Revel vs TouchBistro
March 17, 2025 | Author: Sandeep Sharma
5★
The first wired ethernet connectivity for iPad POS systems. Manage multiple devices universally from any remote location. Save time with reports that explain your business progress and projection to you. Keep business up and running during an Internet slow-down or power outage
10★
iPad POS solution that helps restaurateurs make more money, deliver a great customer experience, and take the guess work out of making business decisions. TouchBistro was designed to make managing your business easier, so you can focus on why you opened your restaurant in the first place.
Revel and TouchBistro are both excellent at making sure restaurants can charge people for food without resorting to bartering or interpretive dance. They exist in the cloud, which doesn’t mean they float above your head, but rather that they work even if your staff has no idea how technology functions beyond tapping buttons. Both will keep track of your inventory, generate reports full of numbers that managers pretend to understand and allow you to take payments in a variety of ways, ensuring that customers can empty their wallets with minimal hassle. Most importantly, they both run on iPads, because, in the modern age, if a business isn’t using an Apple product, does it even exist?
Revel, born in 2010 in the United States, takes itself very seriously. It is the sort of system designed for ambitious restaurant owners who dream of vast empires spanning continents—or at least a few franchises. It comes with all the bells, whistles and API integrations that a corporate overlord could desire, making it highly customizable but also somewhat terrifying. If you need to manage multiple locations, analyze data like a Bond villain and commit to a long-term relationship with your POS provider, Revel is ready to take your hand—contractually speaking, of course.
TouchBistro, on the other hand, emerged a year later in Canada, where it politely decided to cater to small and medium-sized restaurants. Unlike its more corporate cousin, it focuses on making the day-to-day life of servers easier, ensuring that orders are taken quickly, tables are managed efficiently and everything generally runs with less chaos. It operates on a hybrid system, meaning even if the internet decides to take a day off, TouchBistro soldiers on. Its pricing is more flexible and it doesn’t require you to mortgage your restaurant to afford it. It’s a system designed for people who just want to run a nice little eatery without having to take a crash course in enterprise-level software engineering.
See also: Top 10 Restaurant software
Revel, born in 2010 in the United States, takes itself very seriously. It is the sort of system designed for ambitious restaurant owners who dream of vast empires spanning continents—or at least a few franchises. It comes with all the bells, whistles and API integrations that a corporate overlord could desire, making it highly customizable but also somewhat terrifying. If you need to manage multiple locations, analyze data like a Bond villain and commit to a long-term relationship with your POS provider, Revel is ready to take your hand—contractually speaking, of course.
TouchBistro, on the other hand, emerged a year later in Canada, where it politely decided to cater to small and medium-sized restaurants. Unlike its more corporate cousin, it focuses on making the day-to-day life of servers easier, ensuring that orders are taken quickly, tables are managed efficiently and everything generally runs with less chaos. It operates on a hybrid system, meaning even if the internet decides to take a day off, TouchBistro soldiers on. Its pricing is more flexible and it doesn’t require you to mortgage your restaurant to afford it. It’s a system designed for people who just want to run a nice little eatery without having to take a crash course in enterprise-level software engineering.
See also: Top 10 Restaurant software