54% of British consumers who eat in or order takeout used a meal deal at least once in the previous year, according to data from Mintel’s UK Eating Out Review 2026. It’s not a fringe habit. That represents over 50% of the dining public actively influencing their decisions based on structured values, even before they have determined what they truly want to eat.
Depending on how you read it, the number lands differently. It’s a pressure point for the hospitality sector: restaurants didn’t design their kitchens with fixed-price packages in mind, but they are increasingly required to defend each dish’s perceived value. For diners, it represents a more intimate recalibration that started with inflation and appears to have settled into something more long-lasting.
Nearly 38% of British diners are eating out less than they did a year ago, according to YouGov’s Dining Out Report 2025, with the majority citing increased costs as the cause. That cutback percentage is even higher, at 58% among those who cite inflation as their top concern, according to separate data from Restaurant Online. According to Square’s March 2025 research, London diners, especially millennials, have actually increased both their frequency and their spending over the same period. However, the overall national sentiment is cautious, deliberate, and value-aware.

The frequency of outings is not the only thing that has changed. That’s how they operate. According to three out of five diners who have changed their eating habits, they are now selecting less expensive eateries. Over 50% claim to place fewer orders. Additionally, according to Mintel, 43% of restaurant patrons actively choose set menus over à la carte to maintain a consistent bill. The final figure is impressive. It implies that consumers aren’t just reacting to high prices when they happen; rather, they are preparing ahead of time and setting a ceiling for the evening before they even enter.
| Stat / Insight | Figure | Source |
|---|---|---|
| British diners who used a meal deal (eat-in or takeaway) in the past year | 54% | Mintel UK Eating Out Review 2026 |
| Diners eating out less than a year ago (YouGov) | 38% | YouGov GB Dining Out Report 2025 |
| Diners cutting back due to rising inflation (Restaurant Online) | 58% | Restaurant Online, August 2025 |
| Among those cutting back, those citing higher costs as main reason | 63% | The Guardian, October 2025 |
| Diners choosing set menus over à la carte to manage spend | 43% | Mintel UK Eating Out Review 2026 |
| London diners who increased dining-out frequency over 12 months | 44% | Square UK Research, March 2025 |
| London millennials who increased dining frequency | 60% | Square UK Research, March 2025 |
| Diners who believe restaurant prices have risen in the past year | 79% | The Guardian / YouGov, October 2025 |
| QSR channel share gain in Q2 2025 | +1.1ppts | Lumina Intelligence, November 2025 |
| Diners who altered preferences citing cheaper restaurant choices | 59% | The Guardian / YouGov, October 2025 |
In response, the restaurant business hasn’t remained silent. By introducing premium tiers, all-day promotions, and structured bundles that let customers trade up if they so choose, operators have greatly expanded their meal deal architecture beyond the traditional sandwich-and-drink format. The goal is to draw in both the frugal and the slightly decadent at the same time. Quick-service restaurants have benefited the most from this moment, according to Lumina Intelligence’s Q2 2025 data. QSRs gained over a percentage point in channel share, with brands like Domino’s seeing notable growth after launching a £4 lunch deal. Wetherspoons, KFC, and Burger King all gained ground. Even though they wouldn’t always characterize it that way, people seem to want familiarity, predictability, and price transparency right now.
Operators now rely on loyalty apps as an additional tool. They enable restaurants to offer tiered discounts without overtly advertising that they are doing so, and they encourage repeat business from what might otherwise have been a one-time visit. The idea that eating out is turning into a point-accumulation exercise rather than an enjoyable activity may be a little unsettling, but most people don’t seem to mind. The reasoning makes sense if the app helps you get back through the door while saving you money.
Whether this is a long-term change or a long-term adaptation to conditions that most people hope will improve is still up for debate. It’s important to note the generational divide: younger diners, especially those in their late twenties and early thirties, continue to go out, spend money, and view restaurants as social gathering places rather than just places to eat. Squeezed by expenses that don’t seem to be going down anytime soon, families and older consumers are the ones pulling back the most. According to Lumina’s data, people between the ages of 35 and 44—those juggling mortgage rates and school runs—are the most likely to completely cut back on their dining out.
This is most likely not the end of eating out as a significant British custom. At least once a month, 60% of people still dine out or order takeout. There is an appetite. The calculations that surround it have changed, such as doing the homework before deciding where to go, checking the deal before placing an order, and circling the set menu rather than the à la carte. It’s reasonable to wonder if this makes eating out more intelligent or just a little less impulsive. However, the 54% figure indicates that value isn’t currently a desirable quality for the majority of Britain. It is the beginning.
