Restaurant marketers face a practical question every time they want to reach customers: should the message go out as an email or a text? Both channels work. Both have loyal advocates. But they serve fundamentally different purposes, and using the wrong channel for the wrong message wastes money and annoys customers.
The answer isn’t either/or — it’s understanding when each channel delivers the best return. This guide compares email and SMS across every metric that matters for restaurants, then provides a framework for choosing the right channel for each type of message.
The Numbers: Email vs SMS Head to Head
| Metric | SMS | |
|---|---|---|
| Open rate | 20-25% (restaurant industry) | 95-98% |
| Click-through rate | 2-5% | 15-30% |
| Response time | 6-12 hours average | 3 minutes average |
| Conversion rate | 1-3% | 5-8% |
| Cost per message | $0.005-$0.02 | $0.03-$0.10 |
| Cost per 1,000 messages | $5-$20 | $30-$100 |
| Unsubscribe rate per campaign | 0.2-0.5% | 1-3% |
| Character/content limit | Unlimited (rich media) | 160 characters (expandable with MMS) |
| Deliverability | 85-95% (spam filters) | 99%+ |
| Opt-in difficulty | Low (email is expected) | Medium (phone number is personal) |
The data tells a clear story: SMS wins on attention and immediacy. Email wins on cost, content depth, and sustainability. Neither is universally better — they’re complementary tools for different jobs.
When Email Wins
1. Content-Rich Communications
Email supports images, links, formatted text, headers, and embedded videos. When your message needs to show something — a new menu, a seasonal update, an event invitation — email is the right channel.
Best for: - Monthly newsletters with multiple stories and updates - New menu launches with food photography - Event invitations with details, schedule, and booking links - Loyalty program updates showing point balances and available rewards - Seasonal promotions with multiple offers
Example: “Our Spring Menu is Here” — featuring 5 new dish photos, chef’s notes on each dish, and a reservation link. This message needs visual real estate that SMS can’t provide.
2. Storytelling and Brand Building
Email lets you build a relationship beyond transactions. Tell the story behind your new supplier, introduce a new chef, share the inspiration for a seasonal dish. These messages don’t demand immediate action — they build affinity that drives future visits.
Best for: - “Meet our team” profiles - Behind-the-scenes stories (farm visits, recipe development) - Anniversary or milestone celebrations - Community involvement stories
3. Detailed Offers With Multiple Options
When your promotion has complexity — multiple items, tiered pricing, terms and conditions — email handles it gracefully. SMS crammed with details is frustrating to read and easy to misunderstand.
Example: “Holiday Catering Menu — 3 packages, prices from $25-$45 per person, order by December 15” with full package breakdowns, dietary options, and an ordering link.
4. Nurture Campaigns
Multi-step email sequences that guide new customers through a journey:
- Email 1 (Day 1): “Welcome! Here’s your first-visit offer”
- Email 2 (Day 7): “Did you know we also offer delivery? Here’s how to order”
- Email 3 (Day 21): “Haven’t visited yet? Your offer expires in 7 days”
- Email 4 (Day 30): “Here’s what our regulars love — their top 3 dishes”
These automated sequences are cost-effective at $0.01 per email and build long-term customer relationships.
5. High Frequency Is Acceptable
Customers tolerate 2-4 emails per month from a restaurant without significant opt-out spikes. The same frequency via SMS would generate substantial complaints and unsubscribes. If your communication plan requires regular touchpoints, email is the safer channel.
When SMS Wins
1. Time-Sensitive Offers
When you need action within hours, not days, SMS dominates. A 95% open rate within 3 minutes means your message reaches almost everyone almost immediately.
Best for: - Same-day promotions: “Rain got you down? Free delivery on all orders today — order at [link]” - Flash offers: “First 20 customers to order our new burger get a free side — order now” - Last-minute availability: “2 cancellations tonight! Table for 4 available at 8 PM — reply YES to book”
Example: At 11:15 AM, you send: “Today only: Free coffee with any lunch order. Order now: [link].” By 11:45 AM, 30% of recipients have opened it. By 12:30 PM, orders are flowing in. Email would have reached 15% of recipients by lunch — too late.
2. Reservation Confirmations and Reminders
SMS is the standard channel for transactional reservation messages:
- Confirmation: “Your table for 4 at [Restaurant] is confirmed for Friday, March 28 at 7:30 PM. Reply C to cancel.”
- Reminder (24h): “Reminder: Table for 4 tomorrow at 7:30 PM. Reply C to cancel or M to modify.”
- Day-of: “See you tonight at 7:30! Our special tonight is pan-seared halibut.”
These functional messages have near-100% open rates and significantly reduce no-shows — restaurants using SMS reminders report 25-40% fewer no-shows.
3. Order Status Updates
For delivery and takeout orders, SMS provides real-time updates that customers expect:
- “Your order has been confirmed and is being prepared”
- “Your order is ready for pickup”
- “Your delivery driver is on the way — ETA 15 minutes”
Platforms like FoxiFood handle these order notifications automatically, keeping customers informed without manual effort.
4. Two-Way Communication
SMS enables instant back-and-forth:
- Customer: “Can I change my reservation from 7 to 7:30?”
-
Restaurant: “Done! See you at 7:30.”
