ChowNow's pitch is simple: keep the commission, pay a flat monthly fee. It's a cleaner economic structure than DoorDash or Grubhub, and for high-volume restaurants, it can save real money. For low- and mid-volume independents, the math gets harder.
ChowNow's pricing structure in 2026
ChowNow uses a flat-fee SaaS model rather than commission-per-order. Published pricing:
- Setup fee: ~$399 one-time (often waived in promotions).
- Monthly software fee: $149/month per location.
- Marketing fee: $99/month optional for Local Marketing tools.
- Payment processing: typically 2.9% + $0.30 per transaction via their default processor (or bring your own processor for slightly different economics).
Call it $150–$250/month all-in for the typical setup, before processing.
The break-even math vs. commission platforms
The whole point of ChowNow is to replace commission-based platforms. So here's the key question: at what volume does ChowNow's flat fee beat DoorDash's 15–30% commission?
| Online orders/month | Avg ticket | Monthly online revenue | DoorDash 20% commission | ChowNow $150 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 50 | $35 | $1,750 | $350 | $150 + 2.9% |
| 150 | $35 | $5,250 | $1,050 | $150 + 2.9% |
| 300 | $35 | $10,500 | $2,100 | $150 + 2.9% |
At 50 orders/month, ChowNow saves $200. At 300 orders/month, it saves $1,950. The more volume you do online, the better ChowNow's economics look — which is the argument ChowNow makes, and it's correct.
Where the argument gets fuzzy
ChowNow vs. DoorDash is not apples-to-apples, because they're playing different games.
ChowNow is a first-party ordering tool
Guests order from your branded site or app. You own the customer relationship, the data, the email list. But ChowNow is not a delivery marketplace — guests have to come find you.
DoorDash is a marketplace
The commission is expensive because DoorDash is generating demand — showing your restaurant to people who weren't thinking about you. The 20%+ commission is part fee and part customer acquisition cost.
So the honest comparison is: ChowNow's $150/month + your own marketing spend (SMS, social, loyalty, Google) vs. DoorDash's commission as a bundled demand-gen + fulfillment fee. For some restaurants, the self-marketing path is cheaper and builds more durable customer relationships. For others, it's cheaper and easier to let DoorDash find customers.
What ChowNow does well
- Clean branded ordering pages and mobile apps.
- Real customer data ownership.
- Flat predictable cost.
- Good integrations with most major POS systems.
- Decent marketing tools for the price.
What ChowNow doesn't do
- Demand generation. Guests have to know about you already.
- Full stack. It's ordering, not POS, not loyalty, not SMS, not kiosk, not website beyond the ordering page.
- Native SMS at scale — you'd add a separate tool like Attentive.
This is why ChowNow users often end up with a stack that looks like: Toast + ChowNow + Attentive + Thanx + a branded website tool + DoorDash. Five vendors, five bills, five support lines, five integration points.
The consolidated alternative
Platforms that bundle first-party ordering with POS, SMS, loyalty, and a branded website as one login tend to beat a stitched "Toast + ChowNow + Attentive + Thanx" stack on total cost, and more importantly on data unity — one guest profile across all channels vs. four disconnected profiles.
If that sounds interesting, run your numbers through our savings calculator.
Bottom line
ChowNow is a good tool. For an independent restaurant with real online volume and no interest in a full-stack platform, it's a solid choice against DoorDash for commission-free ordering. But if you're stacking it on top of Toast plus three other tools, the all-in economics of a consolidated platform are usually better — and the operational simplicity of one login is real.