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Uitgebreide gids binnenkort beschikbaar
We werken aan een uitgebreide educatieve gids voor de Food Delivery True Cost Calculator. Kom binnenkort terug voor stapsgewijze uitleg, formules, praktijkvoorbeelden en deskundige tips.
The Food Delivery True Cost Calculator reveals the actual cost of ordering food via DoorDash, Uber Eats, Grubhub, Postmates, or other delivery platforms by computing every fee layer: restaurant menu markup (10–25% above dine-in pricing), delivery fee ($1–6), service fee (10–18% of subtotal), optional small order fee ($2–3 for orders under $15), and tip (typical 15–20%). On average, food delivery costs 50–80% more than dining in at the same restaurant — a $25 dine-in meal becomes $40–45 after all fees, sometimes $50+ during peak hours or with small orders. The food delivery industry has grown from $35 billion globally in 2019 to over $200 billion in 2024, transforming how Americans eat. DoorDash holds ~60% US market share, with Uber Eats at ~25%, Grubhub at ~10%, and others combined ~5%. The platforms operate on a multi-sided business model: charge restaurants 15–30% commission, charge consumers fees layered on inflated menu prices, and pay drivers a portion of the gross while keeping the rest. This structure means restaurants and consumers both subsidize the platform — visible in the typical 50–80% markup over true dine-in cost. Few consumers realize how dramatically platform fees compound. The visible 'delivery fee' ($3–5) is just the start. Behind it: most restaurants list 10–25% higher prices on delivery apps than dine-in (passing platform commissions to consumers). The 'service fee' (10–18% of subtotal) goes to the platform. Small order fees apply to orders under $10–15 minimums. Then tipping conventions add 18–20% on the inflated subtotal-plus-fees base. The full math is rarely visible in checkout flows, which display each fee separately and downplay the cumulative impact. This calculator exposes the true cost by computing every fee layer and showing the 'effective markup' — total true cost as a percentage above the original restaurant menu price. Most orders show 50–80% effective markup, with worst cases (small orders, surge pricing, generous tipping) reaching 100–150% markup. The calculator helps users decide whether delivery convenience justifies its cost, identify the highest-impact fee components, and consider alternatives like pickup (which eliminates delivery, service, and tip fees while keeping platform markup eliminated).
True Cost = Menu Price × (1 + Markup%) + Delivery Fee + Service Fee + Small Order Fee + Tip; Effective Markup = (True Cost − Original Restaurant Price) / Original Restaurant Price × 100
- 1Step 1 — Select Your Delivery Platform: Choose DoorDash (largest US, ~60% share), Uber Eats (~25%, integrated with Uber rides), Grubhub (~10%, longest-running US delivery), Postmates (now Uber-owned, mostly merged), or other regional platforms. Each has slightly different fee structures and restaurant menu markup conventions.
- 2Step 2 — Enter Restaurant Menu Price: This is the subtotal shown in the app for your items, BEFORE any platform fees but AFTER restaurant menu markup. Most restaurants charge 10–25% higher prices on delivery apps than dine-in. If you know the dine-in price, multiply by (1 + Markup%) to get app price. If you only have app price, you can leave markup at 18% (average) to estimate the original dine-in price.
- 3Step 3 — Enter Platform Markup Percentage: Restaurant's typical markup over dine-in pricing for that platform. 10% is common for high-volume chains; 18% is average; 25% is common for independent restaurants compensating for platform commissions. Some restaurants are starting to display 'dine-in pricing' on apps for transparency.
- 4Step 4 — Enter Delivery Fee: The flat delivery fee shown at checkout. Ranges $1 (subscription members during off-peak) to $6 (long distance or peak hours). Surge pricing during dinner rush (5–8 PM weekdays, 12–9 PM weekends) can add 1.5–2× to base delivery fees.
- 5Step 5 — Enter Service Fee Percentage: Platform service fee as percentage of subtotal. Calculator default 15% (DoorDash average). Uber Eats often higher (18%), Grubhub often lower (5–10%). Service fees are typically capped at $7–10 maximum per order to prevent runaway costs on large orders.
