P6 — Food cost pillar
Free tool · P6 food cost

Restaurant wastage tracker (India)

Daily kitchen wastage log for Indian restaurants. Record every discarded item — prep trimming, expired produce, cooking errors, over-production, plate returns — across 9 categories and 9 reasons. Calculates the rupee value of each waste event, total daily waste, waste as % of purchases (target ≤3%), category and reason breakdown, and a rolling 7-day trend. Export the full log as CSV or print A4 for the daily kitchen report. Saves in browser across multiple days. No signup.

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The 3% target and why it matters

Industry benchmarks for controlled Indian restaurant kitchens put acceptable wastage at 2–3% of total raw material purchases. Above 5% is a warning sign; above 8% indicates a systemic problem. At ₹2 lakh of daily purchases (a mid-size casual dining outlet), even moving from 6% to 3% waste saves ₹6,000 per day — ₹18 lakh annually. For a restaurant running 15% EBITDA, that is roughly equivalent to a 9% increase in total revenue. Wastage control is one of the highest-ROI interventions available to a kitchen manager because it requires no additional revenue, no capital, and no menu changes.

The most common reason for high wastage in Indian kitchens is not skill — it is the absence of measurement. A kitchen that starts weighing and logging waste consistently reduces it by 20–40% within 4 weeks simply because the behaviour of logging creates accountability.

Reading the reason breakdown

Expired / spoiled as the dominant reason means the purchasing team is over-ordering or the storage / FIFO (first-in, first-out) discipline has broken down. Fix: reduce order frequency for perishables and audit the walk-in temperature log.

Over-production means your prep forecast is inaccurate — you are cooking more than the day demands. Fix: track covers-per-day by day-of-week and build a simple par production sheet so the kitchen cooks to demand, not to habit.

Prep trimming is partially unavoidable (onion peel, chicken skin, carrot tops) but high values indicate either poor-quality produce (over-ripe, bruised, wrong size) or a skill gap in the prep team. A yield study — weighing the edible yield of each vegetable and protein before and after prep — gives you the baseline to compare against.

Theft / pilferage is the hardest to diagnose and the most important to catch early. If your theoretical usage (from recipe-cost-card × covers) consistently differs from actual usage by more than 5%, and other reasons do not account for it, investigate storage access, staff meal policies, and end-of-day stock reconciliation.

Where this fits

  • Inventory count sheet — the weekly stock count that gives you the opening + closing stock to calculate actual usage; compare actual usage against theoretical usage from the recipe cost card to detect hidden waste
  • Recipe cost card — the yield percentages in your recipe cards should match what you observe here; if the trimming waste consistently exceeds the recipe yield assumption, update the recipe cost card
  • Food cost calculator — the monthly food cost % is the summary metric; this daily wastage log explains the movements in it
  • FSSAI food safety checklist — storage temperature compliance and FIFO discipline are the root cause controls for the "expired / spoiled" wastage reason
  • P6 — Food cost pillar — all food cost articles, from purchasing through portion control, yield management and menu engineering