· Starting a Restaurant  · 10 min read

How to Plan a Soft Opening and Grand Launch That Sets You Up for Success

A soft opening is your last chance to fix problems before the public shows up. Here's how to plan, execute, and leverage it — from guest lists and menu strategy to pricing models and grand opening momentum.

A soft opening is your last chance to fix problems before the public shows up. Here's how to plan, execute, and leverage it — from guest lists and menu strategy to pricing models and grand opening momentum.

You have spent months — maybe years — planning your restaurant. The buildout is done, the equipment is installed, the staff is hired. Now comes the moment that separates operators who stumble through their first weeks from those who hit the ground running: the soft opening.

According to Square, a poorly executed soft opening does more harm than skipping one entirely, because negative first impressions spread faster than positive ones. That single insight should frame your entire approach. The soft opening is not a casual dress rehearsal. It is a controlled stress test with real consequences.

Why Every Restaurant Should Do a Soft Opening

The soft opening serves two purposes simultaneously. It is an operational beta test that exposes problems you cannot find any other way, and it is a marketing event that generates the word-of-mouth momentum you need for your grand opening.

Here is what a soft opening actually tests, according to WebstaurantStore:

  • Kitchen equipment performance under real pressure — not test runs, actual service
  • Staff readiness gaps — who freezes, who improvises, who leads
  • POS and payment system functionality — before a paying customer encounters a glitch
  • Kitchen workflow and timing — how long tickets actually take versus your projections
  • Front-of-house traffic flow — where bottlenecks form, where guests get confused
  • Inventory consumption rates — how fast you burn through product at real volume

You cannot simulate these conditions. A soft opening creates them in a controlled environment where mistakes are forgivable.

Square’s Three-Phase Framework

Square structures the soft opening around three phases: planning, executing, and tweaking. This framework is straightforward, but most operators skip or rush at least one phase — and pay for it.

Phase 1: Planning

Match the format to your restaurant concept. According to Square, full-service establishments benefit from a private party with cocktail-style food service, while quick-service venues should host a more casual event with discounted food. Before you send a single invitation, create a comprehensive checklist covering:

  • Budget — how much you are willing to spend (or lose) on the event
  • Event length — shorter is better for maintaining quality
  • Guest list — who comes, how many, and in what order
  • Menu selection — what you will and will not serve
  • Pricing model — free, discounted, or full price
  • Feedback mechanism — how you will collect opinions
  • Staff assignments — who is doing what, with backups

Phase 2: Executing

A detailed timeline and thorough staff training are prerequisites. Square emphasizes that even though the soft opening is a test run, guests will form opinions and share them. Your staff must be trained to engage with each table conversationally and thank guests for participating.

Every team member should know the menu inside and out. Square advises that staff tastings should occur before the soft opening so every server can describe and recommend dishes with genuine knowledge.

Phase 3: Tweaking

After each soft opening event, review every aspect: menu items, wait times, kitchen workflow, front-of-house service flow, and technology systems. This is the entire point. If you are not making changes between events, you are wasting the soft opening.

Document what went wrong, what went right, and what needs adjustment. Then actually make the adjustments before the next event or the grand opening.

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Timeline: How Long Should Your Soft Opening Last?

WebstaurantStore presents two approaches, and the right one depends on your concept, budget, and tolerance for risk.

The Three-Day Strategy

DayFormatAudience
Day 1Cocktail hour with appetizersFriends, family, local business owners
Day 2Breakfast and lunch serviceExpanded guest list
Day 3Dinner serviceFull test of peak operations

This compressed timeline works best for operators who want rapid feedback cycles and are confident in their preparation. You get quick data, make quick fixes, and move to the grand opening while momentum is fresh.

The One- to Two-Week Strategy

Events are spread across multiple days, beginning with exclusive friends-and-family nights, expanding to local business owners, and finally opening selected meal periods to the public. According to WebstaurantStore, this approach allows more time to identify and fix issues between events.

This works better for complex operations — fine dining, large-format restaurants, or concepts with extensive menus — where there is more to test and more that can go wrong.

The Gap Between Soft and Grand Opening

Both Square and WebstaurantStore agree on one critical point: keep the gap between your soft opening and grand opening short. A few days to one week is ideal. Buzz dissipates quickly. If you wait too long, you lose the word-of-mouth momentum that the soft opening generated.

Building Your Guest List

A typical soft opening invites approximately 100 people per night, according to WebstaurantStore, staggered in time slots to simulate realistic service flow. Do not pack the house on night one. You are testing capacity, not proving it.

Three Tiers of Guests

Tier 1 — Friends and Family: They are your most forgiving audience. They will give you honest feedback without destroying you on social media if the risotto takes 40 minutes. Start here.

Tier 2 — Local Business Owners: Building relationships with neighboring businesses creates a referral network and B2B opportunities (catering, corporate events, lunch regulars). Invite them on day two or three.

Tier 3 — Community Leaders and Influencers: These guests generate word-of-mouth marketing. They should come when your team has already worked out the worst kinks — not on night one.

Stagger arrival times across 30- to 60-minute windows. If you invite 100 people at 7:00 PM, you will overwhelm the kitchen and learn nothing useful except that you cannot serve 100 people simultaneously.

Every source in the archive agrees on this point: do not serve your full menu at the soft opening. A limited menu gives your kitchen a fighting chance and lets you identify problems with specific dishes.

According to Square, the soft opening menu should feature a simple selection of distinctive dishes that still showcases your restaurant’s identity. You are not trying to impress guests with range. You are trying to execute a handful of dishes flawlessly under pressure.