-
Customer: “Do you have a gluten-free option for the pasta?”
- Restaurant: “Yes! Our penne alla vodka comes in a GF version. Same price.”
Email exchanges take hours. SMS conversations happen in real time, matching the pace customers expect.
5. Urgency and Scarcity
When the message itself demands urgency, SMS is the only option:
- “Last 3 spots for Saturday’s wine dinner — reply BOOK to reserve”
- “Your loyalty reward expires in 48 hours — redeem now”
- “Just added: New Year’s Eve dinner. Limited to 40 guests. Book: [link]”
The immediacy of SMS amplifies urgency in a way email can’t match. An “expires tomorrow” email might be opened 2 days later. An “expires tomorrow” SMS is read within minutes.
The Cost Reality
Let’s compare the real cost of reaching 2,000 customers with each channel:
Email Campaign (2,000 recipients)
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| Email platform (monthly) | $20-$50 |
| Cost per 2,000 emails | ~$10-$40 |
| Design time | 1-2 hours (staff time) |
| Expected opens | 400-500 (20-25%) |
| Expected clicks | 40-100 (2-5%) |
| Cost per click | $0.10-$1.00 |
SMS Campaign (2,000 recipients)
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| SMS platform (monthly) | $25-$75 |
| Cost per 2,000 texts | $60-$200 |
| Composition time | 10-15 minutes |
| Expected opens | 1,900-1,960 (95-98%) |
| Expected clicks | 285-600 (15-30%) |
| Cost per click | $0.10-$0.70 |
On a cost-per-click basis, the channels are surprisingly similar. SMS costs more per message but generates far more engagement. For action-oriented campaigns, SMS often delivers better ROI despite the higher per-message cost.
However, email’s lower cost makes it far more economical for non-urgent, relationship-building messages where you don’t need immediate clicks.
Building Your List: Email vs SMS
Email List Building
Customers share email addresses relatively freely:
- Online ordering accounts (captured automatically)
- Wi-Fi signup
- Newsletter subscription on your website
- Receipt opt-in
- Contest or giveaway entry
- Loyalty program registration
Typical collection rate: 15-25% of guests will provide an email address when asked.
SMS List Building
Phone numbers are more personal. Collection requires explicit value proposition:
- “Text JOIN to 55555 for exclusive offers” (in-restaurant signage)
- Checkbox opt-in during online ordering: “Send me order updates and offers via SMS”
- Loyalty program registration with SMS notification preference
- Reservation confirmation opt-in: “Can we text you with specials?”
Typical collection rate: 8-15% of guests will opt in to SMS when asked.
Legal requirements for SMS: - Explicit opt-in required — no pre-checked boxes - Clear disclosure of message frequency - Easy opt-out mechanism (reply STOP) - Compliance with local telecommunications regulations (TCPA in the US, GDPR in Europe, etc.)
SMS consent is more strictly regulated than email consent. Violations carry significant fines.
The Optimal Channel Strategy
Don’t choose one channel — use both strategically. Here’s a framework:
| Message Type | Channel | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly newsletter | 1-2x/month | |
| New menu announcement | As needed | |
| Event invitation | As needed | |
| Same-day promotion | SMS | 1-2x/month max |
| Reservation confirmation | SMS | Per booking |
| Order status updates | SMS | Per order |
| Birthday/anniversary offer | Email with SMS reminder | 1x/year |
| Win-back (lapsed customer) | Email first, SMS follow-up 3 days later | As needed |
| Flash sale / limited availability | SMS | 1-2x/month max |
| Loyalty updates | Monthly | |
| Feedback request | Email (with SMS for VIPs) | Post-visit |
Golden rule for SMS frequency: Never send more than 4-6 marketing SMS messages per month. Beyond that, opt-out rates spike dramatically. Reserve SMS for messages that genuinely need immediate attention.
Golden rule for email frequency: 2-4 emails per month is the sweet spot for restaurants. Below 1 per month and subscribers forget you. Above 4 per month and fatigue sets in.
Measuring Channel Performance
Track these metrics for each channel monthly:
- List growth rate — net new subscribers minus unsubscribes
- Engagement rate — opens, clicks, and actions per campaign
- Revenue attribution — revenue generated from each campaign (track with unique promo codes or marketing analytics)
- Cost per acquisition — total channel cost divided by new customers acquired
- Opt-out rate — if climbing, reduce frequency or improve relevance
Review quarterly: which channel drives more revenue per dollar spent? Which drives higher-quality customers (repeat visitors vs. one-time deal seekers)?
Key Takeaways
- SMS has 95-98% open rates vs. email’s 20-25%, but costs 5-10x more per message. Choose based on the message type, not a blanket preference.
- Use email for content-rich messages (newsletters, menu launches, event invitations) and ongoing relationship building.
- Use SMS for time-sensitive offers (same-day promotions, flash sales), reservation reminders, and order status updates.
- Cap SMS marketing at 4-6 messages per month — beyond that, opt-out rates spike. Email tolerates 2-4 messages per month comfortably.
- Build both lists simultaneously: email through online ordering and Wi-Fi signups, SMS through loyalty programs and reservation opt-ins.
- On a cost-per-click basis, the channels perform similarly. The right choice depends on urgency, content complexity, and desired response time.