Industries

Surveys for Restaurants — Templates, Questions & Examples

In the restaurant business, the gap between a one-time visitor and a loyal regular often comes down to details you cannot see from the kitchen: a slow table, a lukewarm dish, or a server who forgot a request. Diner surveys turn fleeting impressions into measurable signals you can act on. They reveal whether food quality, portion size, wait times, cleanliness, and value for money match guest expectations across shifts and locations. By collecting feedback right after the meal, you catch problems before they reach review sites, identify your best dishes and staff, and track satisfaction trends as you change menus or pricing. The result is fewer silent walkaways, higher repeat visits, and a clearer picture of what keeps tables full.

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Survey types — Restaurants

Why it matters

  • Diners who leave unhappy without complaining, then post negative reviews online
  • Inconsistent food quality or service between shifts, branches, or busy and quiet hours
  • Long or unpredictable wait times for tables, ordering, and the bill
  • Not knowing which menu items to keep, promote, or remove
  • Difficulty measuring whether new pricing hurts perceived value
  • Staff performance that is hard to evaluate without direct guest feedback

Frequently asked questions

The strongest moment is right after the experience is fresh: at the table once plates are cleared, on the printed or digital receipt, or by SMS within an hour of a delivery order. A QR code on the table is ideal because the guest scans while the meal is still vivid and emotions are honest. Keep it to three or four questions so it can be finished before the check arrives. For loyalty members, a slightly longer monthly survey works well to track trends, but always favor speed and timing over length to maximize response rates.
Yes. In KSA and the UAE many guests prefer to give feedback in Arabic, and offering both Arabic and English raises completion rates noticeably. Make sure the survey renders right-to-left correctly, uses natural Arabic phrasing rather than literal translation, and respects local dining etiquette in its tone. SurveyMaker lets you publish the same survey in multiple languages and lets each guest pick their preference. For mixed audiences in the Gulf, a bilingual link with a language toggle is usually the safest choice and signals that you respect every guest.
Response rates rise when you remove friction and add a small reason to participate. Keep the survey under a minute, ask only what you will act on, and place the invitation where guests already pause, like the bill folder or receipt. A modest incentive, such as a discount on the next visit or entry into a monthly draw, can double participation. Train servers to mention it warmly rather than as an afterthought. Finally, close the loop publicly by sharing improvements you made from feedback, so guests see that their input actually changes things.
Three numbers carry most of the weight. Net Promoter Score tells you how many guests would actively recommend you and is a strong predictor of repeat visits. A meal-specific CSAT or rating on food, service, and ambiance pinpoints exactly where to improve. And a value-for-money question protects you when adjusting prices. Beyond the scores, read the open comments closely, because they name dishes, staff, and moments that numbers cannot. Track these over time and segment by branch, shift, and day part so you can see whether a change helped everyone or only some guests.

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