What Is a Kitchen Order Ticket (KOT)?
Every dish that reaches a restaurant table starts life as one instruction to the kitchen.
A Kitchen Order Ticket, or KOT, is the order slip a restaurant creates to tell the kitchen exactly what to cook, for which table, and with which modifications. It moves an order from the service floor to the cooking station, and it is generated before the customer’s bill, whether it prints on a thermal roll at a Chennai tiffin counter or appears on a screen inside a Gurugram cloud kitchen.
The name sticks whether the ticket is paper or digital. A handwritten chit and a digital KOT sent from a POS are the same document doing the same job.
What Does a KOT Contain?
A KOT is not a free-form note. Whether printed or on a kitchen display system, the same fields show up because the kitchen needs each one to cook the right thing for the right table.
| Field on the KOT | What it tells the kitchen |
|---|---|
| KOT number | A running serial to track and reprint the order |
| Table or token number | Where the food goes, or the pickup token for takeaway |
| Order type | Dine-in, takeaway, or delivery |
| Item list with quantity | What to cook and how many plates |
| Modifiers and notes | “Jain”, “no onion”, “extra spicy”, “half plate” |
| Time stamp | When the order hit the kitchen |
Notice what is missing: no prices, no GST, no customer name. Those belong on the bill, not here. The kitchen has no reason to see the rupee value of a dish.
A KOT is not fixed once it prints, either. On a POS, a few standard actions keep it in step with a live table:
- New KOT the moment an order is placed
- Modify KOT when the table adds or swaps a dish
- Void or cancel KOT when an item is dropped, logged with a reason
- Transfer KOT when guests move to another table
KOT vs the Customer Bill
People new to restaurant operations often mix these two up. They are separate documents with separate jobs, and only one of them is a tax record.
| Aspect | Kitchen Order Ticket (KOT) | Customer Bill |
|---|---|---|
| Purpose | Tells the kitchen what to cook | Tells the customer what to pay |
| Who reads it | Chefs and kitchen staff | Customer and cashier |
| Shows prices | No | Yes, with GST |
| Legal status | Internal document | GST tax invoice |
| When created | The moment the order is placed | At the end, before payment |
One order can throw off multiple KOTs (one per kitchen station) but still close into a single bill. That link between the two is what a billing counter reconciles at settlement.
Kitchen Order Ticket Example
Note: this is an invented example for illustration only. The outlet, items, and figures are not real.
Picture a vegetarian family restaurant in Pune’s Aundh at 8:40 PM on a Friday. Table 12 places its order, and the POS prints this KOT for the kitchen.
The “Jain” note on the thali and the “less spicy” on the tikka are the whole point. Those two words are the difference between a happy table and a sent-back plate during the dinner rush.
Why the KOT Matters in a Busy Indian Kitchen
Speed and accuracy are the obvious wins, but the quieter benefit is the record. Every KOT carries a time stamp, so a manager can see that table 12 waited nine minutes for its dosas and the tandoor was the bottleneck, not the service. That is data you cannot pull from a paper chit tossed in a drawer at closing.
There is a control angle too. A KOT means nothing gets cooked without a logged order, which is how outlets cut pilferage and “friendly” free plates. Any food business needs an FSSAI licence to run in the first place, and a kitchen working entirely off logged orders keeps the kind of clean operational trail that makes any audit less stressful.
And the numbers stack up at scale. Across 1,00,000+ restaurants on Petpooja POSS, faster order placement and cleaner station routing are what let a busy outlet turn tables quicker on a packed Saturday, which is exactly what a high-footfall POSS customer like The Rameshwaram Cafe needs during peak hours.
Use the KOT System Restaurants Already Trust
Writing KOTs by hand works until the 8 PM rush, when three tables order at once and one chit goes missing behind the counter. That is where Petpooja POSS earns its keep. A server taps the order on the billing screen or captain app, and the system generates the KOT, routes each item to the right station, and keeps the running serial so nothing is lost or double-cooked. When the meal ends, the same order rolls into a GST bill without anyone re-keying a thing. For owners moving off paper, the automated kitchen workflow is usually the first thing that pays for itself.
Frequently Asked Questions
No. The KOT number tracks the order inside the kitchen, while the bill (invoice) number is the GST tax record for the customer. One bill can pull together several KOTs from the same table.
The server raises a void or cancel KOT, which flags the kitchen to stop or drop that item. On a POS this is logged with a reason and a time stamp, so cancelled dishes cannot quietly disappear from the day’s records.
No. A KOT is an internal kitchen document with no prices or tax on it, so GST rules do not apply to it. Those rules apply to the customer bill, which is the actual tax invoice.
Yes, and it often does. If a table orders starters, mains, and drinks, a POS can split them into separate KOTs routed to the cold section, the main kitchen, and the bar, so each station sees only its own work.
They do. Instead of a table number, the KOT carries a token or an order ID from the delivery app, but the kitchen still cooks from a KOT exactly as it would for a dine-in guest.
