Artificial Intelligence (AI) is no longer a future concept for restaurants, cafés, and caterers; it is a tool being used right now across Australia to cut waste, manage staff costs, and improve customer service. According to the Australian AI Adoption Tracker (2025), 42% of small to medium hospitality businesses already use AI in some form, with larger venues leading the way. The shift isn’t hype, it’s a practical response to rising costs and tighter margins.
The booking experience is one of the fastest-moving areas. Research shows 74% of diners are comfortable with AI helping them manage reservations and confirmations. For venues, this means fewer missed calls, less admin, and better guest satisfaction. One Sydney operator reported AI handling 859 overflow calls in a month, converting around 200 into confirmed bookings. That saved 20–40 staff hours a week, time redirected to service and food.
Staffing has always been one of the toughest balancing acts in hospitality. New AI scheduling tools forecast demand using POS sales data, weather, and local events. They then recommend rosters that keep wage costs aligned without sacrificing service. Several platforms now also factor in Fair Work Award compliance, reducing the risk of underpayment errors. For operators, it means more accurate rosters and less time on spreadsheets. (Also, R&CA members have access to the R&CA in-house IR services)
Waste tracking is another major AI breakthrough. Computer-vision tools can now scan, weigh, and log food waste, providing insights a manual tally never could. International hotel pilots have shown up to 25% food waste reduction within six months. For caterers, the savings can be even higher. That’s less money in the bin, tighter gross profit, and a sustainability win that resonates with diners.
Generative AI is already being used to draft social posts, emails, and menu descriptions. But the real benefit comes from more intelligent targeting, using guest data to deliver timely, relevant messages. The challenge is quality data: without accurate contact details, visit history and preferences, the outputs fall flat. Australian diners still value personal touches most, so AI should be seen as the support act that frees up staff to focus on the guest experience.
Activate AI in systems you already pay for. Most booking, POS, and workforce tools now include AI features - switch them on.
Trial a waste tracker. Even 30 days of data can reveal your biggest loss items and easy fixes.
Check your data practices. Be transparent with customers about how their data is used, and review AI outputs before they reach guests.
Keep the human connection. Use AI for admin and efficiency, then put staff time back on the floor where it matters most.
AI is already part of the hospitality industry in Australia. It’s being used to save time, reduce costs, and sharpen service, not replace people. For restaurants, cafés and caterers, the opportunity is to start small, track results, and make sure technology supports the core of the business: great food and genuine hospitality.