How to Manage Staff Shortages in a London Restaurant
Staff shortages are one of the biggest challenges facing London restaurant owners today. Whether it’s a chef calling in sick on a Friday night, a sudden spike in covers, or the long-running hospitality recruitment crisis — gaps in the kitchen can bring even the best-run venue to its knees.
But the restaurants that thrive aren’t the ones that never face shortages. They’re the ones that know how to manage staff shortages in a London restaurant before they become a crisis. Here are the top tips from the team at Chef Staffing Solutions.
Build a Relationship With a Specialist Staffing Agency Before You Need One
The biggest mistake London restaurant owners make is calling a staffing agency for the first time at 4pm on a Saturday when they’re already two chefs down. By then, it’s a scramble.
The smarter approach is to register with a specialist chef recruitment agency like Chef Staffing Solutions before a crisis hits. That way, your venue details, kitchen setup, and preferred chef types are already on file — and when you call, we can move fast.
- Register your venue in advance — it takes under 5 minutes
- Brief us on your kitchen culture, menu style, and team structure
- Build a shortlist of pre-approved relief chefs for your venue
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Plan Your Rota Around London’s Seasonal Peaks
London hospitality has a very predictable rhythm if you know where to look. Mother’s Day, Easter weekend, the summer events season, Christmas parties — these dates fill up fast and strip the city’s available chef pool thin.
Smart restaurant owners plan their staffing needs 4–6 weeks ahead of major events, not the week before. CSS publishes a live hospitality events calendar so you can see exactly what’s coming and book cover in advance.
- Book temporary cover at least 2–3 weeks before peak dates
- Identify your highest-risk service days and plan around them
- Use quieter periods to trial temporary chefs for permanent roles
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Cross-Train Your Permanent Team
A kitchen where every chef can only work one station is a kitchen that falls apart the moment someone calls in sick. Cross-training your permanent team across multiple sections creates resilience that no agency can fully replace.
Even basic overlap — a sous chef who can cover pastry, or a CDP who can run the pass in a pinch — buys you time and options when the unexpected happens.
- Rotate junior chefs through different stations during quieter services
- Document station guides so temporary chefs can step in faster
- Incentivise multi-skilling with development opportunities
Use Temporary Chefs as a Try-Before-You-Hire Tool
One of the most underused strategies in London restaurant management is using temporary placements as a low-risk audition for permanent hires. When a relief chef impresses during a busy service, you’ve already seen them under real pressure — which tells you far more than any interview.
“Some of our best permanent hires started as relief chefs. You see exactly how they handle pressure before you commit.”
— Head Chef, Central London BrasserieCSS actively supports temp-to-perm transitions, and many London venues have built strong permanent teams this way.
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Don’t Underestimate Front of House — It Affects the Kitchen Too
Many London restaurant owners focus entirely on kitchen staffing, but FOH shortages create just as much chaos. Understaffed front of house leads to slower table turns, frustrated guests, and pressure on the kitchen pass that knocks the whole service off rhythm.
CSS doesn’t just supply chefs — we place experienced front of house staff, bartenders, and kitchen assistants too, so you can stabilise the whole operation in one call.
- FOH and kitchen shortages are often linked — address both together
- A strong floor manager can hold a shaky service together
- Bartenders and runners can be placed same-day with CSS
Have a Clear Absence Policy and Stick to It
Many London restaurants operate without a clear absence reporting procedure, which means managers find out about a no-show 20 minutes before service. A simple policy — chefs must call (not text) at least 4 hours before their shift — gives you time to arrange cover before the situation becomes critical.
- Set minimum notice periods for calling in sick
- Identify a single point of contact for all absence reports
- Keep your CSS account manager’s number saved and accessible to all managers
Retain Your Best People — It’s Cheaper Than Replacing Them
The most effective long-term strategy for managing staff shortages in a London restaurant is reducing staff turnover in the first place. London’s hospitality churn rate is high — but it isn’t inevitable.
Small investments in staff welfare, clear progression paths, consistent scheduling, and a positive kitchen culture make a significant difference to retention — and save you the cost and disruption of constant recruitment.
- Offer predictable rota patterns where possible
- Recognise and reward performance publicly
- Create clear development pathways from commis to CDP to sous chef
- Address toxic kitchen culture before it costs you your team
The Bottom Line on Managing Staff Shortages in a London Restaurant
Staff shortages will happen to every London restaurant at some point — the question is whether you’re prepared when they do. The owners and operators who handle them best share a few things in common: they plan ahead, they have trusted partners on speed dial, and they treat staffing as a strategic priority rather than an afterthought.
Chef Staffing Solutions exists precisely to support London’s hospitality businesses through these moments — with vetted, experienced staff available at short notice, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
“The venues that manage shortages best aren’t lucky — they’re prepared. And preparation means having the right people and the right partners in place before the crisis hits.”
— CSS Operations TeamShort-staffed? We can help — today.
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