Picking a POS is the most consequential tech decision an independent restaurant makes. The wrong choice locks you into a multi-year contract, ugly reporting, and integration friction that quietly costs labor hours every week. The right choice fades into the background.
This guide is opinionated about what to evaluate. It does not name specific vendors — your local market conditions, processor relationships, and existing tech stack matter more than any vendor's marketing claims.
What actually matters in a POS
1. Reporting that doesn't lie
The reports an operator runs every Monday: sales by daypart, sales by item, voids by server, comp percentage, labor-as-percentage-of-sales. If your POS's reporting requires exporting to Excel before you can see these numbers cleanly, you have already lost. Pick a POS where the standard reports answer the standard questions in two clicks.
2. Reasonable processor terms
Some POS vendors lock you into their payment processor at non-competitive rates. The "free POS" model usually means processor margin pays for the hardware. Read the contract. Look for transparent interchange-plus pricing, not bundled effective rates. A 0.20% delta on processing across $1.5M in annual sales is $3,000 — every year.
3. Off-the-shelf hardware
Proprietary tablets that only run one POS app become e-waste when you switch vendors. Standard iPad-based POS systems give you optionality and replacement parts that are not vendor-controlled.
4. API access for back-of-house apps
If your POS exposes a clean API, your back-of-house tools (inventory, reporting, scheduling) can read sales data without manual export. If the only export is CSV email, you will end up doing more manual work over time, not less.
5. Service support that returns calls
This is the one almost-impossible thing to evaluate during a sales cycle. The signal: ask the salesperson for two reference customers in your city, call them, ask "what happens when the system goes down on a Saturday at 7pm?" If the answer is "we wait for a callback," that is the experience you will have.
What does not matter
- Number of integrations: most independents use five to eight in active rotation (typically online ordering, inventory, scheduling, accounting, KDS, plus a couple of niche tools). The other 200 in the marketplace are decoration.
- Loyalty program features: most are unused. Build engagement through reviews and menu cadence (see customer engagement guide) rather than through punch-card software.
- "AI" features in the POS: usually marketing language for analytics dashboards that summarize what your sales-by-item report already shows.
How POS choice interacts with the ALSTIG stack
The Restaurant Consultant, VendorWatch, and Review Responder work alongside any POS — they handle the operational layer outside the cashier transaction. MenuCraft outputs print-ready PDFs regardless of what your POS uses for menu management. The apps are deliberately POS-agnostic so the back-of-house workflow does not get held hostage to your front-of-house contract.
That separation is intentional. POS contracts are long; the operational tooling around them should not be locked to the same timeline.
See all six apps or read the software selection framework.
Sources
Last updated: .
This article draws on industry-standard operational data plus 14 years of operating experience at Mouton's Bistro & Bar (Cedar Park, TX) and Mouton's Southern Bistro (Leander, TX).