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ONLINE REVIEWS STUDY · SWITZERLAND

Men complain,
Women recommend.

Four guest types in hospitality. An independent study of 22,000+ restaurant reviews across 100 Swiss restaurants shows who writes and why.

22,216

reviews analysed

100

Swiss restaurants

4

Guest Archetypes

§ 01 — What we got wrong

Everything you think you know about how men and women leave restaurant reviews is probably wrong.

The most common assumption is that women are more expressive, writing longer and more detailed reviews, while men stick to a star rating and move on. Our data tells a different story.

173

Men write longer reviews.

On average 173 characters per male review — versus 152 for women.

53,6%

Men review with text more often

53.6% of male reviews include written text, compared to 49.4% of female reviews.

0,02

At premium restaurants, almost identical.

Men 4.59 stars, women 4.61. A difference of just 0.02. Gender differences disappear at premium.

§ 02 — The four guest types

Four guests every restaurant should know.

Across 22,000+ reviews, four recurring patterns emerge — consistent across all restaurant categories and price segments.

№ 01 / 04 ♀ RECOMMENDER
The Enthusiast

The Enthusiast

Predominantly female · Most active in quick-service and casual dining
77.1 %
5-star reviews
56.7 %
mention food
+50 %
review requests

Your most valuable reviewer. She visits, she notices, and she shares. Food is her primary focus. Generous with praise, but not uncritical. Responds particularly well to direct review requests via QR code, NFC or direct link.

→ What this means
The easiest positive review to earn — but only if you ask. Bring the platform to her, instead of hoping she finds you on Google.
№ 03 / 04 ♂ CRITIC
The Value Calculator

The Value Calculator

Predominantly male · Present across all categories
13.7 %
mention price (vs. 10 % ♀)
20 %
of negative ♂reviews about price
58.2 %
premium reviewers

Value is the only topic that is primarily mentioned negatively. The Value Calculator shows up across every price segment. At fast-food, he expects a simple deal: quick, affordable, consistent. At premium, he expects the price to justify every detail.

→ What this means
Value complaints are rarely just about price. Make value visible: through clear communication, presentation and attention to detail, before it becomes a complaint.
№ 02 / 04 ♂ CRITIC
The Service Judge

The Service Judge

Predominantly male · Most vocal at fast-food.
26.4 %
mention service negatively (fast-food)
61.5 %
of fast-food reviewers are male
12 %
of fast-food reviews are 1-star

Clear expectations, precise criticism. Service and staff are his primary triggers, especially at fast-food. What frustrates him is being treated poorly, kept waiting, or receiving something that does not match what was ordered.

→ What this means
Friendliness, speed and attentiveness are not nice-to-haves. They determine whether a guest leaves a 1-star review. Monitor service sentiment regularly.
№ 04 / 04 ⚖ Regular
The Loyal Advocate

The Loyal Advocate

Gender-balanced (50/50) · Most active in casual dining and premium
4.48 ★
average vs. 4.17 for first-timers
76.9 %
give 5 stars
−2.5×
fewer 1-star reviews than first-time visitors

The guest every restaurant wants more of. Returns, remembers, and almost always rates positively. Gender plays no role here: 49.9% male, 50.1% female. Loyalty neutralizes the differences that show up so clearly elsewhere.

→ What this means
Your most reliable source of positive reviews. They do not need to be convinced, they need to be asked. A timely request after a return visit is all it takes.

§ 03 — The data behind the archetypes

The U-shape of gender distribution.

Men dominate at both ends of the price spectrum, fast-food and premium. Women dominate the middle ground.

Where financial stakes are highest — a disappointing fast-food visit or a significant spend at premium — men are more likely to write. In quick-service and casual dining, women are more likely to write.

Gender split by restaurant category

Fast-Food
♂ 61.5 %
38.5 % ♀
Quick-Service
♂ 42.7 %
57.3 % ♀
Casual Dining
♂ 41.9 %
58.1 % ♀
Premium
♂ 58.2 %
41.8 % ♀
Men
Women

What they write about

Food
♂ 49.7 %
56.7 % ♀
Service
♂ 47.3 %
51.5 % ♀
Ambience
♂ 18.4 %
21.7 % ♀
Value — ♂ dominate
♂ 13.7 %
10.0 % ♀
Men
Women

The data behind the archetypes.

How men and women review differently — what they write about, how detailed, and on which platform. And what really sets the loyal regular apart from the first-time visitor.

Ratings: women are more generous, men more polarized

Overall, female reviewers rate more positively: 4.60 stars on average compared to 4.46 for men. Even more telling is the difference at the extremes. Men are 72% more likely to leave a 1-star review, with 4.3% of male reviews being 1-star compared to 2.5% of female reviews. Women give 5-star reviews more often: 77.1% versus 71.1% for men.

