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Tech Stack for Bars and Pubs in 2027

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Direct Answer

The 2027 bar-and-pub stack runs on Toast POS ($69-$165/mo plus 2.49%+ swipe) wired to BeerSAVER draft monitoring ($99/mo per system, $999 install), BevSpot inventory ($80/mo), Patronscan ID scanners ($75-$200/mo per device), 7shifts scheduling ($34.99-$76.99/mo per location), QuickBooks Online Plus ($110/mo) and an Untappd for Business digital tap list ($75-$100/mo).

If you only buy one thing first, buy BeerSAVER — draft shrinkage is the single biggest leak in a bar P&L and the meter pays for itself inside 90 days.

Why Bars and Pubs Operate Differently

Bars are not restaurants with a liquor license. The unit economics flip the other way: alcohol is 75-80% of revenue instead of 25%, food (when it exists) runs at 30-35% cost while liquor runs 18-22% cost if poured tight and 28-35% if not, and the single largest controllable loss is not food spoilage but draft beer shrinkage — kegs vented, foam pours, over-pours, comps, and outright theft.

A 15.5-gallon half-barrel yields 124 sixteen-ounce pints in theory and 95-105 pints in practice without a flow meter. At a $7 pint that gap is $133-$203 per keg, every keg.

This is why the bar stack is operationally inverted from a typical full-service restaurant stack. The POS matters, but the meter on the beer line matters more. The reservation system barely exists for most neighborhood pubs because walk-in conversion is the entire game.

Labor is brutal — bartenders are tipped employees on $2.13-$10.50 federal/state minimums with tip credits, which means scheduling, tip pooling, and tip-out reporting are compliance landmines that an ordinary scheduler will not handle. And the door is a legal exposure no restaurant ever faces: serve one minor or one obviously drunk patron and the dram-shop suit ends the business.

Three operator-role specifics drive the 2027 stack:

Core Stack

The 2027 bar-and-pub operator runs seven systems. Each one has a job no other system can do.

1. POS — Toast or SpotOn ($0-$165/mo software, 2.49%-2.99% + $0.15 per swipe). Toast's base Starter Kit is $0/mo with higher card-not-present rates; the Core plan is $69/mo and most full-service bars land on Toast Essentials at $165/mo once you bolt on KDS, online ordering, and gift cards.

Real all-in monthly Toast cost for a $50K-card-volume bar is $1,500-$2,500/mo between software, processing, and hardware financing. SpotOn undercuts Toast on processing for high-volume bars and includes built-in reservations and loyalty — Restaurant Basic runs $0/mo for software with 1.99% + $0.25 interchange-plus for qualified merchants.

2. Draft Monitoring — US BeerSAVER ($99/mo monitoring, $999+ install per system). This is the highest-ROI line item in the whole stack. BeerSAVER puts a flow meter on every draft line, pipes the pour data into a cloud dashboard, and shows you per-bartender, per-shift, per-tap variance.

The vendor advertises a 3-month payback, and that is conservative — a 12-tap bar pouring 4 kegs per tap per week recovers $6,000-$10,000 of annual shrinkage that previously vanished into "foam." Alternative: SteadyServ (handles keg-level inventory with RFID, $199-$399/mo for a 12-tap bar).

3. Liquor & Inventory Counts — BevSpot or WISK ($80-$345/mo). BevSpot starts at $80/mo (annual contract required) and is the right answer for a single-location pub doing weekly inventory. WISK.ai is $165-$345/mo depending on tier and adds Bluetooth scale integration that lets you weigh open bottles to the gram — variance reports get scary-accurate.

Backbar is the free-tier fallback ($0-$50/mo) for a brand-new bar with no budget.

4. Door / ID Verification — Patronscan ($75-$200/mo per device, $1,500-$3,000 hardware). Patronscan Guard is the standard countertop unit; Guard+ adds forensic-grade fake-ID detection and is what late-night and club operators run. Per-device subscription is $75-$125/mo for Guard, $150-$200/mo for Guard+.

Patronscan also maintains a shared troublemaker flag across thousands of partner venues — kicked-out patrons get flagged at the next bar's door, which is worth the price tag alone. Alternative: Servall Biometrics IDvisor Smart, similar price point.

5. Scheduling & Tip Compliance — 7shifts ($34.99-$76.99/mo per location). The Entree plan at $34.99/mo covers up to 30 employees and handles tip pooling, tip-out math, and labor-cost-against-sales overlays from Toast. The Works at $76.99/mo adds unlimited employees, performance tracking, and 7shifts Tip Payouts (daily digital tip distribution — bartenders get tipped out to a card the same night, which kills the late-night cash-drawer headache).

