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Home»Technology
Klearly restaurant payments platform interface in use at a busy European restaurant

Klearly secures €12M to build Europe’s top restaurant payments

13 January 2026 Technology No Comments5 Mins Read
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Klearly lands €12 million to power next‑generation restaurant payments

Amsterdam-based fintech startup Klearly has raised €12 million to accelerate its ambition to build Europe’s most comprehensive restaurant payments and data platform. The fresh capital will be used to deepen product development, expand across key European markets, and strengthen integrations with existing hospitality systems.

A new operating layer for restaurant payments

Klearly positions itself as more than a traditional payment service provider. The company is building an infrastructure layer that connects point-of-sale (POS) systems, online ordering, table payments, and customer data into a single, unified environment for restaurants.

Instead of forcing venues to juggle multiple payment terminals, delivery apps, and loyalty tools, Klearly aims to centralise all payment flows and surface them through a data-rich dashboard. This allows restaurant operators to track revenue by channel, optimise menu pricing, and better understand guest behaviour in real time.

Solving fragmentation in hospitality fintech

Across Europe, restaurants often rely on a patchwork of providers for card acquiring, QR code payments, online reservations, and delivery platforms. Data is scattered, reconciliation is manual, and fees are difficult to track. This fragmentation erodes margins in an industry already operating on thin profitability.

Klearly is targeting this pain point by offering a single integration layer that connects to existing POS vendors and payment partners. By aggregating transactions into one system of record, the platform promises cleaner reconciliation, clearer visibility on payment fees, and faster access to cash flow insights.

How Klearly’s platform works

The core of Klearly’s product is an integrated payments and analytics stack designed specifically for the hospitality sector. While technical details remain largely under wraps, the company’s value proposition can be broken down into three pillars:

1. Unified payment acceptance

  • Support for in‑store card payments, contactless, and mobile wallets.
  • QR code and pay‑at‑table experiences for faster table turnover.
  • Integrated online ordering and delivery payments, ensuring consistent reporting across channels.

2. Real‑time data and insights

  • Consolidated transaction data from multiple systems in one dashboard.
  • Granular visibility into average ticket size, channel performance, and peak hours.
  • Tools to analyse menu performance and identify high‑margin items.

3. Operational automation

  • Automated settlement reporting and simplified accounting workflows.
  • Reduced manual reconciliation between POS, delivery apps, and payment providers.
  • APIs that allow larger restaurant groups to plug insights into their existing business intelligence stacks.

By combining payment processing with data analytics, Klearly is betting that restaurants will increasingly see payments not as a commodity, but as a strategic source of actionable information.

Why investors are backing restaurant‑focused fintech

The European hospitality sector is undergoing a rapid shift towards digital payments and data‑driven operations. The pandemic dramatically accelerated the adoption of QR menus, online ordering, and cashless payments, creating a new baseline for guest expectations.

At the same time, rising labour costs and inflation have pushed restaurant owners to seek tools that can protect margins and streamline operations. Platforms that can unlock even small percentage gains in efficiency or average order value are gaining strong traction with operators and investors alike.

Against this backdrop, a specialised platform like Klearly is well positioned. Rather than serving every retail vertical, the company is tailoring its payment flows, interfaces, and analytics specifically to restaurants, bars, and cafés. This vertical focus allows it to develop features such as table‑level reporting, cover counts, and shift‑based performance tracking that generic payment providers often overlook.

Expansion plans across Europe

With its new €12 million funding round, Klearly plans to scale beyond its Dutch home market and increase its footprint in major European hospitality hubs. The company is expected to prioritise countries with dense restaurant clusters and high adoption of cashless payments, such as Germany, the Nordics, the UK, and Southern Europe’s tourism‑driven cities.

The investment will also support the build‑out of local compliance and regulatory capabilities, a critical requirement in Europe’s fragmented financial landscape. Adhering to PSD2, local licensing regimes, and stringent data protection rules such as GDPR is essential for any fintech that aims to handle sensitive payment data at scale.

Deepening integrations and partnerships

Another core use of funds will be expanding Klearly’s ecosystem of integrations. The startup is expected to strengthen partnerships with leading POS vendors, reservation platforms, and delivery marketplaces to ensure restaurants can adopt its solution without ripping out existing systems.

By positioning itself as an interoperable layer rather than a closed system, Klearly aims to reduce friction in onboarding and make its platform attractive to both independent venues and multi‑site restaurant groups.

The competitive landscape in restaurant payments

The market for restaurant payments and hospitality tech is becoming increasingly crowded, with challengers and incumbents vying for control of the checkout experience. Large payment processors, POS companies, and neobanks are all pushing deeper into the sector with specialised offerings.

Klearly’s strategy hinges on owning the data layer and providing a rich set of analytics tools that go far beyond processing transactions. If it can demonstrate measurable improvements in metrics such as table turnover, average spend per guest, and labour productivity, the startup will be well positioned to secure long‑term contracts and defend its margins.

For restaurant operators, the rise of platforms like Klearly signals a broader shift: payments are no longer just about accepting cards, but about building an integrated digital backbone that connects the front of house, kitchen, and back office with real‑time financial intelligence.

With fresh capital in hand and a clear focus on Europe’s hospitality sector, Klearly now faces the execution challenge of scaling its technology, team, and partnerships fast enough to stay ahead in one of fintech’s most competitive verticals.

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