WebstaurantStore outlines three menu approaches:

ApproachProsCons
Full menuComprehensive testingHarder to isolate problems, higher waste
Signature dishes onlyShowcases uniqueness, focused executionMay not test kitchen versatility
Limited selection across eventsMost operators’ preferred path; test different items each nightRequires multiple events

The third approach — testing a limited selection across multiple events — gives you the most useful data. Serve different sections of your menu on different nights. Track which dishes take too long, which generate complaints, and which get compliments.

Pricing Models: Free, Discounted, or Full Price?

This is one of the most debated decisions in soft opening planning. All three approaches have merit, and the right choice depends on your budget and goals.

Option 1: Free Meals

The most effective approach for generating detailed, honest feedback. When guests are not paying, they are more likely to tell you the truth about the undercooked salmon.

The downside: cost. You are absorbing the full food cost plus labor for every cover. Square also notes that staff wages may need to be higher during free-meal events because tip income drops significantly.

Option 2: Discounted Pricing

The middle ground most operators choose. You offset some costs while still creating a sense of goodwill. According to WebstaurantStore, servers should communicate regular prices to guests so they tip based on the full value of the meal, not the discounted amount.

Option 3: Full-Price Service

The most economical approach for the operator. You are essentially running a normal service with a curated guest list. To encourage candid feedback, Square recommends offering complimentary drinks, appetizers, or small perks as thank-you gestures.

Which Should You Choose?

ModelBest ForBudget ImpactFeedback Quality
Free mealsMaximum feedback, community goodwillHigh costHighest
DiscountedBalancing cost and goodwillModerate costGood
Full priceBudget-conscious operatorsMinimal costAdequate with perks

If your budget allows it, at least one free or heavily discounted event generates the most valuable feedback. You can run subsequent events at a discount or full price.

Collecting Feedback That Actually Helps

Hosting a soft opening without a structured feedback system is like running an experiment without recording the results. According to WebstaurantStore, written feedback through comment cards or digital forms provided with the check is the most effective method.

What to Ask

Keep it specific. Do not ask “How was everything?” You will get “Great!” every time. Instead, ask targeted questions:

  • How long did you wait before being greeted?
  • Rate the temperature and presentation of your entree (1-5)
  • Was the noise level comfortable for conversation?
  • What would you change about the experience?
  • Would you recommend this restaurant to a friend?

Motivating Completion

Offering coupons or return-visit incentives motivates guests to complete feedback forms and generates more detailed responses, according to WebstaurantStore. A “20% off your next visit” card stapled to a comment card costs you almost nothing and drives two outcomes: useful feedback and a return visit.

Informal Feedback

Train your staff to gather conversational feedback at each table. Not scripted questions — genuine engagement. “What did you think of the short rib?” is better than “Was everything okay?”

From Soft Opening to Grand Opening

The soft opening is the rehearsal. The grand opening is opening night. Everything you learned during the soft opening should feed directly into your grand opening plan.

Timing

Keep the gap short — a few days to one week. Use that time to implement the changes your soft opening revealed. Do not schedule your grand opening before your soft opening is complete. You need to know what to fix first.

Building Momentum

According to Square, the grand opening should combine your refined operational experience with marketing momentum. Leverage the positive word-of-mouth generated during the soft opening through:

  • Social media marketing — share behind-the-scenes content from the soft opening, teaser posts, countdown announcements
  • Influencer partnerships — invite local food bloggers and influencers who attended the soft opening to share their experience
  • Local community engagement — connect with neighborhood organizations, business associations, and local press

Grand Opening Checklist

  • All soft opening issues resolved
  • Menu finalized based on testing feedback
  • Staff debriefed and retrained on problem areas
  • POS and payment systems confirmed working
  • Marketing materials distributed (social, email, local press)
  • Opening-day staffing at full capacity with backup
  • Inventory stocked based on actual consumption data from soft opening
  • Reservations managed to avoid overwhelming the kitchen
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Common Mistakes to Avoid

Based on TouchBistro’s analysis of common opening mistakes and the soft opening sources, here are the pitfalls that derail launches:

Inviting too many people. Overwhelming your kitchen and staff on night one teaches you nothing except that chaos is chaotic. Start with a manageable number and scale up.

Skipping staff training. According to TouchBistro, inadequate staff training is one of the top mistakes new restaurants make. Creating comprehensive onboarding materials before opening — including written instructions and training sessions — sets employees up for success. The soft opening is not the place to start training.

Running the full menu. Your kitchen has never operated under real conditions. Give them a limited menu they can execute well, then expand.

Not collecting feedback. If you do not have comment cards, digital forms, or a structured way to gather opinions, you are relying on memory and anecdotes. Neither is reliable.

Waiting too long between soft and grand opening. Buzz has a short shelf life. WebstaurantStore recommends keeping the gap to a few days or one week at most.

Ignoring the data. If your soft opening reveals that the kitchen cannot handle more than 60 covers per hour, do not book 80 for your grand opening. Respect what the data tells you.

The Bottom Line

A soft opening is not optional — it is the final stress test that separates a smooth launch from a chaotic one. Plan it with the same rigor you applied to your business plan. Match the format to your concept, build your guest list in tiers, limit the menu, collect structured feedback, and keep the gap to your grand opening short.

According to Square, the goal is to generate positive word-of-mouth momentum that carries into your grand opening. But that only happens if the soft opening itself goes well. Invest the time, budget, and effort to make it a genuine preview of what your restaurant will become — not a dress rehearsal where nothing works.

→ Read more: Restaurant Grand Opening Marketing: The Complete Playbook for a Successful Launch

→ Read more: Restaurant Opening Timeline: From Concept to First Customer

→ Read more: Customer Feedback and Surveys: Turning Guest Opinions Into Improvements

Your grand opening gets one shot. Your soft opening is how you earn the right to make it count.

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