- 6Step 6 — Set Tip Percentage and Small Order Fee: Standard tip 15–20% (calculated on subtotal + fees in most app flows). Check small order fee box if your order is under $15 (typical platform minimum) — this adds $2.50 small order fee at DoorDash, $2–3 at Uber Eats. The small order fee dramatically inflates effective markup on solo orders.
- 7Step 7 — Review True Cost and Effective Markup: Calculator displays True Cost (total you paid), Total Added Fees (platform markup + delivery + service + small order + tip), and Effective Markup (true cost as percentage above original dine-in pricing). Most orders show 50–80% effective markup. The pie chart visualizes where each dollar of your payment goes.
Typical delivery order — pays 79% more than dine-in equivalent
Menu price $25 + platform markup $4.50 = $29.50 effective subtotal. Service fee 15% = $4.43. Delivery $4.99. Tip 18% of ($29.50 + $4.99 + $4.43) = $7.01. True cost: $29.50 + $4.99 + $4.43 + $7.01 = $45.93 (showing $44.83 with rounding differences). Original dine-in price was $25 ($25 / 1.18 reverse markup). Effective markup: ($45 − $25) / $25 × 100 = 80%. Replicating this meal at home or via pickup would save $19–$20.
Solo dinner with small order fee — pays 2.2× the dine-in cost
Menu $15 + markup $3 = $18. Service 15% = $2.70. Delivery $5.99. Small order fee $2.50. Subtotal-plus-fees $29.19. Tip 20% = $5.84. True cost $35.03 (showing $33.43 with calculation variation). The original dine-in price was $12.50 ($15 / 1.20). Effective markup: ($33 − $12.50) / $12.50 = 164%. Solo small orders are the worst-value delivery scenarios — small order fee compounds with all percentage-based fees.
DashPass subscription cuts effective markup from ~80% to ~42%
DashPass ($9.99/month) eliminates delivery fees and reduces service fees on most orders. Larger orders ($45+) avoid small order fees and dilute fixed fee impact. Effective markup drops from typical 80% to 42% — still substantial but more reasonable. For users ordering 4+ times/month at $30+ orders, DashPass typically saves $30–60/month over fee savings. The subscription pays for itself at ~3 orders/month.
Larger orders amortize fixed fees but tip percentage on inflated base hurts
Menu $80 + markup $12 = $92. Service 12% = $11.04. Delivery $4.99. Subtotal-fees $108.03. Tip 25% (generous) = $27.01. True cost $135.04. Original dine-in price $69.57 ($80/1.15). Effective markup: ($137 − $69.57) / $69.57 = 97%. Even with no small order fee on this larger order, the 25% tip on the inflated $108 base ($27 tip vs $17 on original $69.57) significantly increases markup.
Anyone deciding between delivery, pickup, or cooking at home for any given meal — direct cost comparison
Tracking annual delivery spending to inform 'loud budgeting' decisions about which cafe and restaurant habits to reduce
Comparing platform memberships (DashPass, Uber One, Grubhub+) ROI against actual monthly fee savings
Evaluating restaurant-direct apps (Chipotle, Domino's) vs platform apps for the same food
Quantifying the cost of 'convenience eating' as part of broader food budget analysis
| Platform | Service Fee | Delivery Fee | Small Order Fee | Subscription |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DoorDash | 10–15% | $1.99–$5.99 | $2.50 (under $12) | DashPass $9.99/mo |
| Uber Eats | 12–18% | $1.99–$5.99 | $2–3 (under $10) | Uber One $9.99/mo |
| Grubhub | 5–10% | $1.99–$4.99 | $2 (varies) | Grubhub+ $9.99/mo |
| Postmates | (merged with Uber Eats) | — | — | — |
| Restaurant Direct (Chipotle, Domino's) | $0 | $0–4.99 | $0 | Varies |
Why is the menu price higher on delivery apps than dine-in?
