ALSTIG INC

What is table turn time in a restaurant?

The number that decides how many covers a dining room can deliver — and the one most operators don't measure until reservations start getting denied.

Turn time is the average time a table is occupied by a single party, measured from seating to clear.

Capacity formula: Maximum covers per service = (Seats × Service window minutes ÷ Turn time) × Average party size factor

Industry-standard ranges

What matters less than the absolute number is the variance across tables. A dining room where every table runs 90 minutes has predictable capacity. A dining room where some tables turn in 60 and others in 120 makes reservation pacing impossible.

Why turn time is the capacity ceiling

If a restaurant has 60 seats, runs a 4-hour dinner service, and average party size is 2.5, the maximum covers it can serve is constrained by turn time:

A 30-minute swing in turn time changes covers-per-service by ~50%. That's the difference between a sold-out Saturday and a half-full one.

How to measure turn time

  1. Pull seating timestamps from the host system or reservation platform.
  2. Pull check-close timestamps from the POS for each ticket.
  3. Subtract: close − seat = turn time for that table.
  4. Average across the service period, ideally segmented by daypart and party size.

Two-tops typically turn faster than four-tops. Eight-tops can run 50% longer than four-tops. Track the segments, not just the aggregate.

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.