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Australia edition · 10 products ranked · Verified 2026-05-24

Top 10 Restaurant POS Software in Australia for 2026

Independent Australian restaurant POS ranking, AUD pricing, Tyro EFTPOS reality, Impos and Kounta (Lightspeed) local dominance, RSA Act and ATO requirements.

Australia verdict (TL;DR)

Verified 2026-05-24

Australian restaurant POS is dominated by ANZ-built and ANZ-acquired vendors. Lightspeed Restaurant (which acquired Sydney-built Kounta) is the dominant modern Aussie hospitality POS. Impos (Melbourne) is the entrenched Aussie hospitality champion at independent restaurants and pubs. Square for Restaurants holds Aussie SMB. TouchBistro and Toast have limited Aussie presence. Revel and SpotOn have minimal Aussie footprint. Tyro is the dominant Aussie payments backbone for hospitality - virtually every Aussie restaurant POS integrates with Tyro EFTPOS. Olo handles Aussie QSR digital-ordering. NCR Aloha runs at older Aussie franchise networks.

Picks for Australia

  • Aussie restaurant, cafe or pub wanting modern POS with Tyro integration: lightspeed-restaurant Lightspeed Restaurant (which acquired Sydney-built Kounta) is the dominant modern Aussie hospitality POS. Native Tyro integration, Aussie hospitality features, common at independent restaurants, pubs and cafes nationwide.
  • Aussie SMB cafe, food truck or single-location restaurant: square-restaurants Square for Restaurants is the Aussie SMB pick for single-location cafes, food trucks and small restaurants. Square also runs Aussie payments (rebranded as Block).
  • Aussie QSR digital ordering and delivery aggregation: olo Olo handles Aussie QSR digital ordering at scale - Domino's Pizza Australia, Guzman y Gomez, Mad Mex, several large Aussie franchise networks running first-party digital ordering.
  • Aussie franchise network running legacy POS: aloha-pos NCR Aloha (now NCR Voyix) runs at older Aussie franchise networks - some larger pub groups, club venues and traditional Aussie hospitality chains.
  • Aussie single-location restaurant wanting US-style features: toast Toast has some Aussie footprint at modern Aussie restaurants wanting US-style POS UX. Limited Aussie payments and integration depth compared to Lightspeed Restaurant.
  • Aussie restaurant wanting iPad-first lightweight POS: touchbistro TouchBistro has Aussie footprint at smaller restaurants wanting iPad-based POS. Limited Aussie payments depth.
Market context

How the restaurant pos software market looks in Australia

Australian restaurant POS is dominated by ANZ-built and ANZ-acquired vendors because the workflow stack is Aussie-specific: integration with Tyro EFTPOS (the dominant Aussie hospitality payments backbone), state-by-state Responsible Service of Alcohol (RSA) requirements, ATO GST reporting on restaurant sales, Fair Work Hospitality Industry General Award (HIGA) penalty rates and allowance interpretation, and Aussie till-management patterns that differ from US restaurants.

Lightspeed Restaurant is the dominant modern Aussie hospitality POS, particularly after Lightspeed acquired Sydney-built Kounta in 2019. Kounta was the Aussie-built hospitality POS champion with thousands of Aussie restaurants and cafes; the Lightspeed acquisition preserved the Aussie product team and integrations. Impos (Melbourne) is the long-running independent Aussie hospitality POS at pubs, clubs, restaurants and cafes - smaller scale than Lightspeed Restaurant but deeply entrenched at venues that prefer the Impos UX. Square for Restaurants holds Aussie SMB single-location.

At the QSR end, Olo handles digital ordering at Domino's Pizza Australia, Guzman y Gomez, Mad Mex and several large Aussie franchise networks. NCR Aloha (now NCR Voyix) runs at older Aussie franchise networks including some larger pub groups and club venues. McDonald's Australia, Hungry Jack's and KFC Australia run their own POS stacks.

Tyro is the structural Aussie payments backbone for hospitality. Sydney-headquartered ASX-listed, Tyro processes Aussie EFTPOS at the majority of Aussie hospitality venues. Any restaurant POS without native Tyro integration is functionally non-competitive at Aussie hospo - which is why Toast, TouchBistro, Revel and SpotOn have struggled to win Aussie market share despite product strength. The dominant Aussie split-bill, surcharging, and EFTPOS-integration patterns run through Tyro.

Compliance & local rules

Australian restaurant POS compliance touches multiple frameworks. The ATO requires GST reporting on restaurant sales above A$75K turnover; POS must produce defensible GST-inclusive records. The Fair Work Hospitality Industry General Award (HIGA) sets penalty rates (Saturday +25%, Sunday +50%, public holiday +125-150%, late-night +10-25%) which must flow through to time-and-attendance and payroll. State-by-state Responsible Service of Alcohol (RSA) certificates are mandatory for staff serving alcohol and many venues require POS to enforce RSA-certified-staff serving. Tobacco licensing rules vary by state. The Privacy Act 1988 and APP 11 govern customer payment-card and personal information; PCI DSS applies to any POS handling card data. The Notifiable Data Breaches scheme requires OAIC notification within 30 days. APRA does not directly regulate restaurant POS but Tyro (the dominant Aussie hospitality payments processor) is APRA-regulated. AUSTRAC obligations may apply where large cash transactions flow through POS. The Australian Consumer Law (ACL) governs receipts, returns and refunds. Surcharging rules from RBA cap card surcharges at the cost-of-acceptance.

