Comparison guide · last reviewed Mar 2026
Next Order vs Square
Square is beloved for simplicity and speed. Next Order goes deeper on restaurant operations. Multi-service workflows, own-driver delivery and loyalty that matches how venues earn repeat visits.
Workflow depth
Multi-service
counter + table + delivery + bookings on one record
Loyalty
Tied to POS
rewards earn against real tickets, not a separate list
Own drivers
Built in
dispatch boards and ETAs, not an app marketplace
The verdict, upfront
Pick the platform that fits your operation
Square wins for solo operators and small teams who want to be live this week. Next Order wins for restaurants running counter, phone, dine-in, web and own-driver delivery on the same record.
Pick Square if
- You are a solo operator or small team that wants to be selling on Square hardware this week
- Your model is mostly counter or dine-in with simple payments and no multi-service complexity
- You also want appointments, invoicing or banking-adjacent tools alongside the POS
- You prefer transparent entry-tier pricing and a low training burden for new staff
Pick Next Order if
- You run several guest journeys at once. QR dine-in, counter pickup, phone, web, first-party delivery. On the same POS
- You sell direct online and want to keep that margin instead of paying a take rate
- You run own-driver delivery (or want to) and need dispatch, zones and tracking on the same screen as the POS
- Your loyalty programme rewards visit behaviour, not just email captures
Comparison matrix
Direct ordering
Next Order
Branded restaurant ordering with subscription pricing oriented around your margin on owned channels.
Square
Square Online suits many small venues; restaurant-specific merchandising and order channels may need extensions, evaluate menu complexity and channel mix.
Commission model
Next Order
No marketplace-style take rate on your direct Next Order storefront when set up as your owned channel.
Square
Square charges processing on card payments; software fees vary by product tier, transparent, but not “restaurant-only” pricing. Model effective rate vs your ticket.
Own-driver delivery
Next Order
Dispatch, zones and tracking for first-party delivery teams integrated with POS and guest profiles.
Square
Square integrates with delivery partners; many small venues use third-party couriers. For in-house fleets, compare driver tools and visibility in a demo.
Loyalty & marketing
Next Order
Visit-based loyalty, vouchers and campaigns on the same profile as POS and ordering.
Square
Square Marketing and loyalty are approachable for small venues. Square wins ease of use for simple programmes; complex restaurant promos may hit limits sooner.
Table management
Next Order
Reservations, floor and coursing designed around full-service alongside takeaway.
Square
Square for Restaurants covers many table-service needs; peak-scale venues should validate coursing, tabs and multi-kitchen flows.
Multi-location
Next Order
HQ-style controls for menus, permissions and reporting aimed at restaurant groups.
Square
Square scales to multi-location with dashboards; enterprise restaurant groups sometimes outgrow default templates, confirm reporting and permissions for your org chart.
Pricing transparency
Next Order
Subscription-led quotes with clear software scope for restaurant modules.
Square
Simple public pricing for many of its small-business products, excellent clarity at small scale; enterprise deals may bundle differently.
Hardware flexibility
Next Order
Supported restaurant hardware paths with bundles tuned to kitchens and counters.
Square
Square hardware is polished and tightly integrated, great when you buy in; less ideal if you need niche hardware outside supported lists.
Support model
Next Order
Restaurant-focused teams across AU, US and UK with paths for groups.
Square
Large support base and self-serve content, strong for DIY operators; premium support tiers exist for higher volume.
| Topic | Next Order | Square |
|---|---|---|
| Direct ordering | Branded restaurant ordering with subscription pricing oriented around your margin on owned channels. | Square Online suits many small venues; restaurant-specific merchandising and order channels may need extensions, evaluate menu complexity and channel mix. |
| Commission model | No marketplace-style take rate on your direct Next Order storefront when set up as your owned channel. | Square charges processing on card payments; software fees vary by product tier, transparent, but not “restaurant-only” pricing. Model effective rate vs your ticket. |
| Own-driver delivery | Dispatch, zones and tracking for first-party delivery teams integrated with POS and guest profiles. | Square integrates with delivery partners; many small venues use third-party couriers. For in-house fleets, compare driver tools and visibility in a demo. |
| Loyalty & marketing | Visit-based loyalty, vouchers and campaigns on the same profile as POS and ordering. | Square Marketing and loyalty are approachable for small venues. Square wins ease of use for simple programmes; complex restaurant promos may hit limits sooner. |
| Table management | Reservations, floor and coursing designed around full-service alongside takeaway. | Square for Restaurants covers many table-service needs; peak-scale venues should validate coursing, tabs and multi-kitchen flows. |
| Multi-location | HQ-style controls for menus, permissions and reporting aimed at restaurant groups. | Square scales to multi-location with dashboards; enterprise restaurant groups sometimes outgrow default templates, confirm reporting and permissions for your org chart. |
| Pricing transparency | Subscription-led quotes with clear software scope for restaurant modules. | Simple public pricing for many of its small-business products, excellent clarity at small scale; enterprise deals may bundle differently. |
| Hardware flexibility | Supported restaurant hardware paths with bundles tuned to kitchens and counters. | Square hardware is polished and tightly integrated, great when you buy in; less ideal if you need niche hardware outside supported lists. |
| Support model | Restaurant-focused teams across AU, US and UK with paths for groups. | Large support base and self-serve content, strong for DIY operators; premium support tiers exist for higher volume. |
Illustrative comparison; Square product names and bundles vary by region, confirm on a live account review.
