Chart showing where consumers spend Food Away from Home dollars based on their income. Data from Mar. 2022 to July 2025.

As income increases, where people spend their Food Away from Home (FAFH) dollars shifts. Lower-income households (under $35,000) direct nearly half of their FAFH spending to fast food, while higher-income groups (above $200,000) allocate just 28% to fast food and 64% to restaurants.

This pattern is consistent with service as what economists call a “normal good”: as income rises, consumers demand more of it. Thus higher-income consumers spend more money and a bigger share of their food budget on FAFH, and also spend more money and a bigger share of their FAFH budget in restaurants that provide more service.

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Published:
August 21, 2025