Which POS system should you actually buy?
We compare point-of-sale systems on what vendors bury in the fine print — real monthly costs, card-processing rates, contract length, and how hard it is to leave.
The quick answer
Four buyers, four winners. Tap any card for the full review, or scroll down for the complete table.
$0/month forever, pay-once hardware from $899, no contract, any processor.
Read the review → Easiest free start SSquare8.4/10A genuinely free plan and 15-minute setup — if you accept Square's processing rate.
Read the review → Best for restaurants TToast8.1/10The deepest full-service toolset — at the price of a 2-year contract and locked processing.
Read the review → Best for retail LLightspeed7.3/10Best-in-class inventory tools — with a $400/month penalty for bringing your own processor.
Read the review →Every system, side by side
Sort by any column. Filter by business type. All figures are published US rates as of June 12, 2026 — quote-only items are marked.
| System | Best for | Software /mo | Hardware | Card-present fee | Contract & lock-in | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Owning your system outright | $0 | $899–$1,800 once | Any processor | None · no lock-in | 8.7/10 | |
| Starting free, mobile & small shops | $0–$149 | $59–$899 | 2.6% + 15¢ | Month-to-month · Square only | 8.4/10 | |
| Full-service restaurants | $0–$69+ | From $899 | 2.49% + 15¢ | 2-year · Toast only | 8.1/10 | |
SShopify POS Review soon |
Retail that also sells online | $39 + $89/loc | $349 | 2.6% + 10¢ | Monthly · +0.6–2% off-Shopify | 8.0/10 |
| Polished all-in-one hardware | $0–$135 | $49–$1,899 | 2.3–2.6% + 10¢ | Device-locked · resellers 3–4 yr | 7.4/10 | |
| Inventory-heavy retail | $69–$399 | Quote only | From 2.4% + 10¢ | Annual · $400/mo if 3rd-party | 7.3/10 | |
SSumUp POS Review soon |
Cafés on a budget | $99–$289 | Incl. · from $54 | 2.6% + 10¢ | 12-month · SumUp only | 7.2/10 |
TTouchBistro Review soon |
iPad-based restaurants | From $69 | Quote only | Not published | Annual, auto-renew | 7.0/10 |
EEpos Now Review soon |
Cheap upfront hardware | From ~$79 | From $349 | ~2.6% + 10¢* | 12–36 months reported | 6.5/10 |
*Not published on Epos Now's US site — third-party reported; confirm on your quote. Scores follow our public methodology. More systems are reviewed every month. See our guide to the best POS for restaurants.
What you'll actually pay over 3 years
A single register — software plus hardware only. Processing is separate, and it's usually the biggest cost of all.
Subscription systems cost 2–5× more than pay-once systems over three years — before a single card is swiped. Then add processing: at $20,000/month in sales, a flat 2.6% + 15¢ rate is roughly $6,800 a year, every year. See processing rates above.
Six categories, weighted toward what hurts
Cost and lock-in carry the most weight, because that's where buyers get burned. Every system runs the same grid.
We build, sell, and support POS hardware ourselves — so the scoring reflects what actually breaks on a busy Friday night. Read the full methodology →
Find the right fit for your counter
Filter the comparison to the systems that suit how you actually sell.
Read the full breakdowns
Every review uses the same scoring grid, with honest pros and cons and verified pricing.
POS buying, answered
Which POS system is best in 2026?
There's no single best — it depends what you optimize for. Lowest total cost to own: JET ($0/month, pay-once hardware, no contract). Easiest free start: Square. Deepest restaurant features: Toast. Strongest retail inventory: Lightspeed. The table above shows the trade-offs side by side.
What does a POS system really cost over 3 years?
Software (monthly fee × 36) + hardware + payment processing. Processing is usually 70–85% of lifetime cost: at $20,000/month in card sales, 2.6% + 15¢ runs roughly $6,700–$7,200 a year. Software and hardware over 3 years range from $899 (a pay-once station, or Square Free + Register) to about $5,000 (Clover Station Duo on a Growth plan).
Which POS has no monthly fee?
JET POS ($0/month permanently, software included with hardware), Square's Free plan (locked to Square processing), and Clover's payments-only tier (very limited features). Toast's $0 Starter Kit charges a higher 3.09% + 15¢ processing rate and still has a 2-year agreement.
What is processor lock-in, and which systems have it?
Lock-in means the POS only works with the vendor's own payment processing, so you can't negotiate rates. Fully locked: Square, Toast, SumUp. Clover devices are permanently tied to the processor that provisioned them. Lightspeed charges $400/month for third-party processing; Shopify adds 0.6–2% per transaction. No lock-in: JET (bring any processor).
Still deciding?
Start with the full comparison table — sort by cost, fees, or score and shortlist in two minutes.