ALSTIG INC

What is contribution margin in restaurant menu engineering?

The number that matters in menu engineering — not food cost percentage on its own.

Contribution margin is menu price minus plate cost, expressed in dollars or as a percentage of menu price.

Formula: Contribution Margin $ = Menu Price − Plate Cost  |  Contribution Margin % = (Menu Price − Plate Cost) ÷ Menu Price × 100

Why contribution margin beats food cost percentage for menu decisions

Food cost percentage is the headline metric that operators track at the P&L level. But for individual menu items, contribution margin is the better decision input. A high-priced steak at 38% food cost contributes more dollars to fixed costs than a low-priced pasta at 22% food cost — even though the food cost percentage looks worse.

Example: a $48 steak with $18 plate cost = $30 contribution margin (38% food cost). A $18 pasta with $4 plate cost = $14 contribution margin (22% food cost). The steak is the better-margin item in dollar terms, even though the percentage looks worse.

The Kasavana-Smith menu engineering matrix

Standard menu engineering plots every menu item on two axes:

The four quadrants:

How to calculate contribution margin

  1. Calculate plate cost with yield-factor adjustments.
  2. Subtract plate cost from menu price.
  3. For percentage form: divide by menu price, multiply by 100.

Example: $24 menu price, $7.20 plate cost. Contribution margin = $24 − $7.20 = $16.80 per plate, or 70% contribution margin (which is the inverse of the 30% food cost).

Contribution margin calculator

Compute the dollars and percentage each menu item contributes to fixed costs and profit. Pair this with sales-mix data and you have the inputs for the Kasavana-Smith menu engineering matrix.

Contribution margin calculator
Contribution margin $16.80
Contribution % 70.0%
Implied food cost % 30.0%

Implied food cost is inside the 28–32% full-service target band.

Contribution margin is what each plate contributes after its variable cost is covered. Track contribution dollars alongside food cost % — high-priced steak with 38% food cost can contribute more dollars than low-priced pasta at 22%.

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Defined by Ben Mouton, founder of ALSTIG INC and 14-year restaurant operator. Browse the full restaurant operations glossary or read more articles.