Key Takeaways
- The BLS establishment survey shows that food services and drinking places employed 12.
- The simplest explanation is that operators and unemployed workers are not looking at the same jobs.
- Restaurant workers earned an average of $19.
- The headline that gets less attention than unemployment is turnover.
- The TD Bank survey found that 40% of operators identified labor efficiency, training, and scheduling as the top area where AI could provide relief.
In February 2026, one out of every 14 food service workers in the United States was unemployed. The Bureau of Labor Statistics pegged the sector's unemployment rate at 7.1%, nearly double the national average of 4.4%. An estimated 875,000 people who worked in restaurants and bars were actively looking for jobs and could not find them, according to an OysterLink analysis of the BLS data published March 13.
At the same time, a TD Bank survey of restaurant operators released in early 2026 found that 54% cited a shrinking labor pool as their biggest challenge in attracting and retaining talent. The National Restaurant Association projects the industry will need to fill 200,000 new positions this year, pushing total employment toward 15.8 million.
Both numbers are accurate. Both feel contradictory. Understanding why they coexist is the key to understanding what has actually changed in the restaurant labor market, and why the old playbook of raising wages and hoping for applicants is not going to cut it.
The Numbers Tell Two Stories#
The BLS establishment survey shows that food services and drinking places employed 12.33 million workers in February 2026, down from 12.36 million in January. That is a loss of roughly 29,700 jobs in a single month. The decline was part of a broader national payroll contraction: total nonfarm employment fell by 92,000 in February, the first negative print in months, driven by losses across health care, construction, and hospitality.
But zoom out and the picture looks different. Restaurant staffing levels in February 2026 were still 0.3% above where they stood in February 2020, roughly 42,000 jobs above pre-pandemic levels. The recovery, measured in raw headcount, happened. The problem is that the recovery was uneven. According to BLS data cited by the National Restaurant Association, employment at snack and nonalcoholic beverage bars (coffee shops, doughnut shops, ice cream parlors) sat 25% above February 2020 levels. Quick-service and fast-casual restaurants were 2.1% above pre-pandemic headcounts. Full-service restaurants, by contrast, have been the slowest to recover.
The household survey, which measures unemployment differently than the payroll survey, paints the more alarming picture. Food service unemployment has risen steadily over two years. In February 2024, the rate was 4.9%, or about one in 20 workers. By February 2025, it had jumped to 7.9%. The February 2026 reading of 7.1% is technically an improvement from a year ago, but it remains far above the overall economy and well above pre-pandemic norms.
Why the Paradox Exists#
The simplest explanation is that operators and unemployed workers are not looking at the same jobs.
A restaurant manager in suburban Dallas trying to staff a drive-thru for the breakfast shift needs reliable morning workers who will show up at 5 a.m., five days a week, for $15 to $17 an hour. An unemployed food service worker in downtown Chicago who spent three years as a server at a full-service restaurant is looking for evening shifts at $25 or more per hour with tips. Neither one satisfies the other's requirements.
Geography compounds the mismatch. The NRA has noted that 18 states still have restaurant employment levels below where they were in 2020. Growth has concentrated in Sun Belt markets, suburban areas, and fast-growing segments like coffee and chicken. Legacy casual dining markets in the Midwest and Northeast have not recovered the same density of jobs.
Then there is the structural issue of hours. Average weekly hours for production and nonsupervisory food service workers dropped to 22.9 in January 2026, according to BLS data. That is down from 23.8 in October 2025, a meaningful reduction. Operators are scheduling fewer hours per employee, partly because traffic has softened and partly because they are spreading shifts across a larger part-time workforce. For workers who need 35 or 40 hours a week to pay rent, a restaurant offering 20 hours is not a viable option, even if the job technically exists.
The Wage Gap That Won't Close#
Restaurant workers earned an average of $19.68 per hour in January 2026, according to BLS data for production and nonsupervisory employees in food services. The national average for all private-sector employees was $37.32 in February 2026. That is a gap of nearly $18 per hour, or roughly 47%.
Wages in the industry have risen substantially since 2020. The NRA and multiple industry analyses have documented roughly 50% growth in average hourly pay for restaurant workers over the past four years. But the gap with other sectors has not closed. Retail, warehousing, and health care have all raised wages at comparable rates, and many of those jobs offer more predictable schedules, benefits, and physical working conditions.
California's $20 minimum wage for fast food workers, which took effect in April 2024, has now been in place for nearly two years. Research from UC Santa Cruz published in early 2026 found that while wages rose as intended, operators responded by cutting hours and accelerating automation investments. The net effect on total worker compensation was mixed. Some workers earned more per hour but took home less per month because their hours were reduced.