At a glance

Quick comparison, ranked for Australia

Product Best for Starts at 10-emp/mo* Pricing G2 Geo
3 Lightspeed Restaurant
Full-service restaurants in Canada, EU, Australia
$69 $69 4.1 Global; strongest in Canada, EU, Australia, US
2 Square for Restaurants
Small operators and quick-service restaurants
$0 $0 4.4 Strongest in US, Canada, UK, Australia, Ireland, Japan
1 Toast
Independent and mid-market full-service restaurants
$0 $0 4.2 Strongest in US; expanding to UK, Ireland
4 TouchBistro
Owner-operated full-service restaurants
$69 $69 4.3 Strongest in Canada, US, UK, Mexico
5 Revel Systems
Mid-market restaurants and quick-service chains
$99 $99 3.7 Strongest in US, UK, Australia
6 Clover for Restaurants
Restaurants prioritizing payment processing relationship
$90 $90 3.8 Strongest in US, UK, Canada
7 SpotOn
Full-service restaurants and growing chains
$0 $0 4.4 Strongest in US
8 Aloha POS
Chain restaurants and franchise operators
Quote - 3.5 Strongest in US, Canada, EU
9 Olo
Restaurant groups and chains
Quote - 4.2 Strongest in US, Canada
10 RestoLabs
Small to mid-size restaurants globally
$79 $79 4.4 Global; strongest in India, US, UK, UAE

*10-employee monthly cost = base fee + (per-employee × 10) using the lowest published tier. For opaque-pricing vendors, no value is shown.

Verified local pricing

What buyers in Australia actually pay

Median annual deal size by employee band, in AUD. Crowdsourced from anonymized buyer disclosures.

Product Employee band Median annual (AUD) Sample Notes
Lightspeed Restaurant 1-3 locations A$5,800 48 Lightspeed Restaurant Core/Plus, Aussie independent restaurants
Lightspeed Restaurant 5-20 locations A$38,000 22 Lightspeed Restaurant Enterprise, Aussie multi-venue
Square for Restaurants 1 location A$1,200 41 Square for Restaurants Plus, Aussie SMB
TouchBistro 1-3 locations A$4,800 17 TouchBistro Pro, smaller Aussie restaurants
Toast 1-3 locations A$7,200 11 Toast Restaurant Basics + Restaurant Grow, limited Aussie footprint
Olo 20-200 locations A$96,000 9 Olo Ordering + Dispatch, Aussie QSR franchise
Local challengers

Australia-built or Australia-strong vendors worth knowing

Not yet ranked in our global top 10, but credible options for Australia buyers and worth a shortlist.

Lightspeed Restaurant (Kounta heritage)

Visit ↗

Lightspeed acquired Sydney-built Kounta in 2019. Kounta retained product team and Aussie integrations. The dominant modern Aussie hospitality POS at independent restaurants, pubs and cafes.

Impos

Visit ↗

Melbourne-built. Long-running independent Aussie hospitality POS. Strong fit for pubs, clubs, restaurants and cafes preferring the Impos UX over Lightspeed.

Tyro

Visit ↗

Sydney-headquartered ASX-listed. The dominant Aussie hospitality payments backbone. Any Aussie restaurant POS needs native Tyro integration to be functionally competitive.

abacus

Visit ↗

Aussie-built hospitality POS with footprint at independent Aussie restaurants and venues. Strong fit for venues preferring local product support.

The Australia ranking

All 10, ranked for Australia

Same intelligence as the global ranking, vendor trust, review patterns, verified pricing, compliance, reordered for the Australia market.

#3

Lightspeed Restaurant

Modern Canadian-built restaurant POS with global multi-location depth.

Founded 2005 · Montreal, Canada · public · 5-300 employees
G2 4.1 (680)
Capterra 4.0
From $69 /mo
◐ Partial disclosure
Visit Lightspeed Restaurant

Lightspeed Restaurant is the restaurant-vertical POS from Lightspeed Commerce (NYSE:LSPD, TSX:LSPD), public since 2019. Lightspeed acquired Upserve in 2020 for $430M to deepen US restaurant POS presence. The product covers full restaurant POS including table management, kitchen display, payment processing, online ordering, and multi-location reporting across global markets. Strengths: clean modern UX, strong global multi-location support across North America, Europe, and Australia, integrated Lightspeed Payments processing, mature commerce-platform heritage. Best fit for full-service restaurants outside the US wanting modern restaurant POS, or US restaurants on the former Upserve install base. Trade-offs: US market share below Toast and Square, post-Upserve integration created brand confusion 2020-2024, and AI feature velocity below Toast.

Best for

Full-service restaurants in Canada, EU, and Australia (1-30 locations) wanting modern restaurant POS, or US restaurants on the former Upserve install base.

Worst for

US-only operators (Toast deeper US share), Square ecosystem extensions (Square for Restaurants better fit), or chain restaurants on Aloha (Aloha POS deeper chain support).

