Paperchase Research

Dining Under Fire

UAE & KSA Restaurant Crisis Performance

In the first weeks of the Iran conflict, we tracked 55+ restaurants across two markets. What the data shows will reshape how operators think about resilience.

−26.2%
Portfolio-wide sales decline, year-on-year
Feb 21 – Mar 8, 2026 vs. same period 2025 · 55+ clients, UAE & KSA
−31.2% UAE Sales
−6.9% KSA Sales
+295.4% KSA Delivery Orders
+27.5% KSA Covers
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Context
The Window We're Measuring
The conflict escalated on Feb 28, inside an already compressed Ramadan period. The overlap matters for interpreting KSA's cover growth.
Iran conflict escalates
Feb 28
Ramadan 2026 (Feb 17 – Mar 18)
Comparison window (Feb 21 – Mar 8)
Conflict escalation (Feb 28)

Both countries are under direct military attack. The gap is not about safety. It's about what drives each market's restaurant economy.

Market Divergence
One Crisis. Two Very Different Outcomes.
Same external shock — but the structural drivers of each market produced radically different results across every metric.
United Arab Emirates
Sales−31.2%
Covers−14.4%
Spend per head−19.7%

Tourism-dependent. International guests fled or cancelled. Every metric moved in the wrong direction at once.

Saudi Arabia
Sales−6.9%
Covers+27.5%
Spend per head−27.2%

Domestic-demand-driven. Saudi families eating locally during Ramadan. Cover growth partly reflects extended Ramadan window.*

By the Numbers
The Damage, Metric by Metric
The UAE dropped across every measure. KSA held on covers but compressed heavily on spend per head. The divergence is the story.
UAE Sales
−31.2%
KSA Sales
−6.9%
UAE Covers
−14.4%
KSA Covers
+27.5%
UAE SPH
−19.7%
KSA SPH
−27.2%
The Offset
Delivery as Crisis Infrastructure

Among KSA operators with delivery in place, order volumes nearly quadrupled. Delivery was the only revenue channel that moved in the right direction during this period. For UAE operators without it: the question is no longer whether to build delivery capability, but whether you can afford not to.

Delivery cover data drawn primarily from KSA clients. UAE delivery included in portfolio sales but not split at cover level.

+145.9%
Delivery sales, year-on-year
+295.4%
Delivery order volume, year-on-year
Segment Analysis
Fine Dining vs. Fast Casual
The crisis did not hit all segments equally. Fine dining had a delivery offset. Fast casual did not.
Fine Dining
+14.7%
Covers (delivery offset + domestic concentration)
−33.8%
Spend per head
More guests, far less from each of them. The guest mix shifted: fewer international high-spenders, more domestic diners with different profiles.
Fast Casual
−32.4%
Sales
−29.7%
Covers
Hit on both sides. No delivery offset to absorb the shock, narrower margins, less capacity to weather a 30% volume drop.
"These shocks materially reduced inbound tourism, paused many regional events, and raised operating costs. Tourist covers fell sharply."
Ish Makda, CFO, LPM
What Operators Should Do Now
Five Immediate Actions
The crisis is ongoing. Operators cannot wait for stabilization. These are data-driven priorities.
01
Audit delivery as crisis infrastructure
Not as a growth play. As resilience. Delivery was the only consistent revenue offset in this data.
02
Map your tourism exposure
Segment covers by guest type. Know what percentage of revenue depends on inbound travel.
03
Diagnose SPH compression
Ramadan mix shift? Guest caution? Pricing issue? Each has a different operational response.
04
Build a disruption playbook
Communication plans, rapid delivery deployment, cost levers that don't damage the long-term business.
05
Benchmark your crisis data
You now have real downside performance data. Build it into your next budget cycle.
Methodology
How This Data Was Built
Dataset 55+ restaurant clients across UAE and KSA. Fine dining, fast casual, bars, and pub-style concepts in both markets. Weekly sales and covers data from Paperchase client accounts.
Comparison Window Feb 21 – Mar 8, 2026 vs. same period 2025. Ramadan 2026 overlaps 21 days of this window; 2025 overlaps 10 days. Data has not been normalized for this shift.
Data Scope Note Delivery cover data drawn primarily from KSA clients. UAE delivery included in portfolio sales but not split at cover level. This is not a census; it is the most granular crisis-period view available.
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Download: Dining Under Fire

What's inside the full report

Complete crisis-period analysis — operator-level data, full segment breakdowns, and frameworks you can act on this week.

  • Full weekly data breakdown, not just averages
  • Operator-level performance benchmarks (anonymised)
  • Delivery vs. dine-in split by market and segment
  • UAE fine dining deep-dive: where the SPH fell
  • KSA Ramadan-adjusted cover analysis
  • 12-month historical context for each metric
  • Five-step disruption playbook templates
  • What the best-performing operators did differently
"These shocks materially reduced inbound tourism, paused many regional events, and raised operating costs. Tourist covers fell sharply."
Ish Makda, CFO, LPM