Free plan exists for under-20-employee shops but lacks the Toast integration.

6. Accounting — QuickBooks Online Plus ($110/mo as of May 2026). Plus is the right tier for a bar because of class tracking (split P&L by liquor / beer / wine / food / NA), inventory tracking on bottle SKUs, and budget vs. Actual reporting.

Up to 5 users. Pair with Restaurant365 ($459-$589/mo) only if you cross 3+ locations — single pubs do not need R365's overhead.

7. Beer Menu & Loyalty — Untappd for Business ($899-$1,199/year, ~$75-$100/mo). Untappd's Essentials tier is $899/year (capped at 20 non-beer items, 5 users); Premium is $1,199/year with unlimited items, API access, and the Wine-Searcher database. The Untappd platform also drives discovery — 9M+ users get push notifications when a rare beer hits your tap list.

BeerMenus is the cheaper alternative at $29-$69/mo.

Optional eighth system for reservations-driven bars: SevenRooms at $499-$900/mo per venue with zero per-cover fees, or OpenTable at $149-$449/mo + $1.50/cover for higher-volume cocktail rooms.

flowchart TD A[Customer at Door] -->|ID Scan| B[Patronscan Guard+] B -->|Approved + Age| C[Bartender Station] B -.->|Banned/Underage| X[Refuse Entry] C -->|Pour Order| D[Toast POS Terminal] D -->|Beer Pour Command| E[BeerSAVER Flow Meter] E -->|Volume Telemetry| F[BeerSAVER Cloud Dashboard] D -->|Liquor Sale| G[BevSpot Inventory] D -->|Hourly Sales| H[7shifts Labor Dashboard] D -->|Daily Z-Report| I[QuickBooks Online Plus] G -->|Variance Report| I H -->|Payroll Export| I F -->|Shrinkage Alert| J[GM Phone] H -->|Schedule Push| K[Bartender Phone] D -->|Tap List Update| L[Untappd for Business] L -->|Discovery Push| M[Untappd App Users] M -->|Walk-In Traffic| A

Real Operators

Barcelona Wine Bar (Barteca Restaurant Group, 19 locations across the U.S.): runs Toast for POS with custom integrations into their wine inventory, 7shifts for scheduling, and SevenRooms for reservations and CRM. Their wine program (650+ bottles) lives in a custom BTG inventory system layered on top of Toast, which is the kind of edge case that pushes you past BevSpot.

The Lola (Nashville, single-location cocktail bar): publicly references SpotOn as their POS, BevSpot for liquor inventory, and Resy ($249-$899/mo) for reservations because the cocktail menu drives a reservation-first model.

Mikkeller Bar (San Francisco, San Diego, NYC + international): beer-program-centric chain that runs Untappd for Business Premium as the source of truth for their 40-tap rotating list, Toast for POS, and BeerSAVER-style flow metering on every line.

Logan's Pub Group (Pacific Northwest, 4 locations): runs Lightspeed Restaurant ($69-$399/mo) instead of Toast — Lightspeed remains popular with neighborhood pubs because of its bolt-on iPad-first simplicity. Pairs with WISK for liquor variance and Homebase ($24.95-$99.95/mo) instead of 7shifts.

Buffalo Wild Wings (corporate-owned + franchise, 1,200+ locations): runs an enterprise stack — NCR Aloha POS, Restaurant365 for accounting, HotSchedules (Fourth) for labor, and proprietary draft-monitoring at the corporate level. Not a model for an independent, but illustrates the ceiling.

Integration

The bar stack is POS-centric — every other system either feeds the POS or reads from it. The integration map that actually works in 2027:

The two integrations that break most often: Toast → QuickBooks (Toast occasionally double-posts on month-end), and BevSpot → POS (mid-keg keg-swaps don't always reconcile, and you have to manually mark a keg "kicked" in BevSpot).

Failure Modes

1. Buying Toast hardware and then leaving on the default 2.99% + $0.15 processing rate. Toast aggressively defaults bars to higher card rates. A $1.5M-revenue bar leaves $7,500-$15,000/yr on the table by not negotiating to 2.49% + $0.15 or moving to interchange-plus pricing.

Renegotiate at the 12-month renewal or threaten the SpotOn 1.99% quote.

2. Skipping BeerSAVER because the install seems expensive. The $999-$2,500 install pays back in 8-14 weeks at any bar pouring more than 20 kegs/month. Operators who skip it eat $15,000-$40,000/yr in draft shrinkage they cannot see.