Strengths

  • Clean modern UX
  • Strong global multi-location support
  • Integrated Lightspeed Payments processing
  • Mature commerce-platform heritage
  • Public Lightspeed parent stability
  • Strong fit for non-US full-service

Weaknesses

  • US market share below Toast and Square
  • Post-Upserve integration brand confusion 2020-2024
  • AI feature velocity below Toast
  • Support inconsistency reported

Pricing tiers

partial
  • Lightspeed Essentials
    Per location; core POS
    $69 /mo
  • Lightspeed Plus
    Per location; advanced restaurant features
    $189 /mo
  • Lightspeed Pro
    Multi-location enterprise
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Lightspeed Payments processing fee varies by region
  • · Hardware costs separate
  • · Per-add-on pricing for advanced inventory and loyalty
  • · Multi-year contracts common

Key features

  • +Restaurant-vertical POS
  • +Lightspeed Payments processing
  • +Table management
  • +Kitchen display system
  • +Online ordering integration
  • +Multi-location reporting
  • +Inventory management
  • +Loyalty programs
250+ integrations
DoorDashUber EatsQuickBooksXero7shiftsOpenTable
Geography
Global; strongest in Canada, EU, Australia, US
#2

Square for Restaurants

Block-anchored Square ecosystem restaurant POS with bundled payment processing.

Founded 2009 · San Francisco, CA · public · 1-100 employees
G2 4.4 (880)
Capterra 4.5
From $0 /mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit Square for Restaurants

Square for Restaurants is the restaurant-vertical POS from Block, Inc. (NYSE:SQ), launched 2018. The product extends Square ecosystem to restaurant-specific use cases including table management, kitchen display, online ordering, and menu management, all bundled with Square payment processing. Strengths: Block-anchored Square ecosystem (existing Square sellers extend with zero friction), bundled Square payment processing at predictable rates, strong hardware design, mature small-business installed base, public Block parent stability. Best fit for small operators and quick-service already on Square. Trade-offs: feature depth below Toast for full-service complex workflows (table management, course timing, split checks at deep scale), payment processor lock-in via Square Payments, and innovation pace slower on restaurant-specific AI features than Toast.

Best for

Small operators and quick-service restaurants (1-10 locations) already on Square ecosystem wanting restaurant-vertical features with bundled payment processing.

Worst for

Full-service restaurants with complex table management (Toast better depth), chain restaurants with multi-location franchise reporting (Aloha or Toast better), or operators wanting payment-processor independence (Square Payments is the lock-in).

Strengths

  • Block-anchored Square ecosystem (zero-friction extension)
  • Bundled Square payment processing at predictable rates
  • Strong hardware design (Square Register, Square Terminal)
  • Mature small-business installed base
  • Public Block parent stability
  • Free Square for Restaurants plan available

Weaknesses

  • Feature depth below Toast for full-service complex workflows
  • Square Payments processing lock-in
  • Innovation pace slower on restaurant-specific AI
  • Multi-location franchise features below Toast

Pricing tiers

public
  • Square for Restaurants Free
    Free plan; Square Payments required
    $0 /mo
  • Square for Restaurants Plus
    Per location; full restaurant features
    $60 /mo
  • Square for Restaurants Premium
    Multi-location plus enterprise
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Square Payments processing fee 2.6 percent plus $0.10 per card-present transaction
  • · Hardware costs $169-$799 per device
  • · Per-add-on pricing for advanced inventory and loyalty
  • · Higher rate on keyed-in transactions

Key features

  • +Square ecosystem extension
  • +Square Payments integrated processing
  • +Table management for full-service
  • +Kitchen display system
  • +Online ordering integration
  • +Square Loyalty integration
  • +Multi-location reporting (Plus and Premium)
150+ integrations
DoorDashUber EatsQuickBooks7shiftsSquare Online
Geography
Strongest in US, Canada, UK, Australia, Ireland, Japan
#1

Toast

Modern restaurant POS market leader with deepest restaurant-vertical UX.

Founded 2011 · Boston, MA · public · 5-500 employees
G2 4.2 (1,280)
Capterra 4.2
From $0 /mo
◐ Partial disclosure
Visit Toast

Toast is the modern restaurant POS market leader, founded 2011 in Boston, public since September 2021 (NYSE:TOST). The product covers full restaurant POS including order entry, kitchen display routing, payment processing, table management, menu engineering, labor scheduling, online ordering, and multi-location reporting. Strengths: deepest restaurant-vertical UX in category, integrated payment processing (Toast Payments), aggressive AI feature velocity (Toast IQ menu engineering, AI-driven labor forecasting), strong hardware bundling, roughly 25 percent US restaurant POS share. Best fit for US independent and mid-market full-service restaurants. Trade-offs: Toast Payments processing margin is the real revenue driver (vendor lock-in via payment processing), stock dropped from 2021 IPO peak then recovered through 2024-2026 as restaurant economics stabilized, hardware lease costs add up, and Support is hit-or-miss as company scaled.

Best for

US independent and mid-market full-service restaurants (1-50 locations) wanting modern restaurant-vertical POS with integrated payment processing, AI-driven menu engineering, and unified online ordering.

Worst for

Small operators wanting Square ecosystem (Square for Restaurants better), chain restaurants with existing Aloha installations (Aloha POS better), or restaurants prioritizing payment-processor independence (Toast Payments is the lock-in).

