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    Go out or stay in? Mother’s Day brunch at home beats restaurant reservations

    Al Punto Hoy from ANASTACIO ALEGRIABy Al Punto Hoy from ANASTACIO ALEGRIAabril 28, 2026No hay comentarios5 Views
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    Go out or stay in? Mother’s Day brunch at home beats restaurant reservations
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    Go out or stay in? Mother’s Day brunch at home beats restaurant reservations

    More than 3 out of 4 Americans plan to dine out this Mother’s Day, making it the busiest day of the year for restaurants. Behind that staggering number is a holiday tradition that has become more stressful, more expensive and less meaningful than the occasion deserves.

    The appeal is understandable. Mother’s Day comes with one unwritten rule: Mom does not cook. Restaurants have been cashing in on that rule for decades. The problem is that millions of families showing up for brunch during the same four-hour window does not produce the relaxed, celebratory morning anyone had in mind.

    The numbers behind the nation’s busiest dining day

    Mother’s Day and restaurant dining have become nearly inseparable. Surveys consistently show nearly 8 in 10 Americans dine out on Mother’s Day, with roughly 43% using a restaurant to celebrate in some form.

    For restaurants, the volume is immediate and measurable: full-service restaurants generate 52% higher revenue on Mother’s Day than on an average Sunday, with 14% more transactions and average ticket sizes running 34% higher.

    And, the Mother’s Day rush falls primarily within the brunch window, which accounts for more than 53% of all Mother’s Day bookings. OpenTable shows the heaviest traffic falling between 10 a.m. and noon. The entire country, it seems, has the same plan.

    Getting a table is the first challenge

    The reservation process for Mother’s Day has become an ordeal in itself before the day even arrives. OpenTable data shows that 29% of families have had to panic-book within 24 hours of the holiday, and use of the platform’s “Notify Me” reservation alerts jumped 36% year over year as diners scrambled for cancellations. Most of the bookings were made at least four days in advance, which means anyone who hasn’t already locked in a table is competing for whatever is left in a very thin field.

    And then there are the moms, almost half, who have to book their own Mother’s Day meal. That’s not the experience most families want to create. The same research found that 44% of moms say having someone else take the lead on decisions is what makes Mother’s Day feel most special. Handing mom the phone to find her own table is not quite the gift anyone intended.

    The real cost of the holiday rush

    A reservation is just a reservation; it’s not a promise that you’ll dine at that exact time. Mother’s Day brunch runs on a tight rotation, and when the 10 a.m. table lingers over their third mimosa, the 11:30 table waits. The 1 o’clock table waits longer. Restaurants aren’t doing anything wrong, and they cannot move hundreds of families through a dining room in four hours without somebody getting the short end of the timeline.

    The financial reality adds another layer: more than half of Americans planning to dine out on Mother’s Day cite overpriced menus as a top frustration, and 47.8% will spend $25 to $50 per person. Many restaurants replace their standard menu with a prix-fixe option on the holiday, eliminating a la carte flexibility while adding a premium that families didn’t budget for when they made the reservation weeks earlier. Over a third of Americans dining out for Mother’s Day spend more than $75 per person, a pretty hefty amount for a family of four or five.

    Brunch at home is the better gift

    There’s a better way to spend the day. Skip the reservation and make brunch at home. Someone else does the planning and the cooking while Mom sits back and enjoys it.

    Cooking at home takes less effort than most people expect. That $50-per-person restaurant brunch costs far more than what you’ll spend in your own kitchen, and you get to choose dishes Mom actually loves. Prep a breakfast casserole the night before and bake it in the morning while she opens her gifts.

    Make a quiche the day before and serve it at room temperature. Set out a mimosa bar with a couple of juices, add fresh fruit and a simple cheese board, and the table comes together with very little work.

    You can sit a little longer, talk a little more and go back for another chocolate chip muffin or bloody mary. Mom can relax in her own chair, coffee in hand, and enjoy her family without the noise and crowd of a restaurant. That’s a good Mother’s Day.

    Lucy Brewer is a professional writer and fourth-generation Southern cook who founded Southern Food and Fun. She’s passionate about preserving classic Southern recipes while creating easy, crowd-pleasing dishes for the modern home cook. Lucy currently lives in Augusta, Ga.

    Copyright © 2026 The Washington Times, LLC.

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