ALSTIG INC

What is prime cost in a restaurant?

The single most important operational metric in a restaurant — and the one most independents under-track.

Prime cost is the sum of cost of goods sold (food and beverage) plus total labor cost (wages, salaries, payroll taxes, and benefits), expressed as a percentage of total sales.

Formula: Prime cost % = (COGS + Total Labor) ÷ Total Sales × 100

The industry-standard target

For full-service independent restaurants, the operational target is 60–65% prime cost. Above 65%, operating margin gets squeezed before the rest of the P&L is even calculated. Below 60% usually means either underpricing the menu or running a model that won't scale (per the National Restaurant Association's State of the Industry benchmarks).

Quick-service restaurants (QSR) typically run a tighter 55–60% prime cost because their food cost band is similar but labor cost runs lower thanks to a less labor-intensive service model.

Why operators track prime cost weekly, not monthly

Prime cost is the headline operational number worth knowing every Monday morning. The bottom-line monthly P&L is a lagging indicator — by the time it tells you something, the month is over. Prime cost calculated weekly catches food-cost drift and labor-overrun patterns inside the window where they can still be corrected.

How to calculate prime cost

  1. Pull weekly sales: total revenue for the week (food + beverage + service charges).
  2. Calculate COGS: beginning inventory + purchases − ending inventory = cost of goods sold for the week.
  3. Calculate labor: hourly wages + salaried management + payroll taxes + benefits paid that week.
  4. Add COGS + Labor.
  5. Divide by sales, multiply by 100.

Example: $40,000 weekly sales, $13,000 COGS, $13,500 labor. Prime cost = ($13,000 + $13,500) ÷ $40,000 × 100 = 66.25% — slightly above the 65% upper bound, signaling either food-cost drift or labor over-scheduling.

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.