Highest Paying Restaurant Jobs Slideshow

A good deal of what a deli clerk does is calculation: portioning and packaging salads, pricing meats per pound. In figuring a clerk's worth, too, there's a lot to weigh, including the shop's location, the quality of its products, and how much hands-on food prep is required of the clerk.

 

At a major chain, a deli clerk might start out making slightly more than minimum wage. A position at a gourmet grocery, on the other hand, can bring closer to $20 per hour. But the nicer the shop, the more divided the behind-the-counter jobs become, spawning specialized titles like cheese monger or butcher, which can vie for larger slices of profits.

Fast Food Cook: $7.57 — $10.98

For fry cooks, it's all about speed and stamina. In an industry that serves one in four Americans daily, fast food cooks flip, fry, and assemble meals at dizzying rates and volumes. To make this process possible, and to create dishes that are uniform in taste from store to store and state to state, most foods are prepped elsewhere in large factories so they can be made at local shops with the push of a button.

 

Training is minimal. So is pay. The mean hourly wage for a fast food cook in America is reported as $8.91 an hour. To supersize that, head to Massachusetts, which the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics lists as one of the top-paying states for fry cooks.

Busboy: $7.25 — $11 An Hour (Plus Tips)

When a complaint by George Costanza inadvertently caused the firing of a restaurant worker in a classic episode of Seinfeld called The Busboy, how much did the comment actually cost the entry-level employee?
 
On average, it seems the loss would have equaled the state's minimum wage requirement, which falls in the ballpark of $7.25 per hour. But depending on the candor of the wait staff, it could have been more. Busboys (and girls), who aid servers by clearing tables and refilling water glasses and bread baskets, are entitled to a cut of each day's tips.

Restaurant Manager: $30,480 — $80,410

How much is the person with the power to comp your bill actually compensated? The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics says an average of $52,220 annually. It also notes, however, that such pay is the result of shifts that run well beyond the eight-hour-a-day benchmark, and tasks that continually mount.
 
Depending on the staffing and scale of a restaurant, a manager's list of duties may include hiring and firing employees, overseeing schedules, payroll and other papers, ordering supplies and food, marketing, and customer service.

Dishwasher: $7.56 — $11.14 an Hour

Dishes aren't the stuff of dreams, but they'll often get you there. Many a fine chef — April Bloomfield of New York's The Breslin, The Spotted Pig, and John Dory, for one — has gotten a start in a kitchen wrangling sheet pans and dish racks.

 

Of course, moving beyond the sink isn't guaranteed. And the job — one of a high-functioning kitchen's most important — is often a thankless, dirty thing with little payoff, particularly when it comes to wages. The Bureau of Labor Statistics cites the mean hourly rate for a dishwasher as $8.98.

Bartender: $7.60 — $15.14 Plus Tips

When it comes to a bartender's earnings, there's a lot of variation at play: a bartender's personality can make a difference, but also how many drinks are doled, what kind, and where the drink goes down. A job at the bar in large city may bring in much more than a post at rural one (though that's not necessarily the case), and a spot at a hotel's well differs greatly from the same place at a club.

 

Cuteness factor — male or female — also helps. In New York City, most hotel bartenders belong to unions, meaning respectable — even impressive — wages, benefits, and tips. And so, though the Bureau of Labor Statistics claims that annual earnings for a bartender top out around $31,000, New York reports that a place at The Plaza's Oak Bar draws something more along the lines of $70,000.

Sommelier: $30,000 — $160,000 Plus Tips

Mostly seen in high-end restaurants and hotel dining rooms, sommeliers are ensured from the get-go a certain degree of prestige and pay. But specific qualifications, particularly the esteemed Master Sommelier certificate, up the ante in big ways.

 

While an inexperienced sommelier draws around $30,000, a Master Sommelier (of which there are only 112 in North America), earns more like $80,000 — even double that amount in some cases — for his or her ability to distinguish the many nuances of various wines and offer pairings. But there's a lot to pay in for that title before it will pay out. Master Sommelier courses and tests, for which there's only a 10-percent passing rate, cost hundreds of dollars a pop. Tasting all that wine doesn't come cheap either.