Restaurant operational depth
Square shines at getting you productive quickly. Next Order invests in workflows that persist when you add a second order channel or a fifth site.
Square for Restaurants covers a wide span of venues. Where teams hit friction is often at the intersection of complex menus, multiple kitchens and high-volume delivery, places where purpose-built restaurant routing, driver dispatch and loyalty redemption rules need to behave under stress. Next Order is not “more features for the sake of it”; it is fewer compromises when the business is fundamentally a restaurant platform, not a side business attached to a reader.
Own-driver delivery and loyalty
Two areas where Square's simplicity meets hard trade-offs.
Own-driver delivery
If you outsource everything to marketplaces or gig couriers, Square’s partner network may be enough. If you run even a small in-house team, you need live dispatch and customer ETAs on the same ticket as the kitchen. Exactly what Next Order is built for. Model the difference with the commission savings calculator.
Loyalty
Square makes it easy to start simple programmes, huge win for time-poor owners. Next Order targets operators ready to tie points, tiers and vouchers to channel mix and visit frequency without exporting CSVs every Monday. If your programme is mostly punch-card simple, Square may feel faster. If it is strategic, test both.
Multi-service operations vs small-business simplicity
The best product is the one your team will run correctly on a Saturday night.
Square’s simplicity is a genuine advantage, complex software that staff abandon is worthless. Next Order aims for the same clarity in the POS while carrying richer context in the back office for groups that cannot afford order chaos between dine-in and delivery. If you are one location with one order channel, Square may be the rational pick. If you are already juggling three modes, centralise deliberately.
Implementation differences
Time-to-value vs depth-of-fit.
Next Order
Structured onboarding: menu workshops, hardware checklist, training paths for managers and drivers. Heavier than “plug in a reader”. by design for operators levelling up, with clearer role controls and rollout checks once a second site or second order channel is in play.
Square
Fast self-serve setup with optional services. Excellent when you want to trade consulting time for speed. Multi-site or franchise rollouts may add custom project layers.
Switch with confidence
Coming from Square
The switch plan, not the switch speech
Many operators start on Square and outgrow it. The Next Order switch is built around honouring what Square got right (fast onboarding) while moving you onto a deeper restaurant platform without service drama.
See the full switch planNo closed days to switch over
Testing on quiet sessions, then flip when you sign off. Service runs on your current system until the new one is proven.
You keep your data
Menu, customers and order history brought across from a PDF, your current provider, or a CSV. Admin access handed over before go-live, not held back.
An onboarding specialist for week one
Not a generic support queue. The same person who mapped your menu sits with your team through the first Friday of trading.
Reuse the hardware that works
iPads, Android terminals, kitchen displays and thermal printers all attach on day one. Buy new only if something is at end-of-life.
Frequently asked questions
What operators ask us before they sign.
Is Square “too simple” for restaurants?
For many cafés and small venues, Square is the right trade-off: fast setup, familiar hardware, clear pricing. Complexity shows up at higher cover counts, multi-service operations and when loyalty needs to mirror how restaurants reward guests, not only email blasts. If your menu has deep modifiers, multiple kitchens or high-volume delivery, validate those paths in a live demo before you assume the ceiling. Simplicity that staff use beats a dense feature matrix nobody adopts.
When does Square win?
Square wins when you are a very small operation that values simplicity above all else, you need the team productive on day one without a multi-week configuration project. It wins when you want to start accepting payments immediately with minimal setup friction: order a reader, activate an account, take your first card today. Food trucks, pop-ups and single-counter venues with minimal hardware needs often fit Square’s polished devices and approachable small-business pricing better than a full restaurant-platform bake-off. Square also wins when you want adjacent products, appointments, invoicing, banking, under one platform without stitching five vendors together for basics.
When does Next Order win?
Next Order wins when restaurant operations are the business: dine-in plus delivery plus pickup with one guest record, own-driver margin, and loyalty that survives a busy Friday service. It fits when you have outgrown punch-card programmes and need tiers, vouchers and campaigns tied to channel mix without exporting CSVs every Monday. If you are already juggling several order channels or planning multi-site expansion, centralising deliberately beats accumulating another bolt-on.
Can we start small with either vendor?
Yes, but ask what “expand later” costs in data transfer, retraining and contract minimums before you sign. Next Order is designed so you are not penalised for adding delivery or a second concept later, with one guest profile across modes. Map your twelve-month roadmap in the sales process so you do not aim for week-one simplicity alone if month six needs dispatch, HQ reporting or franchise templates.
See depth without the bloat
Walk through POS, ordering, loyalty and delivery with your menu. We will show where Next Order earns its place.