversary and the last time we went, my wife and I both started laughing when our appetizer came. The pastry we used to share was 1/3 the size and missing an ingredient entirely. Skipped this year and just splurged on some good steaks.
 
I picked up a huge tube of lean ground beef for $4.99 /lb ($50 worth)

Got me some pork for $2.99 /lb ($30 worth)

Chicken for 3.49 /lb ($30 worth)

Bacon for 5.99/lb ($12, goes great with rice)

Spent $25 on some veggies, beans and rice (veggies are frozen but I will get fresh sometimes for a bit more)

$25 on 'junk' (sugary stuff like milk and pop and chocolate, i buy clearance candy and get the pop on sale)

That's $172 before tax, and I fully intend on living on only this for the next 2 weeks. (there's 2 of us)

I used to love going out to eat, but the quality of food has declined in many places and the price + tip just makes it a huge waste.

We have a fully functional kitchen, might as well use it! With a bit of work we eat far better and for less money.
 
There’s only one place we go to nowadays because prices haven’t changed much, quality is excellent and portion sizes are generous.

Black Forest restaurant in Harrison hot springs if anyone wants to check it out!
 
lets see:

-The young Canadians don't have jobs so they can't afford to go out.
-The "New Canadians" none of them will ever go to a restaurant to eat a Burger or Fish and chips or go to any type of Canadian pub. I'm sure the Indian restaurants are doing just fine in the cities.
 
It's an interesting phenomenon actually: LMIA money-laundering Indian and Chinese joints making and serving slop to jeet and Chinese foreign students and relying upon an army of jeet food delivery drivers to shuttle it back and forth using Comrade Chow's express bike lanes in downtown Toronto. If you stand at the corner of Yonge and Gerrard you can see a steady convoy of these e-bikes making their way up and down Yonge like turds floating along a river. I seriously doubt anyone under the age of 35 in downtown Toronto actually cooks, which if you've seen the kitchens in the new dog crate condos going up that they live in, you can see why.
 
No I don't go out to eat like I used to. I'll maybe order out from time to time but that's it.

The thing is I really like cooking and I pretty much have every cooking gadget you can imagine.

Even with the price of the beef gl and Chicken oing sky high it's still much cheaper to eat at home.
 
Wont eat out and spend 23 dollars for a burger and 10 for a pint.

They can fuck off with those prices.

I'd rather just go somewhere fancy and spend the extra 23 bucks for a proper main.
 
I save up for very occasional sushi.
 
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Every dollar we spend is a vote. I always encourage people to vote with their wallet whenever it comes up. If every Canadian spent just one year buying only the necessities and cancelling their entertainment subscriptions we would see sweeping reform throughout the country.
 
We eat out once a month or two. It's just not worth it. The price for everything is ridiculous.

Took my lady and her brother out for a nice dinner on her birthday. It was around $200 for three of us with NO ALCOHOL.

Add the gratuity and it's a joke. A lot of places now start their tip percentage at 18% on the machines.

Pub food now is what you'd pay for a steak dinner 15 years ago. Going out for a steak now is a joke, the price of beef is ridiculous.

Bottom line is the Canadian Dollar is a joke.
 
Is eating at the Costco considered dinning out?

Sometimes i get the chicken fingers and fries. Anyone else get bonus chicken fingers sometimes? Wife thinks the lady behind the register is slipping me bonus chicken to try and get in my pants? Is she correct? Seems greasy if true.
 
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