ALSTIG INC

What is par level in restaurant inventory?

The inventory floor that prevents 86'd items mid-service — and the number most independents calculate by gut instead of math.

Par level is the minimum quantity of an inventory item that should be on hand to operate without running out before the next replenishment.

Formula: Par = (Average usage between deliveries) × (Safety factor 1.5–2.0)

Why par exists

Par level is the inventory equivalent of a fire alarm. It's not the target stock level — that's higher. It's the trigger point that says "reorder now or you'll be out before the next shipment arrives." When inventory drops to par, the next order goes in.

Operations with disciplined par levels almost never 86 an item mid-service. Operations without par levels run out of things on busy nights and learn the hard way.

Standard ranges by category

How to set par level

  1. Calculate average usage for the period between deliveries. Pull 4-week sales-by-item history and divide by deliveries per week.
  2. Apply the safety factor. 1.5× for stable categories (most proteins, established menu items). 2.0× for volatile categories (specials, seasonal items, items with sudden viral demand).
  3. Document par on a printed sheet at every storage location. The kitchen door, the walk-in, the bar back. Servers and cooks need to see the par to act on it.
  4. Recalculate quarterly as menu mix shifts.

Common operator mistakes

Related concepts

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