Have you ever finished reading a list about the hottest new restaurants in your city only to find that you can’t get a reservation at a single one?
It’s because someone — or something — already booked them. And it’s making the restaurant industry a lot less fun.
Just like Taylor Swift concert tickets, hot restaurant reservations get snatched up instantly by bots (like this one) as soon as they’re posted.
Then, the people operating those bots look to turn a profit on reservation resale sites, which are multiplying:
These marketplaces, unfortunately, are a lose-lose for the rest of us.
Diners trying to book the old-fashioned way — through apps like Resy, Tock, or OpenTable — can be out of luck.
As for restaurants: When bot-booked seats go unfilled, they lose out on cancellation fees charged to invalid credit cards, and on empty tables.
Some are painstakingly combing through reservations to confirm that they’ve been booked by a human, while others are saving more spots for walk-ins.
And there are platforms that aim to partner with restaurants, rather than usurp them:
Ultimately, restaurants are finding that the safest way to secure a reservation is to charge upfront.
So get ready to pay a reservation fee before you even step foot in a restaurant.