Sommelier: $30,000 — $160,000 Plus Tips

Mostly seen in high-end restaurants and hotel dining rooms, sommeliers are ensured from the get-go a certain degree of prestige and pay. But specific qualifications, particularly the esteemed Master Sommelier certificate, up the ante in big ways.

 

While an inexperienced sommelier draws around $30,000, a Master Sommelier (of which there are only 112 in North America), earns more like $80,000 — even double that amount in some cases — for his or her ability to distinguish the many nuances of various wines and offer pairings. But there's a lot to pay in for that title before it will pay out. Master Sommelier courses and tests, for which there's only a 10-percent passing rate, cost hundreds of dollars a pop. Tasting all that wine doesn't come cheap either.

Maître d’Hôtel: $28,000 — $45,000 Plus Tips

CareerBuilder reports the annual salary range of a maître d'hôtel, or maître d', as $28,000 to $45,000 annually. It can be assumed, however, that the rate is actually much higher. Time reports that about a century ago, the Waldorf-Astoria's famed Oscar Tschirky, or Oscar of the Waldorf, brought in $30,000 annually; that's $600,000 or more in today's dollars.

 

The job, which is often offset at small, affordable venues by headwaiters and hosts, involves overseeing wait-staff, reservations, and seating — and a good maître d' is in effect the public face of a restaurant.

Server: $7.54 — $14.41 Plus Tips

Take 20 percent of a $500 check and you've got an impressive portion for an evening's wages. Draw ten percent of a $7 bill and it's a different story. No doubt, the size and style of a restaurant has a big impact on a server's salary.
 
As New York Magazine notes, a waiter at a top spot in New York can clear upward of $50,000 annually for serving guests and doing light prep-work. Some waiters, at very high-end establishments (or at $5,000-a-bottle clubs) reportedly pocket two or three times that. But, of course, not every server is so fortunate. A 2011 report from the D.C.-based Economic Policy Institute revealed that many in the profession fall below the federal poverty line.

Sous-Chef: $33,088 — $111,020

According to a 2009 poll by StarChefs.com, the person in the second-in-command spot in the kitchen generally takes home $42,266 annually, and up to $50,150 in New York State. But the real payoff is in prestige, which sometimes affects the bottom line.
 
A venerable restaurant may offer their sous-chef less money, understanding that before long, the person in that role can run his or her own kitchen. Like pay, a sous-chef's work also varies greatly depending on the type of establishment. In a small set-up, a sous-chef may cook more than in a large, highly staffed kitchen where the role is more like that of a manager.

Pastry Chef: $33,000 — $70,000

Pastry chefs, it turns out, are literally raking in the dough compared to many other kitchen workers. According to a survey conducted by StarChefs.com, the profession saw a 5.7% average increase in salaries during 2009.
 
A pastry chef is said to make around $48,861 annually for creating a restaurant's distinct desserts and breads. That number increases significantly for pastry chefs at private clubs and organizations, who are reported to earn $61,167 per year. And the best state for the trade? Sunny Florida, which pays $55,000 on average. Sounds like a pretty sweet life in all aspects if you can land the job. Oh, and handle the long hours, which often start before dawn.

Executive Chef: $23,260 — ?

A kitchen's highest in command is also its highest paid. Based on a 2009 salary survey, StarChefs.com lists an executive chef's annual income as $79,402. That number rises to $85,685 for executive chefs who are also restaurant owners, and even higher for executive chefs working at a private facility. The latter make a reported $91,860 on average.

 

But as StarChefs.com also details, an executive chef's work runs long — on average 11 hours daily. The nature of that work changes from kitchen to kitchen. In a smaller restaurant, an executive chef's role is probably more hands-on than in a larger place with more staff. And as a recent article in The Daily Meal also makes clear, many executive chefs spend little time at a stove at all, working instead to build empires beyond a one-off restaurant. For those folks, including Wolfgang Puck and Jamie Oliver at the top, the pay is in the multi-millions.