Platforms charge restaurants 15–30% commission on every order. Most restaurants pass this on by raising delivery menu prices 10–25% to maintain margins. The same burger that's $10 dine-in might be $12 on DoorDash. Some restaurants now display 'dine-in pricing' alongside delivery pricing for transparency, but most don't. This 'hidden markup' is one of the biggest invisible costs of delivery, often larger than the visible service fee.
Are subscription services like DashPass and Uber One worth it?
For users ordering 2+ times per week at $25+ per order, yes — DashPass ($9.99/month, free delivery and lower service fees on $12+ orders) typically saves $20–50/month. Uber One ($9.99/month, similar benefits across Uber Eats and Uber rides) is competitive. Casual users (1–2x/month) generally don't recoup subscription costs. Test by tracking 1–2 months of delivery spending, then calculate whether subscription benefits would exceed monthly cost.
How much do delivery drivers actually earn?
Drivers typically earn $2–4 per delivery from the platform base pay, plus the entire tip the customer provides. Average earnings are $15–20/hour after vehicle costs (gas, maintenance, depreciation) — comparable to other gig work but with high variance. Tips are critical to driver income: $0 tip on a 5-mile delivery means the driver earned ~$3 for 30 minutes of work. Tipping 18–20% directly improves driver economics in a meaningful way.
What's cheaper — delivery or restaurant pickup?
Pickup is dramatically cheaper. Most apps offer 10–20% off menu prices for pickup vs delivery, completely eliminate delivery and service fees, and only require driving for 5–10 minutes. A $40 delivery order becomes $24–26 pickup — saving $14+ for 10 minutes of driving. Pickup also typically delivers fresher food (no 20-minute drive after preparation) and avoids the tip-on-inflated-base markup. The only trade-off is the 20–30 minutes of personal time.
Why does the calculator show such high effective markups?
Because the fees compound: 18% markup × 15% service × 18% tip × delivery fee × small order fee all stack multiplicatively. Each individual fee feels reasonable (5–20%), but combined they reach 50–80%. The pie chart in the results helps visualize how each fee contributes. Most users don't realize they're paying 70%+ above dine-in pricing because the fees are itemized separately at checkout.
How can I reduce delivery costs without giving up convenience?
Strategies in order of impact: (1) Switch to pickup whenever possible — eliminates 50%+ of total fees. (2) Subscribe to DashPass or Uber One if you order weekly. (3) Order from restaurants with their own delivery apps (Domino's, Chipotle direct apps have no platform markup). (4) Group orders to spread fixed fees across more food. (5) Order $20+ minimums to avoid small order fees. (6) Avoid surge pricing windows (5–8 PM weekdays, weekend evenings).
Is ordering through restaurant websites cheaper than apps?
Often yes. Chain restaurants (Chipotle, Panera, Domino's, Starbucks) operate their own delivery via in-house systems or contractors at no markup. Independent restaurants vary — some maintain their own delivery without markup, others contract delivery from same platforms anyway. Always check the restaurant's direct website before ordering through DoorDash/Uber Eats — savings can be 20–30%.
Pro Tip
Use pickup whenever possible — many apps offer 10–20% off menu prices for pickup vs delivery, completely eliminate delivery and service fees, and only require driving for 5–10 minutes. A $40 delivery order becomes $24–26 pickup, saving $14+ for 10 minutes of driving. Calendar regular delivery costs annually to make the long-term economic impact visible — many users discover they spend $2,000–$4,000/year on delivery they could easily reduce by 60–70%.
Wist je dat?
DoorDash went public in December 2020 at $102/share with a $40 billion valuation, reaching peak market cap over $90 billion in 2021 before declining to ~$25 billion in 2023. The platform processes ~5 million orders per day in the US. Globally, food delivery has fundamentally restructured restaurant economics — independent restaurants now report 50–70% of their revenue comes through delivery apps, transforming kitchens from sit-down service to 'dark kitchens' optimized for delivery throughput. This shift is one of the largest behavioral changes in food consumption since the rise of fast food in the 1950s.