Turnover Is the Real Drain#
The headline that gets less attention than unemployment is turnover. Industry-wide, restaurant employee turnover sits at approximately 73.9% annually, according to BLS data. That means a 50-person restaurant operation replaces roughly 37 people per year. For a 10-unit QSR franchise, that is 370 hires annually just to maintain current staffing.
The cost of each turnover event is significant. The Center for Hospitality Research at Cornell has estimated that replacing a single hourly restaurant employee costs between $2,000 and $5,000 when accounting for recruiting, training, productivity loss during ramp-up, and increased error rates. For a 10-unit franchise system turning over 370 workers per year, that represents $740,000 to $1.85 million in annual hidden cost.
This is why operators report feeling short-staffed even when the macro data shows 875,000 unemployed food service workers. They are not short-staffed because nobody is available. They are short-staffed because the people they hire leave within 90 days, and the cycle restarts. The problem is not a pipeline problem. It is a retention problem wearing the disguise of a hiring problem.
What Smart Operators Are Doing Differently#
The TD Bank survey found that 40% of operators identified labor efficiency, training, and scheduling as the top area where AI could provide relief. That tracks with what is happening on the ground. Chains like Taco Bell, McDonald's, and Wendy's have invested in voice AI for drive-thru ordering, self-service kiosks, and automated scheduling tools not primarily to eliminate jobs, but to reduce the number of positions that need to be filled during each shift.
The math is straightforward. If a drive-thru location needs seven employees during the lunch rush and a voice AI system reduces that to six, the operator did not eliminate a job in any visible sense. They reduced their exposure to the turnover cycle by one position. Over a year, across 100 locations, that is 100 fewer slots to fill, 100 fewer training cycles, and meaningful savings on the hidden costs of churn.
Texas Roadhouse has taken a different approach. The chain's general manager compensation model ties a significant portion of pay to restaurant performance, creating a structure where unit-level leaders have real ownership over results. The company has consistently reported lower turnover than industry averages, and its traffic performance in 2025 and early 2026 has outpaced the casual dining segment.
Chick-fil-A's operator model, which places a single owner in each restaurant and requires them to work in the business daily, produces turnover rates substantially below industry norms. The tradeoff is that the model is extremely selective (accepting roughly 1% of franchise applicants) and not easily replicated across systems with hundreds or thousands of existing franchisees.
The JOLTS Data Adds Context#
The Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey for January 2026, released by BLS on March 13, reported 872,000 job openings in accommodation and food services. That is down from peaks above 1.5 million during the post-pandemic hiring surge, but it still represents a significant number of unfilled positions.
The ratio matters. With 875,000 unemployed food service workers and 872,000 openings, the numbers are almost perfectly matched. In theory, every unemployed restaurant worker has a job waiting. In practice, the geographic, schedule, wage, and skills mismatches described above mean the two populations do not overlap as neatly as the national totals suggest.
The quits rate in accommodation and food services has moderated from its 2021 and 2022 peaks, when the "Great Resignation" label dominated headlines. But it remains elevated compared to pre-pandemic norms. Workers in the sector are still more likely to quit voluntarily than workers in most other industries, which reflects the fundamental issue: restaurant work is physically demanding, unpredictable in scheduling, and often low-paid relative to alternatives.
What Comes Next#
The NRA's 2026 State of the Industry report projects that the industry will add jobs this year, but acknowledges that filling them will be the central operational challenge. The 82% of operators who told TD Bank they expected improved or stabilized growth are not wrong about the direction. They are dealing with the reality that growth in revenue and growth in the ability to staff that revenue are on divergent trajectories.
For operators, the implications are clear. Raising starting wages is necessary but not sufficient. The operators outperforming on labor metrics are doing multiple things simultaneously: offering schedule predictability, investing in training that creates visible career paths, using technology to reduce the physical and cognitive load of peak-period work, and building compensation structures that reward retention rather than simply attracting warm bodies.
The BLS data will fluctuate month to month. February's 7.1% reading may moderate as seasonal hiring for spring and summer kicks in. But the structural dynamics underneath the headline number are not going away. The restaurant industry has roughly as many openings as it has unemployed workers, and it still cannot match them. Until that matching problem is solved, operators will continue to experience labor shortage in a labor surplus.
QSR Pro Staff
The QSR Pro editorial team covers the quick service restaurant industry with in-depth analysis, data-driven reporting, and operator-first perspective.
More from QSR