Restaurants enjoy strong delivery sales as wet weather keeps diners at home

Britain’s leading restaurant groups have extended a long run of inflation-beating growth in delivery and takeaway sales with a like-for-like increase of 4.8% in October, CGA by NIQ’s Hospitality at Home Tracker shows
Year-on-year delivery and takeaway sales have been well above the rate of inflation in every month of 2024 so far (©Getty / Rattankun Thongbun)

Britain’s top restaurant groups started 2026 with strong growth in delivery sales but took a hit on takeaway revenue, the latest data shows.

Like-for-like delivery sales in January were 7.4% higher than in the same month in 2025, a sharp increase from growth of 4.1% in December, according to the NIQ Hospitality at Home Tracker.

The Tracker, powered by CGA intelligence, reveals that deliveries were boosted in January by widespread and persistent rain, which led many people to stay inside rather than eat out.

Restaurants’ at-home sales have also been boosted by rollouts of new delivery offers. Total delivery sales in January — including from restaurants opened in the past 12 months, or ones where deliveries have been introduced for the first time — were 13.9% ahead of the same month in 2025.

However, revenue from takeaways and click-and-collect orders dropped 9.1% on a like-for-like basis in January, as some consumers tightened their spending after Christmas and others switched to the convenience of deliveries.

Takeaway sales have now fallen year-on-year for 10 successive months.

With deliveries and takeaways combined, the NIQ Hospitality at Home Tracker indicates that restaurant groups’ like-for-like at-home sales in January were 2.7% ahead of January 2025. This is fractionally below the UK’s 3.0% rate of inflation, as set by the Consumer Prices Index.

Total sales were 11.8% ahead.

The growth of at-home sales means deliveries accounted for 13.8 pence in every pound spent with restaurants in January.

“The bright start to 2026 for delivery sales is a contrast to eat-in trends and a welcome source of growth for restaurant operators,” says Karl Chessell, director - hospitality operators and food, EMEA at NIQ.

“With nearly one pound in every seven spent with restaurants now going on deliveries, this is clearly now a valuable and mature channel.

“However, it’s not a risk-free increment to sales, and restaurants need to stay alert to protecting both the profitability and quality of their delivery offers.

“With consumers still cautious with their spending, operators will have to keep working hard to sustain at-home demand in 2026.”