The short answer

Ontario restaurants can charge up to 2.4% on credit card transactions — or their effective merchant discount rate, whichever is lower. The federal framework applies in full, with no Ontario-specific restrictions beyond standard Consumer Protection Act disclosure requirements. The setup takes about 35 to 45 days end to end. Recovery on a typical Ontario restaurant is in the $20,000 to $25,000 range annually for a $1.2M card-volume operation. The biggest operational variables are tipping math, bill-presenter disclosure, and how delivery platforms fit into the program.

Quick facts — Ontario restaurants

Maximum surcharge: 2.4% or effective MDR, whichever is lower.
Typical Ontario restaurant effective rate: 2.1% to 2.5%.
Setup time: 35–45 days from registration to live.
Annual recovery (sample $1.2M operation): $20,000–$25,000.
Tipping interaction: Surcharge applied to pre-tip subtotal; tip calculated on same subtotal.
Delivery platforms: Out of scope — they handle their own processing.

Why Ontario restaurants are the early adopters

Three things make Ontario restaurants particularly well-suited to surcharging compared to other industries or other provinces. First, restaurants run thin — typical operating margins of 3% to 6% mean credit card fees of 2.3% are a meaningful chunk of profit, not a rounding error. Second, Ontario has high credit card usage compared to the national average; a Toronto restaurant doing 80% of revenue on credit isn't unusual. Third, the customer base is mobile and informed — by 2026, most Ontario restaurant customers have seen surcharges at airports, hotels, professional services, and other restaurants, so the practice has lost its novelty.

Result: an Ontario restaurant rolling out a surcharge program in 2026 isn't introducing a new concept to its customers. It's catching up to a practice that's already mainstream. The operational lift is in execution, not customer education.

The Ontario regulatory framework — restaurant-specific overlay

The full Ontario rulebook is on the Ontario province page. The pieces that matter specifically for restaurants:

Restaurant-specific operational considerations

The restaurant industry has more surcharge edge cases than most. The full restaurants industry guide covers the cross-Canada picture; here's what matters specifically for Ontario operators.

How tipping changes the math

The single most asked question from restaurant operators starting a surcharge program: how does tipping work with this? The answer is operationally simple, but it has to be configured correctly in the POS. The surcharge is calculated on the pre-tip subtotal. The tip is also calculated on the pre-tip subtotal. The customer sees:

Modern restaurant POS systems — TouchBistro, Lightspeed Restaurant, Square for Restaurants, Toast — handle this correctly by default. Older POS systems sometimes calculate the tip on the post-surcharge subtotal, which both inflates the tip and creates customer pushback. If your POS does this, fix the configuration before going live. The POS systems guide has more.

Bill-presenter disclosure

Most Ontario restaurants present a printed bill, not a counter terminal. The bill itself is the point-of-sale disclosure. The surcharge has to appear on the bill — typically as a line above the total, labelled clearly. Once the customer hands the bill back with their card, they've authorized payment, so the surcharge has to be visible on the bill, not surfaced for the first time on the receipt that prints after the transaction. This is the most common compliance gap in restaurant rollouts and the most common source of customer complaints. Get the bill format right before flipping the switch.

Multiple cards splitting one bill

Tableside payment with multiple cards splitting a bill is the operational scenario that trips up older POS systems. Each card needs its own surcharge calculation, on its own portion of the subtotal, with its own receipt. If three diners split a $200 bill three ways, each card gets a surcharge on roughly $66.67. The receipts have to itemize correctly. Most modern restaurant POS systems handle this; older ones treat the surcharge as a single line that has to be manually divided. If your POS can't split surcharges automatically, train staff on the manual workaround before going live.

Online ordering and direct delivery

If your restaurant takes its own online orders — through your website, a Square Online site, or a Lightspeed Loyalty integration — surcharging applies to those credit card transactions exactly as it does in-restaurant. The disclosure has to appear on the checkout page before card details are entered. Most online ordering platforms have a configuration setting for this; check before going live and verify by placing a test order.

Third-party delivery platforms (Uber Eats, DoorDash, SkipTheDishes)

Third-party delivery is out of scope for the surcharge program. The customer pays the platform; the platform pays the restaurant after deducting commission. There is no direct credit card transaction between the customer and the restaurant, so there's nothing for the restaurant to surcharge. Don't try to apply the surcharge to delivery orders — you'd be surcharging a payment you don't actually process.

Catering and large group bookings

Catering orders, large group bookings, private events, and venue rentals are typically larger-ticket transactions and follow the same surcharge rules as in-restaurant payments. The economics are particularly favourable here — a 2.4% surcharge on a $4,000 catering invoice is $96, which often pushes the customer toward EFT or cheque payment, both of which save the restaurant the processing fee entirely. For these higher-ticket transactions, the surcharge often functions less as a fee recovery mechanism and more as a payment-method nudge.

