Disclosure: This article is written by Shaun McManus, founder of SmartPubTools and creator of the Restaurant Console. All operational claims reflect genuine experience at Teal Farm Pub, Washington.
What Is a Good Net Profit Margin for a UK Restaurant?
Key Takeaway: UK restaurant net profit margin benchmark is 3-9% of net revenue. A restaurant doing £500,000/year in net revenue making 5% net profit keeps £25,000. At 3% it keeps £15,000. Most operators focus on GP% (65-68% target) but GP% is not what lands in your bank account — net margin is. This guide shows the full journey from gross revenue to net profit and where each pound disappears.
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By Shaun McManus | Last Updated: May 2026
Many restaurant operators are surprised to discover that a restaurant with 65% gross profit margin and £500,000 annual revenue might only make £15,000-45,000 in net profit. The gap between GP% and net margin is where fixed costs, VAT, employer NI, and overhead live. Understanding every line in the journey from revenue to profit is the difference between managing a business and guessing at one.
UK Restaurant Profit Margin Benchmarks 2026
| Metric | UK benchmark | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Gross profit margin (GP%) | 63-68% | Food and drink combined, ex-VAT |
| Labour cost% | 28-32% | Including employer NI and pension |
| Food cost% | 28-32% | Cost of goods sold |
| Rent and rates% | 8-12% | Higher in city centre locations |
| Utilities% | 3-5% | Gas and electricity |
| Net profit margin | 3-9% | After all costs before owner drawings |
From Gross Revenue to Net Profit — The Full Journey
| P&L line | Example (£10,000/week gross revenue) | % of net revenue |
|---|---|---|
| Gross revenue (inc. VAT) | £10,000 | — |
| Less: VAT on food and drink | -£1,250 (approx) | — |
| Net revenue (ex-VAT) | £8,750 | 100% |
| Less: food and drink cost (30%) | -£2,625 | 30% |
| Gross profit | £6,125 | 70% |
| Less: labour (wages + NI + pension, 30%) | -£2,625 | 30% |
| Less: rent and rates (10%) | -£875 | 10% |
| Less: utilities (4%) | -£350 | 4% |
| Less: marketing, sundry, repairs (3%) | -£262 | 3% |
| Net profit | £2,013 | 23% |
Note: the example above shows a well-managed operation at the better end of the benchmark range. A restaurant at 35% labour and 35% food cost on the same revenue would make a net loss. The margin for error in restaurants is thin — every percentage point matters.
The VAT Calculation — Why Net Revenue Is What Matters
All restaurant financial ratios — GP%, labour%, food cost%, net margin% — must be calculated on net-of-VAT revenue. Gross revenue includes VAT you collected on behalf of HMRC, which is not your money. Operators who calculate GP% on inclusive revenue overstate their margin by approximately 17%.
The approximate VAT adjustment for a typical restaurant with mixed standard-rated and zero-rated food: divide gross revenue by approximately 1.143 to get net revenue (varies by food/drink mix). The Restaurant Console Report module calculates this automatically each week — see the restaurant weekly P&L guide for the complete template.
The Three Biggest Levers on Net Profit Margin
GP% improvement is the highest-return lever because it flows directly through to net profit with no additional cost. Moving from 63% to 68% GP% on £8,750/week net revenue adds £437/week — £22,750/year — in gross profit. See the restaurant GP% calculator guide for the formula and the menu pricing guide for how to price to target.
Labour cost reduction is the largest cost lever because labour is typically 30%+ of revenue. Moving from 32% to 28% labour on £8,750/week net revenue saves £350/week — £18,200/year. See the restaurant labour cost guide for UK benchmarks and shift-by-shift tracking.
Rent and occupancy cost reduction is the hardest lever because it requires lease renegotiation or relocation — but at lease renewal, a well-prepared operator with trading accounts showing 8-10% occupancy cost can negotiate effectively. The benchmark is 8-12% of net revenue.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What is a good net profit margin for a UK restaurant?
UK benchmark 3-9% of net revenue. Well-managed independents make 7-9%. Below 3% leaves minimal resilience to cost increases or revenue dips.
What is the difference between gross profit and net profit in a restaurant?
Gross profit = Net revenue − Food and drink cost. Net profit = Gross profit − Labour, rent, utilities, and all other operating costs. A restaurant with 68% GP% is not keeping 68% — that is before labour (30%), rent (10%), and utilities (4%).
How do I calculate my restaurant net profit margin?
Net profit margin% = Net profit ÷ Net revenue (ex-VAT) × 100. Always use ex-VAT revenue — including VAT overstates margin by approximately 17%.
What is the fastest way to improve restaurant profit margin?
GP% improvement — it flows directly to net profit with no additional cost. A 5-point GP% improvement on £8,750/week net revenue adds £22,750/year purely from pricing and portion control.
Why do UK restaurants have low profit margins?
High labour intensity (28-32%), high occupancy costs (8-12%), and food perishability (waste). A 2-3% revenue dip combined with a supplier price increase can turn a 5% margin into a loss — weekly tracking of all cost lines is essential.
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