Average rating by category and gender

Average rating by category and gender

Fast-Food ♂ 3.79 ★ · ♀ 3.95 ★ · Δ 0.16
3.79
3.95
Quick-Service ♂ 4.62 ★ · ♀ 4.72 ★ · Δ 0.10
4.62
4.72
Casual Dining ♂ 4.58 ★ · ♀ 4.65 ★ · Δ 0.07
4.58
4.65
Premium — almost identical ♂ 4.59 ★ · ♀ 4.61 ★ · Δ 0.02
4.59
4.61
Total — all categories ♂ 4.46 ★ · ♀ 4.60 ★ · Δ 0.14
4.46
4.60
Men
Women
Scale 0–5 ★

The rating gap is almost entirely driven by fast-food. At premium restaurants, gender differences nearly disappear. Both genders arrive with high expectations and similar satisfaction levels, and the quality of the experience neutralizes any difference.

Men give 72% more 1-star reviews. 4.3% of male reviews are 1-star, compared to 2.5% for women.

At fast-food, 1 in 8 male reviews is 1-star. 12% of male fast-food reviews are 1-star, compared to 8.4% for women.

What they write about: food, service, ambiance and value

We have already seen the topic distribution. More interesting is when a topic appears. Does it appear more in positive or negative reviews? Three very different patterns emerge.

Food is the one topic women mention equally in positive and negative reviews. (57.5 % of ♀-5-star reviews, 47.5 % of ♀-1-2-star reviews). Food matters to them regardless of how the visit went overall.

Value tells a completely different story. For men, it is nearly twice as likely to appear in a negative review as a positive one. (20 % vs. 10.9 %). It is the only topic that is primarily mentioned negatively.

Ambience stands out for the opposite reason. When mentioned by either gender, it is almost always in a positive review. Nobody writes about ambiance to complain. They write about it to recommend.

How much they write: men go into more detail

Despite the common assumption that women are more expressive, men actually write longer reviews. When a male reviewer writes text, he averages 173 characters versus 152 for women. Men are also slightly more likely to write a text review at all. (53.6 % vs. 49.4 %).

Avg. Characters per review
♂ Men
173
♀ Women
152
Reviews including text
♂ Men
53.6 %
♀ Women
49.4 %

Where they write: Google dominates, but women respond to requests more

Both genders rely heavily on Google, but the split is more pronounced for men. (68.7 % vs. 60.3 %). The most notable difference is on IWantTo.Review, a review collection tool. Women are 50% more active on this platform (21.9 % vs. 14.6 %). Women are significantly more responsive to a direct invitation to share their experience.

Just Eat (formerly EAT.ch), part of the Just Eat Takeaway.com group, is used slightly more by men (11.0% vs 9.6%). TripAdvisor shows no gender difference at all, at 1.9% for both.

Platform split by gender

Google ♂ 68.7 % · ♀ 60.3 %
68.7 %
60.3 %
IWantTo.Review — ♀ +50 % ♂ 14.6 % · ♀ 21.9 %
14.6 %
21.9 %
Just Eat ♂ 11.0 % · ♀ 9.6 %
11.0 %
9.6 %
TripAdvisor — equal ♂ 1.9 % · ♀ 1.9 %
1.9 %
1.9 %

First-time visitors vs. repeat guests: the loyalty effect

The data behind The Loyal Advocate reveals one of the most actionable findings in this study. Across all categories, first-timers are 2.5× more likely to leave a 1-star review than repeat guests.

Type A

First-time visitor

average rating 4.17 ★
give 5 ★ 67.7 %
give 1 ★ 11.3 %
Type B

Repeat Guest

average rating 4.48 ★
give 5 ★ 76.9 %
give 1 ★ 4.4 %

First-timers at fast-food average just 2.71 stars, with 43% leaving 1-star reviews. Converting a first-timer into a repeat visitor is the single most powerful thing a restaurant can do for its online reputation.

§ 04 — Key findings

Ten findings every restaurant owner should know.

01
Men write longer reviews.
On average 173 characters per male review versus 152 for women.
03
Women rate more generously overall.
Women 4.60 ★ · Men 4.46 ★ on average.
05
At premium restaurants, the difference disappears.
Men 4.59 ★, women 4.61 ★ — almost identical.
07
Women mention food more than men.
56.7 % ♀ vs. 49.7 % ♂ — the biggest topic gap in the study.
09
Women respond more to review requests.
+50 % more active on IWantTo.Review (21.9 % vs. 14.6 %).
02
Men leave text comments more often.
53.6 % of male reviews contain written text, compared to 49.4% of female reviews.
04
Men give 1-star reviews 72% more often.
4.3 % of ♂ reviews are 1-star, compared to 2.5 % for ♀.
06
Men dominate at both ends of the price spectrum.
Fast-Food 61.5 % ♂, Premium 58.2 % ♂. Women hold the middle.
08
Value drives complaints.
It appears 2x more often in negative than positive reviews, and men mention it more often.
10
Repeat guests = reputation engine.
2.5× fewer 1-star reviews than first-time visitors (4.4 % vs. 11.3 %).

§ 05 — Methodology

22,216 reviews, 6 months, 4 segments.

An independent analysis by re:spondelligent.

01
Collection
Reviews from 100 Swiss restaurants — fast-food, quick-service, casual dining and premium — between November 2025 and April 2026.
02
Classification
Identification of distinct guest types and behavioral patterns, consistent across all categories and price segments.
03
Topic analysis
Four topics analyzed: Food, Service, Ambience and Value. Each measured separately in positive (4–5 ★) and negative (1–2 ★) reviews.

Would you like to know which guest types shape your reviews?

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