"The Ontario restaurants that roll out cleanest are the ones that fix the bill format first, the menu line second, and the staff script third — in that order. The customers who push back are the customers who saw the surcharge for the first time on the receipt."

A real-world example: a Toronto restaurant doing $100K/month

Consider a typical Toronto full-service restaurant doing $100,000 per month in card volume — $80,000 on credit cards, $20,000 on debit. Effective discount rate: 2.3%. Monthly processing fees: roughly $1,840 on the credit portion, plus minimal debit fees.

After implementing a 2.4% surcharge program in compliance with Ontario rules:

This is a typical pattern. Toronto restaurants in this volume range that roll out cleanly recover most of their processing fees within six weeks of going live. The full calculator models the same math against your specific volume and rate.

The setup process for an Ontario restaurant

The full sequence is in the registration guide. The restaurant-specific overlay:

  1. Confirm your effective discount rate. Ask your processor for your blended effective rate over the last three months. Most Ontario restaurants land between 2.1% and 2.5%.
  2. Verify your POS handles surcharging cleanly. Test with sample receipts before registration. Confirm tipping math is on the pre-tip subtotal. Confirm split-bill handling distributes the surcharge correctly. The POS systems guide covers the platforms that handle this natively.
  3. Submit Visa and Mastercard notifications. Same day. Both have 30-day notice periods running in parallel.
  4. Update menus and bill format. A line at the bottom of the menu — "A 2.4% credit card surcharge applies. Debit and cash are not surcharged." — and the bill format showing the surcharge above the total.
  5. Brief front-of-house staff. One sentence script: "We added a 2.4% credit card surcharge that goes toward our processing costs. Debit and cash don't have the surcharge." See the customer pushback guide for the full staff script.
  6. Post a small entry sign. Door, host stand, or near the cash. Reinforces the menu line for customers who don't read the menu carefully.
  7. Day 31: switch on. The 30-day notice period ends. Surcharge program is live.

Common pitfalls for Ontario restaurant operators

Ontario cities — local context

The rules apply identically across Ontario, but customer expectation and rollout patterns vary somewhat by region:

Quick FAQ for Ontario restaurant operators

Is surcharging legal for restaurants in Ontario?

Yes. Ontario restaurants can apply a credit card surcharge of up to 2.4%, or their effective merchant discount rate — whichever is lower. The federal framework that took effect in October 2022 applies, and Ontario has no surcharge-specific provincial restrictions. Disclosure must comply with both Visa/Mastercard rules and Ontario's Consumer Protection Act.

How does the surcharge interact with tipping at an Ontario restaurant?

The surcharge is calculated on the pre-tip subtotal, not on the tipped amount. The tip is calculated separately, on the same pre-tip subtotal. Most modern restaurant POS systems handle this correctly by default — the customer sees the food and beverage subtotal, the surcharge as a separate line, taxes, and then a tip prompt that doesn't include the surcharge in its calculation base.

What does Ontario disclosure look like in a restaurant?

Two disclosure points are required. First, at the point of entry — typically a line on the menu near the bottom and a small sign at the host stand or door. Second, at the point of sale — on the printed bill (above the total) and on the terminal screen when the customer taps or inserts. Online ordering and delivery checkouts need the disclosure on the cart page before card details are entered.

How much can an Ontario restaurant save with a surcharge program?

A typical Ontario restaurant doing $1.2M a year in card volume at a 2.3% effective discount rate pays roughly $27,600 a year in processing fees. A compliant surcharge program recovers most of that — typically $20,000 to $25,000 in the first full year, accounting for the 5% to 15% of customers who shift to debit. Smaller cafés and quick-service operators recover proportionally less in absolute terms but often a higher percentage because debit is less prevalent in low-ticket cash-and-card environments.

Will Ontario customers walk away over a surcharge?

Rarely. Ontario customers — particularly in Toronto, Ottawa, and Hamilton — have encountered surcharges across multiple restaurants and other businesses since 2022 and most are familiar with the practice. The first 30 days after rollout typically generate the most questions, but actual walkouts over a properly disclosed surcharge are uncommon. Restaurants that handle the rollout cleanly see customer volumes recover to normal within four to six weeks.

Do third-party delivery orders get surcharged?

No, not by the restaurant. Third-party delivery platforms (Uber Eats, DoorDash, SkipTheDishes) handle their own payment processing and the restaurant doesn't have a direct credit card transaction with the customer. The surcharge program applies to direct payments — in-restaurant transactions, the restaurant's own online ordering, and phone orders paid by card. Delivery platform commissions are a separate cost structure.

Next steps

If you're an Ontario restaurant operator considering a surcharge program, the path is: confirm your effective discount rate, verify your POS handles tipping and split bills correctly, register with Visa and Mastercard, update your menus and bill format, brief staff, and go live after the 30-day notice. The full setup is documented in the registration guide. The form below puts you in touch with a Canadian specialist who handles Ontario restaurant rollouts end-to-end — including POS verification, processor configuration, signage, and staff briefing.