Strengths

  • Deepest restaurant-vertical UX in category
  • Integrated Toast Payments processing
  • Aggressive AI feature velocity (Toast IQ menu engineering)
  • Strong hardware bundling and lease options
  • Roughly 25 percent US restaurant POS share
  • Multi-location reporting and franchise support

Weaknesses

  • Toast Payments processing margin drives revenue (vendor lock-in)
  • Hardware lease costs accumulate over multi-year term
  • Support is hit-or-miss as company scaled
  • Stock dropped from 2021 IPO peak then recovered
  • Pricing scales fast at multi-location

Pricing tiers

partial
  • Toast Starter Kit
    Hardware-only entry; Toast Payments required
    $0 /mo
  • Toast Core
    Per terminal; full POS
    $69 /mo
  • Toast Growth
    Per location; online ordering plus loyalty
    $165 /mo
  • Toast Custom
    Multi-location plus enterprise
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Toast Payments processing fee 2.49 percent plus $0.15 per card-present transaction
  • · Hardware lease ~$50-$150 per terminal per month
  • · Per-add-on pricing for kitchen display, online ordering, loyalty
  • · Multi-year contracts standard

Key features

  • +Restaurant-vertical POS
  • +Toast Payments integrated processing
  • +Toast IQ AI menu engineering
  • +Kitchen display system
  • +Table management for full-service
  • +Online ordering plus delivery integration
  • +Labor scheduling with AI forecasting
  • +Multi-location reporting
200+ integrations
DoorDashUber EatsGrubhubQuickBooks7shiftsResy
Geography
Strongest in US; expanding to UK, Ireland
#4

TouchBistro

Long-running iPad-native POS for owner-operated full-service restaurants.

Founded 2010 · Toronto, Canada · private · 5-150 employees
G2 4.3 (480)
Capterra 4.0
From $69 /mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit TouchBistro

TouchBistro is the iPad-native restaurant POS, founded 2010 in Toronto. The product is designed specifically for full-service restaurants with iPad-based ordering, table management, kitchen display, and menu management. Strengths: iPad-native architecture (mature, designed for restaurants from the start), strong fit for owner-operated full-service restaurants, mature table management features, founder-led culture, affordable pricing relative to Toast. Best fit for owner-operated full-service restaurants (1-5 locations) wanting straightforward iPad-based POS. Trade-offs: feature depth below Toast for multi-location franchise reporting, iPad-only architecture limits hardware choice, AI feature velocity slower than Toast, and US market share below Toast and Square.

Best for

Owner-operated full-service restaurants (1-5 locations) wanting straightforward iPad-based POS with mature table management and reservations.

Worst for

Multi-location franchise operators (Toast or Aloha better depth), Square ecosystem extensions (Square for Restaurants better fit), or restaurants wanting non-iPad hardware (Toast or Lightspeed better hardware flexibility).

Strengths

  • iPad-native architecture (purpose-built)
  • Strong fit for owner-operated full-service
  • Mature table management features
  • Founder-led Canadian culture
  • Affordable pricing relative to Toast
  • Strong reservations integration (TouchBistro Reservations)

Weaknesses

  • Feature depth below Toast for multi-location franchise
  • iPad-only architecture limits hardware choice
  • AI feature velocity slower than Toast
  • US market share below Toast and Square
  • Support inconsistency reported

Pricing tiers

public
  • TouchBistro Solo
    Single location; core POS
    $69 /mo
  • TouchBistro Dual
    Two terminals; per location
    $129 /mo
  • TouchBistro Team
    Up to five terminals
    $249 /mo
  • TouchBistro Unlimited
    Unlimited terminals
    $399 /mo
Watch for
  • · Payment processing through TouchBistro Payments or external (Chase Payments, Square)
  • · iPad hardware separate ($329-$799)
  • · Per-add-on pricing for reservations, loyalty, online ordering
  • · Annual contracts common

Key features

  • +iPad-native POS
  • +Table management
  • +Kitchen display system
  • +Menu management
  • +TouchBistro Reservations (formerly TableUp)
  • +Online ordering integration
  • +Loyalty programs
  • +Multi-location reporting
100+ integrations
DoorDashUber EatsQuickBooks7shiftsTouchBistro Reservations
Geography
Strongest in Canada, US, UK, Mexico
#5

Revel Systems

iPad-anchored POS with strong inventory and reporting, PE-backed.

Founded 2010 · San Francisco, CA · pe backed · 20-500 employees
G2 3.7 (380)
Capterra 3.8
From $99 /mo
○ Sales call required
Visit Revel Systems

Revel Systems is the iPad-anchored POS platform, founded 2010 in San Francisco. The company is PE-backed (Welsh, Carson, Anderson and Stowe acquired majority stake 2019). The product covers POS, inventory, kitchen display, employee management, and reporting for restaurants and retail. Strengths: iPad-anchored architecture, strong inventory and reporting depth, mature customer base across restaurants and retail, multi-location franchise support, open API for integrations. Best fit for mid-market restaurants (5-50 locations) wanting deeper workflow customization than Toast or Square. Trade-offs: post-PE acquisition product velocity has been mixed, Support response times vary, UX dated relative to Toast, and customer reports of pricing pressure since PE acquisition.

Best for

Mid-market restaurants and quick-service chains (5-50 locations) wanting deeper workflow customization, strong inventory and reporting, and combined restaurant plus retail operations.

Worst for

Small single-location operators (Square or TouchBistro simpler), buyers wanting modern UX (Toast cleaner), or restaurants prioritizing fastest AI features (Toast better).

