No-shows are one of the most frustrating challenges in the restaurant industry. An empty table during a fully booked service doesn't just mean lost revenue—it means wasted prep, disappointed walk-ins who were turned away, and demoralized staff.
Industry data suggests that no-show rates average between 10–20% for restaurants without any mitigation strategy. For a 50-cover restaurant, that's 5–10 empty seats every night—potentially thousands of euros in lost revenue each month.
Here are five proven strategies to bring that number down dramatically.
1. Send Automated Reminders
The simplest and most effective strategy. A well-timed reminder—sent 24 hours before the reservation—gives guests a chance to cancel or modify if their plans have changed. Most no-shows aren't malicious; people simply forget.
SMS reminders have higher open rates than email (98% vs 20%), making them the preferred channel. Include a one-tap link to cancel or confirm, making it effortless for guests to update their status.
2. Require Deposits for Peak Times
Deposits are the nuclear option—and they work. Requiring a €10–25 per-person deposit for Friday and Saturday nights, holidays, and special events can reduce no-shows to near zero for those sittings.
The key is communication. Frame deposits positively: "To guarantee your table, we ask for a small deposit that's applied to your bill." Most guests understand and appreciate that you're protecting their reservation.
3. Hold Cards as Guarantees
A lighter alternative to deposits. Hold a card on file with a clear cancellation policy (e.g., "Cancel at least 4 hours before your reservation to avoid a €25 per person charge"). You rarely need to charge it—the mere existence of the policy reduces no-shows by 50–70%.
4. Build a Waitlist System
Even with the best prevention, some no-shows will slip through. A waitlist lets you fill those seats quickly. When a cancellation comes in, automatically notify the next person on the waitlist with a time-limited offer to claim the table.
This turns a negative (empty table) into a positive (delighted guest who got a last-minute booking).
5. Track and Flag Repeat Offenders
Your CRM should track no-show history. A guest who no-shows once might have had a genuine emergency. A guest who no-shows three times is a pattern. Flag these guests and require deposits or card guarantees for their future bookings automatically.
“After implementing automated reminders and deposits for weekends, our no-show rate dropped from 18% to under 3%. That's an extra €4,000 per month in recovered revenue.”
— Restaurant owner, Paris
The Bottom Line
You don't need to implement all five strategies at once. Start with automated reminders—they're free, non-intrusive, and typically reduce no-shows by 30–40% on their own. Then layer in deposits or card holds for your busiest services.
The goal isn't to punish guests. It's to create a system where cancelling is easy and forgetting is hard.




