Trading benefited from Halloween weekend celebrations and schools’ half-term holidays, both of which shifted some trading from October to November.
Sales were 6.2% ahead of November 2023—the Tracker’s highest figure since June. Total delivery and takeaway sales—including from sites opened in the last 12 months—rose by 14.7%.
Karl Chessell, CGA by NIQ’s director – hospitality operators and food, EMEA, said: “The long run of real-terms growth made at-home orders a vital part of restaurants’ success in a challenging 2024. The revival of takeaways after a long run of negative numbers is especially welcome, given the higher margins they can generate.
“With spending still tight for many consumers, some of the recent growth may have come at the expense of eating-out sales and cost pressures will continue to make for a tough environment for hospitality groups—but we can be confident about more strong trading for deliveries and takeaways in 2025.”
The tracker indicated more growth for restaurants’ takeaway and click-and-collect sales, which were up by 5.5% on a like-for-like basis in November—a fourth consecutive positive month. Deliveries achieved slightly higher growth at 6.8%.