3. Letting bartenders count inventory. This is the cardinal sin. BevSpot or WISK only works if a non-bar-staff manager counts weekly. Bartenders counting their own bottles is how the variance disappears.

4. Running 7shifts without integrating tip-out automation. A bar with manual tip pools loses 3-6 hours/week of bartender close time and exposes the owner to FLSA tip-credit violations. 7shifts Tip Payouts ($1.50/tip-out + processing) makes the close 10 minutes instead of an hour.

5. Using Patronscan as a "checkbox" instead of an enforcement system. The flag-list integration only works if the door staff scans every ID, every time, including patrons who look 40. Bars that selectively scan get sued under dram-shop because the scanner record proves the bar checked some IDs but not the one that caused the incident.

6. Trying to run a bar on QuickBooks Online Simple Start ($35/mo). Simple Start cannot handle class tracking and tops out at one user. Bars without class tracking cannot answer the question "is the cocktail program making money?" — and 80% of new cocktail programs lose money.

Budget

Three realistic 2027 spend tiers for the bar-and-pub stack:

Solo / single-location neighborhood pub ($600K-$1.2M revenue):

Growth / 1-3 locations ($1.5M-$5M revenue):

Multi-unit / 4-10 locations ($6M-$20M revenue):

30 / 60 / 90 Day Rollout

flowchart LR A[Day 0: Open or Switch] --> B[Days 1-30: POS + Door] B --> C[Days 31-60: Inventory + Beer Monitor] C --> D[Days 61-90: Labor + Books + Menu] B -.- B1[Toast install/menu build] B -.- B2[Patronscan at door day 1] C -.- C1[BeerSAVER line install] C -.- C2[BevSpot first count] D -.- D1[7shifts integration + tip pool] D -.- D2[QBO chart of accounts + class tracking] D -.- D3[Untappd tap list live]

Days 1-30 — POS live, door legal. Get Toast or SpotOn stood up, menu built, comp/void buttons locked down to manager PINs, and Patronscan at the door from night one. These are the two non-negotiables. Train every bartender on POS modifier logic (rocks, neat, double, splits) and every door host on the Patronscan flag list.

Days 31-60 — Stop the leaks. Schedule BeerSAVER install (2-3 day cooler downtime per system) and run the first 30-day pour-variance report. Onboard BevSpot or WISK with a real opening inventory count done by the GM. Lock the weekly count cadence — Sunday close or Monday open, never bartender-counted.

Days 61-90 — Tighten labor and accounting. Integrate 7shifts with the POS so labor-as-% -of-sales is live. Build out QuickBooks Online Plus with class tracking by liquor / beer / wine / food / NA / merchandise. Push the live tap list into Untappd for Business and turn on push notifications.

By Day 90 the GM should have a single Monday morning report: weekly sales, liquor variance %, draft variance %, labor %, and prime cost.

FAQ

Q: We're a 6-tap neighborhood pub doing $800K. Is BeerSAVER worth $99/mo? Yes. Even at 6 taps and modest volume (15 kegs/month total) you're losing $1,500-$2,500/month in unbilled pours, foam, and over-serving. BeerSAVER pays back in 6-10 weeks.

Q: Toast keeps pushing us to their payroll and Toast Tips Manager. Do we need it? Probably not if you already use 7shifts. Toast Payroll is competitive ($25-$30/mo + $4-$8/employee) but most bars prefer Gusto ($49/mo + $6/employee) or ADP RUN for the W-2 + tip-credit reporting depth. 7shifts already handles the tip-pool math.

Q: Can we run Square instead of Toast? Yes — Square for Restaurants ($60/mo + 2.6% + $0.10) is a legitimate cheaper alternative for a single-location bar. Square loses to Toast on KDS depth, bar-tab management, and inventory integrations. If you have food and a kitchen, Toast wins.

If you're a cocktail bar with minimal food, Square is defensible.

Q: How do I know my Patronscan paid for itself? Two metrics: fake-ID catches per month (industry average is 3-12 at a busy bar — each one is a potential $10K+ dram-shop exposure avoided) and banned-patron flags at the door (Patronscan publishes the shared troublemaker list).

If you go a full quarter with zero catches, your bartenders are not running every ID through the scanner.

Q: Reservations or no reservations? Neighborhood pub: no. Cocktail bar with a chef-driven food program: yes — SevenRooms if you can afford $499+/mo, Resy ($249/mo entry) if you cannot. The wrong answer is OpenTable for a bar — the per-cover fees are designed for full-service restaurants and torch margin on $9 beer covers.

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