Hospitality

Quick-Service Restaurants

Crew members work split shifts spanning lunch and dinner peaks with breaks governed by state law.

Quick-Service Restaurants sits inside the broader Hospitality sector. Crew members work split shifts spanning lunch and dinner peaks with breaks governed by state law. ShiftClock catalogs 1 shift-work occupations in this category, including Quick-Service Crew Member. Industry-level hiring pressures and overtime trends are summarized in this Hospitality workforce analytics report.

Common schedule patterns used here include Split Shift. Each pattern carries different overtime, break, and shift-differential implications, which is why workers in the same industry can see meaningfully different pay stubs even when the base wage is similar.

Across the occupations in this directory the median hourly wage ranges from $14.20 to $14.20, with an average near $14.20 per hour. These figures are anchored to published U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics OEWS bulletins and adjusted for the shift-work context. They are starting points, not legal advice — actual pay depends on the collective bargaining agreement, state law, and the specific employer. Detailed methodology is described in this latest staffing model whitepaper.

If you work in Quick-Service Restaurants, the most useful next step is to open the occupation page that matches your title, then jump to the schedule pattern your employer uses. From there ShiftClock will surface the right calculator for your overtime situation and break policy.

Operators planning new shifts in this industry can use the schedule directory to compare staffing models side by side. Continuous-process work usually demands 12-hour rotations to limit handovers, while service-heavy operations often blend split shifts with compressed workweeks. The right choice trades off coverage, fatigue, and overtime cost — and ShiftClock makes those tradeoffs explicit through real numbers rather than rules of thumb.

Occupations tracked in this industry

Schedule patterns used here

  • Split Shift — Two work blocks separated by an unpaid break of three or more hours, often used in transit, hospitality, and food service.