Strengths

  • iPad-anchored architecture
  • Strong inventory and reporting depth
  • Mature multi-location franchise support
  • Open API for integrations
  • Works for restaurants plus retail combined

Weaknesses

  • Post-PE acquisition product velocity mixed
  • Support response times vary
  • UX dated relative to Toast
  • Customer reports of pricing pressure since PE
  • AI feature velocity below Toast

Pricing tiers

opaque
  • Revel Essentials
    Per terminal; three-year contract
    $99 /mo
  • Revel Plus
    Per terminal; advanced features
    Quote
  • Revel Enterprise
    Multi-location franchise
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Three-year contract required for Essentials pricing
  • · Implementation services $674 minimum
  • · Payment processing through Revel Advantage or external
  • · iPad hardware separate

Key features

  • +iPad-anchored POS
  • +Inventory management depth
  • +Kitchen display system
  • +Employee management
  • +Multi-location franchise reporting
  • +Open API
  • +Loyalty programs
  • +Self-service kiosks
80+ integrations
QuickBooksXeroDoorDashUber Eats7shifts
Geography
Strongest in US, UK, Australia
#6

Clover for Restaurants

Fiserv-owned payment-processor-anchored restaurant POS bundle.

Founded 2010 · Brookfield, WI · public · 5-200 employees
G2 3.8 (580)
Capterra 3.9
From $90 /mo
◐ Partial disclosure
Visit Clover for Restaurants

Clover for Restaurants is the restaurant-vertical POS bundle from Fiserv (NYSE:FI), the payments and financial-services giant. Fiserv acquired Clover via the 2019 First Data merger. The product covers POS, payment processing, online ordering, and basic restaurant features bundled with Fiserv merchant services. Strengths: payment-processor-anchored bundle (Fiserv merchant services integrated), broad merchant-services bank partner channel, mature hardware (Clover Station, Clover Mini, Clover Flex), public Fiserv parent stability. Best fit for restaurants prioritizing payment-processing relationship over restaurant-vertical features. Trade-offs: feature depth below Toast for full-service restaurant workflows (table management, course timing, KDS routing), bank-partner distribution model means support quality varies by reseller, and post-Fiserv merger innovation pace slow on restaurant-specific features.

Best for

Restaurants and quick-service operators (1-20 locations) prioritizing payment-processing relationship with bank partner and wanting Clover hardware standardization.

Worst for

Full-service restaurants with complex table management (Toast better depth), Square ecosystem extensions (Square for Restaurants better fit), or buyers wanting modern AI-driven menu engineering (Toast better).

Strengths

  • Fiserv-anchored payment processing bundle
  • Broad merchant-services bank partner channel
  • Mature Clover hardware (Station, Mini, Flex)
  • Public Fiserv parent stability
  • Strong fit for payments-led buyers

Weaknesses

  • Feature depth below Toast for full-service
  • Bank-partner distribution means support varies by reseller
  • Post-Fiserv innovation pace slow on restaurant features
  • Restaurant-vertical features below Toast and Square for Restaurants
  • Hardware lock-in

Pricing tiers

partial
  • Clover Restaurant Starter
    Per terminal; basic POS
    $90 /mo
  • Clover Restaurant Standard
    Per terminal; full restaurant features
    $130 /mo
  • Clover Restaurant Advanced
    Multi-terminal multi-location
    $290 /mo
Watch for
  • · Fiserv payment processing fees 2.3-2.6 percent plus $0.10 per transaction
  • · Hardware costs $599-$1,649 per device
  • · Bank-partner reseller markups
  • · Multi-year contracts standard

Key features

  • +Restaurant POS with Fiserv payments
  • +Clover hardware (Station, Mini, Flex)
  • +Online ordering integration
  • +Basic table management
  • +Kitchen display system
  • +Loyalty programs
  • +Multi-location reporting
200+ integrations
DoorDashUber EatsQuickBooks7shiftsClover App Market
Geography
Strongest in US, UK, Canada
#7

SpotOn

Modern restaurant POS challenger with concierge support.

Founded 2017 · Chicago, IL · private · 5-200 employees
G2 4.4 (480)
Capterra 4.5
From $0 /mo
◐ Partial disclosure
Visit SpotOn

SpotOn is the modern restaurant POS challenger, founded 2017 in Chicago. The company raised a $300M-plus Series F in 2023 led by Andreessen Horowitz. The product covers restaurant POS, payment processing, online ordering, marketing, and reservations targeted at full-service and quick-service restaurants. Strengths: modern UX, concierge-style support (white-glove onboarding), aggressive product velocity, strong fit for full-service restaurants wanting Toast alternative, founder-led culture. Best fit for full-service restaurants (1-20 locations) wanting Toast alternative with stronger onboarding support. Trade-offs: smaller installed base than Toast or Square, feature depth still building relative to Toast on multi-location franchise, and brand recognition below Toast in US.

Best for

Full-service restaurants and growing chains (1-20 locations) wanting Toast alternative with concierge support, modern UX, and payment processing bundling.

Worst for

Small single-location operators wanting cheapest option (Square or TouchBistro), Clover-anchored buyers (Clover for Restaurants), or chains on Aloha (Aloha POS deeper chain support).

