Head-to-Head
OpenTable vs Tock
OpenTable for the breadth of restaurants; Tock for tasting menus and the splurge tier.
The Verdict
OpenTable for the breadth of restaurants; Tock for tasting menus and the splurge tier.
OpenTable is the largest booking network with 50,000+ restaurants. The model is reservation-only — you book a table, you arrive, you pay at the restaurant. Free for diners; reliable for breadth.
Tock is the booking platform built for fine-dining tasting menus — the model is prepaid (you pay the deposit or the full menu cost when booking, much like buying a concert ticket). The platform handles the reservation logistics that high-tasting-menu restaurants need. Used by Eleven Madison Park, Alinea, The French Laundry, El Celler de Can Roca, and most three-Michelin-star rooms in North America.
Which One for Which Occasion
| Occasion | Editorial Pick |
|---|---|
| Booking everyday dining | OpenTableBigger network, free model, no friction. |
| Booking a tasting-menu splurge | TockThe platform is engineered for this format; cancellation policies are clearer. |
| Last-minute night-of | OpenTableMore restaurants accept last-minute; Tock cancellations are pre-paid and rare. |
| Three-Michelin-star booking | TockMost US three-stars use Tock exclusively. |
| Loyalty rewards | OpenTableTock has no loyalty program; OpenTable's point system compounds. |
Price Comparison
Both free for the booking layer; Tock requires the deposit or full prepayment at the time of booking, refundable per restaurant policy.
How to Book
Best practice: have accounts on both. OpenTable for breadth; Tock for the splurge-tier tasting-menu rooms — particularly North American three-stars.