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48% of Restaurant Guests Say Being Remembered Matters Most. Only 30% Say It Actually Happens.

48% of Restaurant Guests Say Being Remembered Matters Most. Only 30% Say It Actually Happens.

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In summary: 

  • 48% of diners value being remembered by name or usual order; only 30% say it always happens at their regular spots.

  • Recognized guests are 80% more likely to try new items and 77% tip more.

  • Close the gap by putting guest profiles in front of the floor, greeting by name, recalling preferences, and applying recognition in service recovery.

Ask guests what makes them feel valued at a restaurant and the answer tends to be consistent: they want to be remembered. By name, by usual order, or by the fact that they've been there before.

Toast's April 2026 Regulars Report surveyed 1,500 U.S. adults who dine out or order at least twice a month, finding that 48% of respondents said that staff remembering their name or usual order was what made them feel most valued.1 That's more than double the 22% who pointed to a points-based rewards program.

When those same respondents were asked whether they actually receive that level of recognition at the restaurants they visit most, only 30% said yes, always.

Key Takeaways

  • 48% of diners say being remembered by name or usual order is what makes them feel most valued at a restaurant—more than double the 22% who prioritize loyalty points.

  • Only 30% say they actually receive that level of recognition at restaurants they visit regularly.

  • Guests who feel recognized are 80% more likely to try new menu items, and 77% tip more—with 46% leaving an additional 5–10% and 37% leaving an extra 10–15% or more on top of their standard gratuity.

  • 43% of diners who stopped visiting a favorite restaurant cited gradual regressions—not a single bad experience—as the reason they left.

What makes restaurant guests feel most valued?

Great food gets guests through the door the first time, but the data shows  that true hospitality is what keeps them coming back. According to The Regulars Report, 32% of diners say that feeling recognized by staff is a main reason they return to a restaurant.

Guests who feel at home spend more per check, tip more generously, and are 80% more likely to try new menu items. All of those outcomes compound over time, and they're driven by the same starting point: a host who says their name, or a server who remembers they take their coffee black.

Recognition works because it's personal in a way that complements what digital tools can offer. A loyalty app can track points and drive return visits, but feeling like you belong requires a relationship.

Why do restaurant regulars stop coming back?

When recognition slips—or was never quite there—guests don't usually make a scene about it. They just come less. 

According to The Regulars Report, 43% of diners who stopped going to a restaurant they once considered a regular spot cited gradual regressions rather than a single bad experience. The specifics: a decline in food quality (31%), price increases (22%), and a drop in service (15%).

A drop in service showing up as a driver of departure is worth noting. Price and quality can be solved operationally, but service lives with people and process. In other words, guests who once felt known, who'd made a restaurant part of their weekly routine, eventually find the experience doesn't justify the habit anymore.

How can restaurants close the guest recognition gap?

Closing the gap starts with building recognition into the flow of service as a standard practice.

That means making sure the right information reaches the right people before the guest walks in. Reservation history shows visit frequency, loyalty profiles often track order preferences, and POS guest profiles can connect a name to a table. The data exists in many operators' systems already. The challenge is making sure the host and the floor actually have access to it and the habit of using it.

The payoff can be substantial. Guests who feel recognized may spend more per check and tip better. That 18-point gap between what guests want (48%) and what they actually experience (30%) is also an opportunity—operators who close it are more likely to hold onto the guests who keep the dining room busy.

What does the data say about restaurant guest recognition?

The data points to a straightforward opportunity. Guests want to feel known, and the ones who do come back more, try more, and tip better. The gap between what diners want and what they actually experience is significant, but for most operators, the tools to start closing it are already there.

DISCLAIMER: This information is provided for general informational purposes only, and publication does not constitute an endorsement. Toast does not warrant the accuracy or completeness of any information, text, graphics, links, or other items contained within this content. Toast does not guarantee you will achieve any specific results if you follow any advice herein. It may be advisable for you to consult with a professional such as a lawyer, accountant, or business advisor for advice specific to your situation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Restaurant guest recognition means identifying returning guests and using their name, visit history, and preferences to personalize service at the host stand and table. Many operators connect reservation systems, loyalty data, and POS guest profiles to deliver consistent recognition and turn diners into regulars.

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1Gathered via a Pollfish survey fielded on April 2, 2026, surveying 1,500 U.S. adults who dine out or order in at least twice a month. The survey data is stratified to ensure a representative sample of modern dining behaviors across varying demographics.