Strengths

  • Modern UX
  • Concierge-style white-glove support
  • Aggressive product velocity
  • Founder-led culture
  • Strong fit for Toast alternative
  • $300M-plus Series F backing (2023)

Weaknesses

  • Smaller installed base than Toast or Square
  • Feature depth still building on multi-location franchise
  • Brand recognition below Toast in US
  • Payment processing margins drive revenue (lock-in pattern)

Pricing tiers

partial
  • SpotOn Restaurant Starter
    Free POS hardware bundle with SpotOn Payments
    $0 /mo
  • SpotOn Restaurant
    Per location; full restaurant features
    $165 /mo
  • SpotOn Restaurant Enterprise
    Multi-location enterprise
    Quote
Watch for
  • · SpotOn Payments processing fees vary by deal
  • · Hardware bundled with payment processing commitment
  • · Per-add-on pricing for online ordering and loyalty
  • · Multi-year contracts common

Key features

  • +Restaurant POS with SpotOn Payments
  • +Concierge-style onboarding
  • +Online ordering integration
  • +Table management
  • +Kitchen display system
  • +Marketing and loyalty
  • +SpotOn Reserve (reservations)
100+ integrations
DoorDashUber EatsQuickBooks7shiftsSpotOn Reserve
Geography
Strongest in US
#8

Aloha POS

NCR Voyix-owned legacy POS widely deployed across chain restaurants.

Founded 1996 · Atlanta, GA · public · 50-50,000 employees
G2 3.5 (580)
Capterra 3.7
Custom quote
○ Sales call required
Visit Aloha POS

Aloha POS is the legacy chain-restaurant POS, founded 1996 (Aloha Technologies), acquired by Radiant Systems 1998, then by NCR 2011 for $1.2B. NCR spun off Voyix in 2023 (NYSE:VYX) which now owns Aloha. The product covers full restaurant POS for chain and franchise operators with deep multi-location reporting, enterprise inventory, and franchise management. Strengths: largest chain-restaurant installed base, deep multi-location franchise reporting, mature enterprise inventory and labor features, public NCR Voyix parent. Best fit for chain and franchise restaurants (20-plus locations) with existing Aloha installations. Trade-offs: innovation pace slow relative to Toast and SpotOn (the real flag), UX dated, post-NCR Voyix spin-off product velocity remains mixed, and modern challengers (Toast for chains) winning new chain accounts.

Best for

Chain restaurants and franchise operators (20-plus locations) with existing Aloha installations wanting deep multi-location franchise reporting and enterprise inventory.

Worst for

Independent and small-chain operators (Toast better depth), modern UX seekers (Toast cleaner), or buyers wanting fastest AI-driven menu engineering (Toast better).

Strengths

  • Largest chain-restaurant installed base
  • Deep multi-location franchise reporting
  • Mature enterprise inventory and labor features
  • Public NCR Voyix parent stability
  • Strong fit for existing Aloha installations

Weaknesses

  • Innovation pace slow relative to Toast and SpotOn
  • UX dated
  • Post-NCR Voyix spin-off product velocity mixed
  • Modern challengers winning new chain accounts
  • Support quality varies by reseller

Pricing tiers

opaque
  • Aloha Essentials
    Single-location starter
    Quote
  • Aloha Quick Service
    QSR chains
    Quote
  • Aloha Table Service
    Full-service chains
    Quote
  • Aloha Enterprise
    100-plus locations
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Payment processing through NCR Payments or external
  • · Hardware separate (NCR or compatible)
  • · Implementation services significant
  • · Annual contracts standard

Key features

  • +Chain-restaurant POS
  • +Multi-location franchise reporting
  • +Enterprise inventory
  • +Labor management
  • +Kitchen display system
  • +Loyalty programs
  • +Multi-tenant architecture
250+ integrations
NCR PaymentsQuickBooksDoorDashUber Eats7shiftsNCR back-office
Geography
Strongest in US, Canada, EU
#9

Olo

Restaurant ordering and delivery platform that integrates with POS, not a full POS.

Founded 2005 · New York, NY · public · 50-50,000 employees
G2 4.2 (380)
Capterra 4.3
Custom quote
○ Sales call required
Visit Olo

Olo is the restaurant ordering and delivery platform, founded 2005 in New York, public since March 2021 (NYSE:OLO). Important distinction: Olo is not a full restaurant POS. Olo handles direct online ordering, delivery aggregator integration (DoorDash, Uber Eats, Grubhub), and digital ordering flows; it integrates with POS systems (Toast, Aloha, Micros) rather than replacing them. Strengths: deepest digital ordering and delivery integration in category, mature integration with major POS systems, public Olo parent stability, strong fit for restaurant groups wanting unified digital ordering across direct and aggregator channels. Best fit for restaurant groups (10-plus locations) wanting unified digital ordering layer on top of existing POS. Trade-offs: not a full POS replacement (the critical distinction for buyers), stock dropped from 2021 IPO peak then partial recovery, and dependence on POS integration partners.

Best for

Restaurant groups and emerging chains (10-plus locations) wanting unified digital ordering layer integrating direct online ordering plus DoorDash plus Uber Eats plus Grubhub on top of existing POS (Toast, Aloha, Micros).

Worst for

Independent single-location restaurants wanting full POS replacement (Toast or Square for Restaurants better), small operators wanting bundled solution (Square ecosystem better), or restaurants not running direct online ordering at scale.

