WHICHposReviews › Toast POS

Toast POS review (2026): the restaurant heavyweight, strings included

By the WHICHpos team· Pricing verified June 12, 2026· How we score

TL;DR — our verdict

8.1 / 10  Toast is the deepest restaurant POS you can buy — online ordering, KDS, payroll, coursing, the whole restaurant operating system, on rugged spill-resistant Android hardware. The structural price: a 2-year auto-renewing contract, mandatory Toast Payments processing, quote-only true pricing, and an add-on model where the real monthly bill routinely lands far above the advertised plan.

Best for: full-service and multi-station restaurants that will actually use the depth.
Look elsewhere if: you're counter-service or small (Square), hate processor lock-in, or want out of subscriptions entirely (JET).

Pricing & total cost (25%)7.0
Software features (20%)9.5
Contract & lock-in (15%)6.5
Hardware (15%)9.0
Ease of use (15%)8.5
Support (10%)8.5

How much does Toast POS cost in 2026?

PlanMonthlyCard-present rateNotes
Starter Kit$03.09% + 15¢Up to 2 terminals, $0 upfront hardware, pay-as-you-go
Point of Sale$69 (advertised "as low as $79/terminal")2.49% + 15¢Hardware purchased upfront
Build Your OwnQuoteCustomAdd-ons priced individually

Two things to understand about that table. First, the advertised numbers are entry points — Toast's true pricing is quote-based, and rates are described as "custom flat rates." Second, the add-on model is where budgets die: online ordering, loyalty, gift cards, kiosk, payroll, and marketing are all separately priced modules. Industry reporting and merchant accounts put realistic multi-module bills at $500–$2,000+/month for busy operations.

Note also the discrepancy we found in June 2026: Toast's own pricing page advertises core POS "as low as $79/month per terminal" while major review trackers still cite the long-standing $69 plan — a possible quiet increase. Treat your quote as the only real number.

What does Toast hardware cost?

The most popular starter kit (10" terminal, flip stand, card reader) starts at $899, with 0% 36-month financing offered; remote installation starts at $499. Individual device prices (Toast Flex, Toast Go 2) are not published — quote only. The alternative is the pay-as-you-go route: $0 upfront hardware in exchange for the higher 3.09% + 15¢ rate. That trade is rarely in your favor for any healthy sales volume: on $25,000/month of card sales, the 0.6-point rate difference costs about $1,800/year — every year — versus an $899 one-time kit.

The contract — read this part

The standard Toast agreement is 2 years, auto-renewing (promotional deals sometimes 3), with early-termination fees reported around the remaining months owed. Toast Payments is mandatory on every plan — there is no third-party processor option, period. You are committing your processing economics to one vendor for the duration.

That mattered more than usual in 2025–2026: merchant communities documented waves of fee and rate increases mid-relationship ("fees tripled overnight" threads; searches for "Toast alternatives" reportedly spiked +350%). With no processor competition possible, your only leverage at renewal is leaving the whole platform.

The 3-year true cost

Setup3-year total (software + hardware)
Toast Starter Kit ($0/mo, $0 hardware)$0 + 3.09% + 15¢ on every card transaction
Toast POS plan + $899 kit~$3,383 ($69 × 36 + $899) + 2.49% + 15¢ processing
Realistic multi-module FSR setup$10,000–$30,000+ (quote-dependent)

For contrast, a pay-once counter setup (e.g. JET Onyx at $1,800 one-time, $0/month, any processor) costs less over three years than Toast's entry plan, but it does not attempt Toast's full-service depth. That's the honest trade: Toast charges rent on capability you can't buy outright anywhere else.

What do Toast users actually complain about?

Pros

  • Deepest restaurant feature set on the market
  • Rugged, purpose-built, spill-resistant Android hardware
  • Real $0-upfront entry path for tight budgets
  • 24/7 support included; large knowledge ecosystem
  • Strong KDS, online ordering, and payroll integration

Cons

  • 2-year auto-renewing contract with termination fees
  • Toast Payments mandatory — zero processor competition
  • Quote-only pricing; documented fee increases mid-relationship
  • Add-on model inflates the real monthly bill fast
  • Overkill commitment for counter-service businesses

Who should buy Toast — and who shouldn't?

Buy it if you run a full-service restaurant (or several) and will use the table management, coursing, KDS, and labor tools weekly. In that world, Toast's depth genuinely pays for its strings, and nothing else matches it end-to-end.

Skip it if you're a café, food truck, or small QSR — you'd be signing a 2-year processing contract for features you won't touch. Square starts free, and a pay-once system like JET ($0/month, no contract, any processor) covers counter-service workflows without the subscription at all.

Toast POS — FAQ

How much does Toast cost per month?

$0 (Starter Kit, pay-as-you-go) or $69–$79+ for the core plan — but final pricing is quote-based and add-ons bill separately. Multi-module setups commonly run $500–$2,000+/month.

Does Toast require a contract?

Yes — 2 years standard, auto-renewing, with ETFs. Toast Payments is mandatory on all plans.

What are Toast's processing rates?

2.49% + 15¢ standard (hardware purchased), 3.09% + 15¢ pay-as-you-go. Rates are "custom" — your quote may differ.

Is Toast worth it for a small café?

Usually not — the contract and lock-in buy depth cafés rarely use. Square or a pay-once system fits better.

Toast pricing is quote-driven and shifts often — if your quote differs materially from the numbers here, we'd genuinely like to know: editor@whichpos.com.
Compare all 9 systems Next review: Clover →