How restaurants can handle phone calls better when staff are stretched thin
Running a busy restaurant means juggling a lot of things at once. Your kitchen is in full swing, servers are moving between tables, and then the phone rings. Again. Someone has to break away from what they’re doing to answer it—which might mean a guest gets slower service, or a reservation inquiry goes unanswered for longer than it should.
This is a problem that affects restaurants of all sizes. During peak hours, phone calls pile up. During slower times, you might have staff sitting around waiting for the phone to ring. Neither scenario is ideal, and both cost you money and create friction with customers.
The real cost of missed or delayed calls
When a customer calls to make a reservation and nobody answers, they call a competitor instead. When someone calls about a special event or catering inquiry and has to wait five minutes for an answer, they might lose patience. Even a simple question about your hours or menu can create a negative first impression if it takes too long to get a response.
Beyond lost business, there’s the ripple effect on your team. Pulling someone off the line to take a call interrupts their workflow. If you’re running a skeleton crew during service, answering the phone becomes a real bottleneck. Staff get stressed, and corners get cut somewhere else in the operation.
The challenge is that phones still matter to restaurants. Unlike retail or tech companies, most restaurant bookings and inquiries still come through voice calls. Text and email play a role, but people still prefer to talk to someone directly when making a reservation or asking about dietary requirements.
What options exist beyond hiring more staff
The obvious solution—hire someone just to answer phones—isn’t realistic for most restaurants. The costs don’t pencil out unless you’re a large chain, and you’d be paying someone to sit idle during off-peak hours.
Voicemail is better than nothing, but it’s a poor experience. Customers don’t like leaving messages, and they don’t like waiting for callbacks. They want an answer now.
A third option is to use a restaurant phone answering service. Instead of your team picking up every call, an external service handles incoming calls during your busy hours or whenever you need support. They take reservations, answer common questions, handle cancellations, and route special requests to you.
The way this works in practice: a customer calls your restaurant’s phone number. If you’re unable to answer—or if you’ve set the service to screen calls during specific hours—the call is routed to the answering service. They greet the caller professionally, ask what they need, and handle it appropriately. For routine reservations, they book it in your system. For more complex inquiries, they note the details and forward them to you immediately.
The technology behind this has improved significantly. Modern services use ai phone assistant technology to understand context and handle interactions naturally. This means callers don’t feel like they’re talking to a robot. They’re getting genuine help, just from outside your restaurant.
Comparison of phone management approaches for restaurants
Approach
Time to answer
Cost
Best for
In-house staff
Immediate (when available)
High (full-time salary)
High-volume restaurants with dedicated budget
Voicemail only
None (customer leaves message)
Minimal
Low-traffic restaurants, not recommended
Answering service
Within 1-2 rings
Moderate (pay as you use)
Most restaurants, especially during peak hours
Auto-attendant system
Immediate
Low to moderate
Basic call routing, less personal
For most restaurants, a hybrid approach works well. Your team handles calls when they can during slower periods. During lunch and dinner service, or when you’re short-staffed, the answering service takes over. This keeps call response times short without paying for dedicated in-house staff.
The financial benefit is real. A single missed reservation might cost you $100 to $300 in lost revenue. A customer who can’t reach you and calls somewhere else is money out the door. An answering service typically costs far less than that per call, and the ROI becomes clear quickly.
Beyond reservations, these services help with other common calls. Someone asks if you’re open on holidays. Another caller wants to know if you accommodate gluten-free diets. A third wants to book your private dining room for an event. All of these are handled without pulling your manager or host stand staff away from what they’re doing.
The setup is straightforward. You don’t need new phone lines or complex integrations. Your existing restaurant phone number gets forwarded to the service during the hours you specify. Calls can also be transferred manually if needed. Training is minimal because the service provider handles all the details about how to describe your restaurant, your menu, and your policies.
Restaurants that implement this kind of support often find it improves not just their reservation rate, but also customer satisfaction. People feel heard when their call is answered promptly and professionally. They’re more likely to book with you and recommend you to others.
If you’re tired of watching the phone ring unanswered during service, or if you know customers are frustrated with response times, it’s worth exploring what a modern answering service can do for your operation. The cost is usually much lower than you’d expect, and the peace of mind—plus the recovered lost business—tends to make it one of the better investments a restaurant can make.