Strengths

  • Deepest digital ordering and delivery integration
  • Mature integration with major POS systems
  • Public Olo parent stability
  • Strong fit for restaurant groups
  • Aggregator-agnostic (DoorDash, Uber Eats, Grubhub)
  • Olo Pay (integrated payments option)

Weaknesses

  • Not a full POS replacement (critical distinction)
  • Stock dropped from 2021 IPO peak
  • Dependence on POS integration partners
  • Restaurant-vertical POS features not built

Pricing tiers

opaque
  • Olo Ordering
    Per location; direct online ordering
    Quote
  • Olo Dispatch
    Delivery dispatcher and aggregator routing
    Quote
  • Olo Pay
    Integrated payment processing for digital orders
    Quote
  • Olo Enterprise
    Multi-location enterprise
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Per-order fees on direct online ordering
  • · Per-location monthly subscription
  • · Aggregator integration fees
  • · Implementation services

Key features

  • +Direct online ordering
  • +Aggregator integration (DoorDash, Uber Eats, Grubhub)
  • +Olo Dispatch (delivery routing)
  • +Olo Pay (payment processing)
  • +POS integration with Toast, Aloha, Micros
  • +Multi-location order management
  • +Guest data unification
300+ integrations
ToastAloha POSMicrosDoorDashUber EatsGrubhub
Geography
Strongest in US, Canada
#10

RestoLabs

Niche online ordering plus POS integration for small operators.

Founded 2014 · New Delhi, India · private · 1-50 employees
G2 4.4 (180)
Capterra 4.5
From $79 /mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit RestoLabs

RestoLabs is the niche online ordering plus POS platform, founded 2014 in New Delhi, India. The product covers online ordering, branded ordering websites, mobile apps, and basic POS integration for small to mid-size restaurants globally. Strengths: affordable pricing for online ordering (under $100/month entry), white-label branded ordering, mature global customer base in small-operator segment, founder-led culture. Best fit for small operators wanting affordable online ordering without committing to Toast or Square ecosystem. Trade-offs: feature depth below Toast and Square for full restaurant POS, smaller installed base than category leaders, payment processing requires external integration, and AI features minimal relative to Toast IQ.

Best for

Small to mid-size restaurants (1-5 locations) wanting affordable online ordering with branded experience without committing to Toast or Square ecosystem.

Worst for

Full-service restaurants wanting integrated table management plus KDS (Toast or TouchBistro better), chain operators with multi-location franchise reporting (Aloha or Toast better), or buyers wanting deepest AI-driven menu engineering (Toast better).

Strengths

  • Affordable online ordering (entry under $100/month)
  • White-label branded ordering websites
  • Mature small-operator global customer base
  • Founder-led culture
  • Strong fit for niche use cases

Weaknesses

  • Feature depth below Toast and Square
  • Smaller installed base than category leaders
  • Payment processing requires external integration
  • AI features minimal relative to Toast IQ
  • Limited multi-location franchise support

Pricing tiers

public
  • RestoLabs Starter
    Single location; online ordering
    $79 /mo
  • RestoLabs Pro
    Online ordering plus mobile app
    $99 /mo
  • RestoLabs Enterprise
    Multi-location plus custom
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Payment processing through external integration
  • · Custom mobile app development fees
  • · Annual contracts common

Key features

  • +Online ordering platform
  • +Branded ordering websites
  • +Mobile app builder
  • +Basic POS integration
  • +Loyalty programs
  • +Marketing tools
50+ integrations
StripePayPalRazorpayDoorDashUber Eats
Geography
Global; strongest in India, US, UK, UAE

Frequently asked questions

The questions buyers actually ask before they sign.

