March 06, 2026 · HomeDine Editorial

Pricing seats without a race to the bottom

Cover costs, signal quality, and leave room for generosity.

Numbers that tell the truth

Pricing a home table is emotionally harder than pricing a restaurant cover. You see your own labour as “free” and undershoot. Or you anchor to delivery-app meals and forget that guests are buying intimacy, narrative, and your grocery run. Fair pricing covers true cost, signals quality, and leaves a little room for occasional generosity without resentment.

Itemise what is included

Spell out in the listing:

  • Alcohol — Pairing included, BYO welcome, or cash bar?
  • Snacks and bread — First bite or full supplement?
  • Seconds — Encouraged within reason, or one plated portion only?

Ambiguity breeds awkward moments at the table and star deductions in reviews.

Compare to restaurants on the right axis

Guests are not buying throughput; they are buying attention and specificity. Your price can sit above a casual chain if the menu, room, and story justify it. Anchor comparisons to experiences with similar duration, courses, and beverage—not to a lunch thali down the street unless that is truly your competitive set.

Raise prices when menus upgrade

If you add dry-aged meat, imported spice, or a second server, move the number. Guests respect transparent upgrades more than secret shrinkflation. A short note—“February menu reflects seafood market prices”—prevents sticker shock.

Leave margin for the unexpected

Broken glass, extra taxi for a late guest ingredient, a bottle opened for tasting—you want 10–15% breathing room in your model so one rough night does not erase a month. If you run a charity add-on or comp a regular, build that into storytelling, not into silent subsidy every week.

Stay in the loop

Business fundamentals intersect with capacity sizing and menu cohesion—fewer seats at the right price often beats a full table at a loss.

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