drive-through with speaker and menus at a British McDonald's restaurant in
Edinburgh, Scotland A drive-through restaurant generally consists of: • A
speaker and
microphone for customers to place their orders • A speaker and microphone or wireless
headset system for employees to hear the customer's order (when a speaker is used) • A
trigger pad beneath the concrete to activate the microphone and headset • Monitoring of the driveway and window through a
CCTV system to monitor traffic flow and any criminal action that may occur at the window such as an
armed robbery • One or more free-standing signs listing the menu items, called a
menu board • Newer drive-throughs feature a
LCD or
LED display within the speaker system in order to show the full order and total cost to avert order errors through miscommunication; the entire menu board may also be a display, freeing employees of the responsibility of switching out promotions, adding or removing items, and making pricing changes. At many restaurants, a secondary display featuring the total is placed directly next to the order window to provide the amount to customers, usually paying with cash. • Windows where employees interact with customers by processing the customer's payment and giving them their order. Most drive-throughs have either one window serving both functions or two windows, with the first being used for payment and the second used for retrieving the order, depending on overall restaurant traffic. • Most restaurants have marked parking spaces just beyond the last window. If there is a significant delay in an individual customer's order (e.g. a special order) or congested line traffic, an employee may direct that customer to park in this area, clearing the drive-through lane for the next customer and preventing knock-on delays to other customers. When the order is ready, an employee hand-delivers the order to the customer. This service therefore occasionally has some similarities to
drive-in service, but only during peak periods. shop. location in
Moncton, New Brunswick, Canada Drive-through designs differ from restaurant to restaurant; however, most drive-throughs can accommodate a
queue of four to six passenger cars or trucks simultaneously. Most drive-through lanes are designed so the service windows and speaker are on the driver's side of the car, for example, in
left-hand traffic (right-hand drive) countries such as the UK, Ireland, Australia, India and New Zealand, the windows will be on the right side of the drive-through lane, and vice versa in right-hand traffic (left-hand drive) countries such as North America and mainland Europe. There are a few drive-through lanes designed with service windows on the passenger side, but these lanes are few and usually confined to ordinance compliance situations, as they cannot be used easily by driver-only vehicles. Coffee is often sold through drive-through only coffee shops.
Service time According to QSR's 2024 annual survey,
Taco Bell was the fastest fast-food chain in the United States regarding drive-thru service time, with an average wait of 194.16 seconds. This was significantly faster than the overall average of 244.86 seconds. Other chains with relatively fast service times included KFC (206.41 seconds) and McDonald's (271.81 seconds).
Chick-fil-A, known for its long lines, had an average service time of 298.27 seconds, but also had an additional wait time of 181.15 seconds, resulting in a total customer wait of approximately 479.42 seconds (8 minutes).
History In 1921,
Kirby's Pig Stand introduced the drive-in restaurant, in which
carhops delivered meals. In 1931, a California Pig Stand franchise introduced a drive-through service that bypassed the carhops. The first identified drive-through restaurant was established in 1947 at
Red's Giant Hamburg located in
Springfield, Missouri. A year later in 1948, Harry and Esther Snyder of the
In-N-Out Burger chain built a drive-through restaurant, featuring a two-way speaker system that Harry Snyder invented himself earlier that year. By the 1970s, drive-through service had replaced drive-in restaurants in the United States. The first
McDonald's drive-through was created in 1975 in
Sierra Vista, Arizona, near
Fort Huachuca, a military installation, to serve military members who were not permitted to get out of their cars off-post while wearing
fatigues. The original McDonald's was closed down and demolished in 1999 and a new McDonald's replaced it. In 1987, Bob Charles pioneered the concept of the double vehicle drive-through. Charles, a McDonald's franchisee based in Boulder, Colorado, was the first to design and implement this innovation, which resulted in significantly increased per-unit volume. In 1981,
Max Hamburgers opened Northern Europe's first drive-in in
Piteå. Another early drive-through restaurant in Europe, a McDonald's drive-through, opened at the
Nutgrove Shopping Centre in Dublin, Ireland, in 1985. In the US, drive-throughs account for 70% of McDonald's business and the average drive-through order is fulfilled in under 3:30. Outside of the US, McDonald's drive-throughs are variously known as "McDrive" and "AutoMac". In 2010, the Casa Linda, Texas, franchise of McDonald's opened a drive-through/walk-up-only store with no indoor seating although it has a small patio with tables. ==Drive-through banking==