The case for restaurant surcharging
The average Canadian full-service restaurant runs 70–85% of its sales on credit cards. At an effective discount rate of 2.1–2.5%, that's $25,000+ in processing fees on every $1M of credit card volume. Margin in this industry sits at 3–5%. Recovering even half of those processing fees can mean doubling annual profit.
Typical effective rate: 2.1%–2.5% on credit cards.
Compliant surcharge cap: 2.4% (or your effective rate, whichever is lower).
Average savings: $18,000–$40,000 per year on a $1M credit card volume.
Where it works best: Quick service, takeout-heavy, casual dining.
Where it's harder: Fine dining, hotel restaurants, tasting menus.
How tipping changes the math
This is the part most surcharge guides get wrong. In Canada, the surcharge is applied to the credit card transaction total — including the tip. That means a customer who tips 20% on a $100 meal and pays by credit card sees a surcharge calculated on $120, not $100. The merchant pays processing fees on the full $120 too, so the math works out fairly. But customers don't always see it that way.
Three approaches restaurants are using:
- Surcharge the whole bill (most common). Simplest, fully compliant, matches the network rules. The surcharge appears as a single line item on the receipt.
- Surcharge only the food & beverage subtotal. Some POS systems can configure the surcharge to apply before the tip. This costs the restaurant slightly more (you still pay processing on the tip portion) but reduces customer pushback.
- Build the surcharge into menu prices and offer a cash discount instead. Functionally equivalent, but legally a different program. Better fit for fine dining where surcharges feel out of place.
POS systems that handle restaurant surcharging properly
Not every POS supports compliant surcharging out of the box. The system must (1) automatically distinguish credit from debit, (2) calculate the surcharge as a separate line, (3) refund the surcharge proportionally on partial refunds, and (4) print compliant receipts.
Canadian restaurant POS systems with native surcharging support include Square, TouchBistro, Lightspeed Restaurant, Clover, and Moneris Go. Older or simpler terminals — many of the standalone Ingenico or Verifone units running default firmware — often need a software update or a switch to a surcharge-enabled processor. Our POS comparison guide covers each platform in detail.
The signage requirements (often missed)
Visa and Mastercard rules require disclosure at two points:
- Point of entry: a sign at the door, on the menu, on the website, or on the online ordering page. The sign must state that a surcharge will be applied to credit card transactions.
- Point of sale: on the terminal screen, the printed bill, or the digital checkout. The surcharge amount must be visible before the customer commits to the payment method.
For full-service restaurants, the most efficient approach is a small line at the bottom of the menu ("A 2.4% surcharge applies to credit card payments. No surcharge on debit, Interac, or cash.") plus an automatic line on every printed bill. For takeout and online ordering, a checkbox or banner on the checkout page satisfies the requirement.
"Restaurants that lose customers to surcharging almost always made the same mistake — they hid the disclosure until the bill arrived."
Customer communication scripts that work
Server scripts make or break surcharge rollouts. The wrong script — "we have to charge you extra now" — generates complaints. The right script reframes it as a choice the customer is making:
For dine-in: "Just a heads up, there's a 2.4% surcharge on credit card payments. Debit and cash don't have it — totally up to you."
For takeout/phone orders: "We accept debit, credit, and cash. Credit has a 2.4% surcharge — debit and cash don't."
For online checkout: a single banner above the payment selector saying "Credit card payments include a 2.4% surcharge. Debit and Interac payments do not." Then let the customer choose.
Provinces where it works (and where it's harder)
- Ontario, Alberta, BC: Full compliance with federal rules. No additional restrictions specific to restaurants.
- Quebec: Cannot apply a surcharge. Restaurants in Quebec use cash discount programs or build processing costs into menu pricing. Read our Quebec alternatives guide.
- Other provinces: All permit surcharging. No province-specific restaurant carve-outs.
Provincial deep-dives for restaurant operators
For Canada's largest restaurant markets, we've published dedicated combo guides covering province-specific operational detail — tip handling, peak-service rhythms, sales tax presentation on the receipt, and customer expectation by region.
- Surcharging for restaurants in Ontario — Tipping on HST receipts, GTA vs. small-market customer expectation, the 13% HST line
- Surcharging for restaurants in Alberta — Stampede, K-Days and festival peak weeks, the no-PST receipt advantage, lean-margin recovery math
BC, Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Nova Scotia restaurant combo guides are in progress.
What to expect operationally in the first 60 days
Most restaurants see a small uptick in debit card usage and cash payments in the first month — typically 3–8% of credit card volume shifts. After that, behaviour stabilizes. Customer complaints peak in week two and drop sharply by week six. The restaurants that have the smoothest rollouts are the ones that train staff before launch and treat the surcharge as a normal part of the bill, not an apologetic add-on.
Run the numbers for your restaurant
Plug your monthly credit card volume into our surcharge calculator and see what compliant surcharging would recover at your specific volume and effective rate. Most owners are surprised by the annual figure.