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Care to dine? That's £100 a head before you even order
The Independent
|February 27, 2025
Some restaurants now require minimum spends and deposits to stave off no-shows and influencers. Hannah Twiggs asks if this is a necessary evil or another way to squeeze customers

Once upon a time, booking a restaurant was simple: you found a place, called up, made a reservation and crucially turned up. Now, in an era where dining out is already an expensive endeavour, restaurants are adding yet another hurdle: minimum spends.
London’s top spots are now enforcing spending thresholds, turning tables into high-stakes investments before you’ve even glanced at the menu. At Gymkhana, the first Indian restaurant in London to receive two Michelin stars, that’s £100 a head. Hutong, a northern Chinese restaurant in The Shard, demands £80 per person on weekends.
Chutney Mary, another Indian restaurant, which has been going since 1990, expects you to drop at least £60. Even if you just fancy a quick cocktail and a dessert at Jean-Georges at The Connaught hotel, you’ll need to part with £50 per person to secure a spot. What was once a courtesy booking is becoming a financial commitment.
For restaurants, this is a necessary defence against rising costs, reservation-squatting and social media freeloaders. But for diners, it’s yet another way of extracting cash in an already pricey dining landscape. The real question is: who are restaurants actually fighting? The culprits – no-shows, bots and influencers – or the ordinary customers left holding the bill?

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