Resmio
Free tierGerman restaurant reservation and guest management system
- Data residency
- EU only
- DPA available
- Yes
- Pricing
- Freemium
- Art. 9 data
- Not suitable
Who this tool is for
Industries
- Small restaurants testing online bookings
- Venues needing waitlist management
- Owner-run cafés and bistros
- Establishments preferring German hosting
Resmio is a German reservation and guest-management system covering online table bookings, digital menus and waitlist management. The startup is based in Berlin, with data hosted in Germany.
A free tier covers up to 100 covers per month, making it an accessible starting point for small restaurants testing online reservations. An AV-Vertrag is available for the data-processing relationship.
For owner-run German restaurants that want straightforward, locally hosted reservations without committing to an enterprise platform, Resmio is a focused, DACH-native option. It concentrates on front-of-house guest flow rather than full POS or fiscal functions.
Pros and cons
Strengths
- Free tier up to 100 covers/month
- Data hosted in Germany
- Berlin-based, DACH-native
- Focused reservation and waitlist features
- AV-Vertrag available
Trade-offs
- Free tier capped at 100 covers/month
- No POS or TSE cash functions
- Smaller startup than enterprise vendors
Where it sits with GDPR
Good fit for
- Guest data hosted in Germany
- AV-Vertrag available
- Berlin HQ simplifies processor due diligence
Think twice / not suitable for
- Guest contact data needs retention discipline
- Not designed for Art. 9 special-category data
Data protection note
Berlin HQ; Hosting in Deutschland; AV-Vertrag verfügbar.
Frequently asked questions
Is Resmio free?
Yes, a free tier covers up to 100 covers per month.
Where is Resmio data hosted?
Data is hosted in Germany, and an AV-Vertrag is available.
Does Resmio include a cash register?
No, Resmio focuses on reservations and guest management, not POS or TSE.
Where is Resmio based?
Resmio is a Berlin-based startup.
Reviews are written and reviewed by Eduardo personally. They describe what a tool does and where it sits with data protection, but they do not constitute legal advice.