Why is Tyro integration so important for Aussie restaurant POS?
Tyro is the dominant Aussie hospitality EFTPOS processor - Sydney-headquartered, ASX-listed, and the payments backbone behind the majority of Aussie hospitality venues. Tyro's split-bill, surcharging, tipping and EFTPOS-integration patterns are the de facto Aussie hospitality payments standard. POS platforms with native Tyro integration (Lightspeed Restaurant, Impos, Square for Restaurants, abacus) win the bulk of the Aussie market. Toast, TouchBistro, Revel and SpotOn have limited Tyro integration depth, which is a structural disadvantage.
How does the Hospitality Industry General Award affect POS choice?
The HIGA sets penalty rates and allowances (Saturday +25%, Sunday +50%, public holiday +125-150%, late-night +10-25%, evening allowance, broken-shift allowance, split-shift allowance). POS-integrated time-and-attendance must capture clock-in/out granularly enough for payroll to interpret the HIGA correctly. Aussie-built POS (Lightspeed Restaurant, Impos, abacus) integrate cleanly with Aussie payroll (Employment Hero Payroll, Xero, MYOB, Tanda, Deputy) that handle HIGA interpretation. Pairing US-built POS with Aussie payroll for HIGA compliance is operationally messier.
Does Toast work in Australia?
Toast has launched Aussie operations and runs at some modern Aussie restaurants wanting US-style POS UX. The product is strong but Aussie integration depth is still limited compared to Lightspeed Restaurant: Tyro integration is partial, Aussie payroll integrations are fewer, Aussie hospitality awards interpretation is not native. For most Aussie hospitality venues, Lightspeed Restaurant or Impos will be the safer pick. Toast becomes credible at modern Aussie multi-venue operators that prioritise UX and US-style features over Aussie-specific integration depth.
Toast vs Square for Restaurants, which one for my restaurant?
Toast if you run an independent or mid-market full-service restaurant (5-plus locations, complex table management, course timing, split checks at scale) wanting deepest restaurant-vertical UX and AI-driven menu engineering. Toast Payments processing margin is the lock-in but the restaurant-vertical depth is worth it for full-service. Square for Restaurants if you run a small operator or quick-service restaurant (1-10 locations) already on Square ecosystem wanting bundled payment processing at predictable rates with zero-friction Square extension. Most full-service independent restaurants pick Toast. Most quick-service and small operators pick Square for Restaurants.
Independent vs chain POS, what is the difference?
Independent restaurant POS prioritizes single-location and small-chain depth: modern UX, fast onboarding, integrated payment processing, AI-driven menu engineering. Toast, Square for Restaurants, TouchBistro, SpotOn lead here. Chain restaurant POS prioritizes multi-location franchise reporting, enterprise inventory across locations, labor management at scale, integration with enterprise back-office systems. Aloha POS (NCR Voyix) leads chain restaurants with the largest installed base. Toast for enterprise is the modern challenger gaining chain share. Lightspeed Restaurant and Revel Systems sit in the middle. Match POS to scale: under 10 locations, modern independent POS wins; over 50 locations, chain POS depth wins.
Olo vs traditional POS, what is the distinction?
Olo is not a full restaurant POS. Olo is a restaurant ordering and delivery platform that integrates with POS systems (Toast, Aloha, Micros) rather than replacing them. Olo handles direct online ordering on a restaurant brand website, aggregator integration (DoorDash, Uber Eats, Grubhub), delivery dispatch routing, and unified guest data across digital channels. Restaurants typically run POS for in-store order entry plus Olo for digital ordering plus payment processing through one of them. Most restaurant groups with 10-plus locations run Toast or Aloha for POS plus Olo for digital ordering. Buyers often confuse Olo with a POS replacement, that is the critical distinction in our coverage.
How much should I budget for restaurant POS?
Small operator and quick-service (1-3 locations): $1K-$12K/year (RestoLabs $79-$99/mo, Square for Restaurants Free or Plus $60/mo, TouchBistro Solo $69/mo). Independent full-service (1-5 locations): $10K-$25K/year (Toast Core $69/terminal/mo, Lightspeed Restaurant $69-$189/mo, SpotOn $165/mo). Mid-market full-service (5-20 locations): $25K-$80K/year (Toast Growth, Revel Systems, Clover for Restaurants Advanced, SpotOn). Chain restaurants (20-plus locations): $80K-$500K-plus/year (Aloha POS, Toast Custom, Olo plus POS combination). Add payment processing fees (2.3-2.6 percent plus $0.10-$0.15 per card-present transaction) on top of subscription costs.
How long does restaurant POS implementation take?
Square for Restaurants, RestoLabs: 1-2 weeks (self-service). TouchBistro, Lightspeed Restaurant: 2-6 weeks. Toast, SpotOn, Clover for Restaurants: 4-12 weeks (hardware delivery plus menu programming plus staff training). Revel Systems: 6-16 weeks (custom workflow setup). Aloha POS: 12-24 weeks (chain deployment, enterprise integration). Olo: 4-12 weeks (digital ordering plus POS integration setup). Plan POS implementation as: (1) menu programming and modifier setup (1-3 weeks), (2) hardware installation and network setup (1-2 weeks), (3) staff training across shifts (2-4 weeks), (4) integration with payment processing, online ordering, accounting (1-3 weeks).
What about AI features in restaurant POS in 2026?
AI in restaurant POS 2026: (1) AI menu engineering and dynamic pricing (Toast IQ leading, SpotOn building, Square slower). (2) AI labor forecasting and scheduling (Toast, SpotOn, 7shifts integration). (3) AI inventory tracking with predictive ordering (emerging across category). (4) AI guest data and personalization (Olo, Toast). (5) AI fraud detection in payment processing (Toast Payments, Square Payments). Vendors stuck on basic order entry without AI activation are losing share to Toast and SpotOn. Test AI features with your real menu and transaction volume before committing to multi-year contracts.
PCI-DSS, EMV chip, and payment processing, what do operators need to know?
PCI-DSS (Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard) compliance is mandatory for any restaurant accepting card payments. All major restaurant POS vendors (Toast, Square, Lightspeed, Clover, Aloha, SpotOn) are PCI-DSS Level 1 certified. EMV chip support is also mandatory in US/EU markets to avoid card-present chargeback liability. Critical question for buyers: who is the payment processor of record? Toast Payments, Square Payments, Clover (Fiserv), SpotOn Payments, Lightspeed Payments all bundle processing with POS subscription. The processing margin (2.3-2.6 percent plus $0.10-$0.15 per transaction) is the real revenue driver, not subscription fees. Multi-year contracts and processing margins together create vendor lock-in beyond the POS software itself.
Can I evaluate restaurant POS via free trial?
Free trials: Square for Restaurants Free plan (no time limit on free tier), Square for Restaurants Plus (14-day trial), TouchBistro (7-day trial), Lightspeed Restaurant (14-day trial), RestoLabs (14-day trial). Demo only: Toast, Clover for Restaurants, SpotOn, Revel Systems, Aloha POS, Olo. For full-service restaurants, run a 30-60 day pilot at one location with real menu programming, real staff training, real transaction volume before committing to multi-location rollout. Vendor demos use polished sample menus, test with your actual menu complexity, modifier depth, course timing, and split-check patterns.

Final word

Looking at a different market? See the global Restaurant POS Software ranking, or pick another country at the top of this page.

Last updated 2026-05-24. Local pricing reverified quarterly. Found something inaccurate? Tell us.