The Sun (Malaysia)

Solo dining on the rise

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PEOPLE are eating alone more than ever, with 30% of European restaurant visits in 2016 made by solo diners.

Thanks in part to their constant companions – mobile phones, tablets and other assorted digital devices – consumers have fewer hang-ups about dining on their own and are content to use their phones as their dinner companion, say analysts from The NPD Group.

Last year saw a 4% rise in solo restaurant visits compared to the year previous, representi­ng €11 million (RM52.86 million) in sales, or nearly one-quarter of all market sales.

The report also notes that while overall restaurant visits across Europe dropped 3% over the last six years, the solo dining trend gained momentum, adding the equivalent of 138 million more visits between 2010 and 2016, and marking a rise of 9%.

Breakfast is the meal time where consumers are most likely to eat on their own (50% of the solo dining demographi­c).

That drops to 30% at lunch, when many workers nosh at their desks or head to their nearest fast-food joint, and 15% for dinner, traditiona­lly the most leisurely meal time when asking for a table for one may be more intimidati­ng.

The report also found that 40% of solo diners come from the 18-49 demographi­c.

Analysts attribute the growing trend to several factors, ranging from our increasing­ly harried, nomadic, and mobile lifestyles, and the subsequent blurring of dedicated meal times.

Regionally, the report found that the UK and France have both seen a 10% rise in solo dining over the last six years, while Germany, Italy, France and England are also in line with global trends, with 30% of restaurant visits made by solo diners.

The European country to buck the trend is Spain, where the habit has yet to take substantia­l hold. – AFPRelaxne­ws

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