Third-party delivery platforms usually charge restaurants a commission on each order, and that fee can materially reduce net profit if menu pricing and channel mix are not managed carefully. In most markets, commissions vary by service level and contract terms, so operators need to treat delivery as a distinct margin model rather than an extension of dine-in sales.
Most restaurants see commission structures that change based on how much support the platform provides (marketplace exposure, logistics, promotions, and payment handling). A common range is between 15% and 35% per order, with additional charges possible for marketing boosts or service fees.
Delivery margin is typically thinner than dine-in margin because commission is applied to gross order value. If a restaurant has a 12% net margin before delivery commission, a 25% platform commission can eliminate most or all net profit on that order unless pricing, packaging, and labor are tightly controlled.
For this reason, many operators evaluate contribution margin per channel, not only total sales. Higher delivery volume can still be useful, but only when the order economics remain positive after all variable costs.
A café selling a basket at 500 TRY on a 25% commission plan pays 125 TRY to the platform before considering food cost, labor, and packaging. If cost controls are weak, the order may generate revenue but little profit. With a tighter delivery menu, adjusted pricing, and controlled promotions, the same order can become sustainably profitable.
With Menuviel's digital menu publishing and QR code menu access features, restaurants can maintain an always-updated direct menu experience and reduce over-dependence on high-commission channels. Its centralized menu management also helps teams align pricing, availability, and item structure across channels so delivery decisions are made with clearer margin discipline.