Compare

Grace vs SumUp.

SumUp is a brilliant card reader that grew a light till. If all you need is to take a payment cheaply, it is hard to beat. If you are an independent venue that needs to know your guests, it stops well short.

SumUp earned its place by making card acceptance cheap and simple — a £25 reader, a flat 1.69% per tap, no contract, no monthly fee. For a market stall, a coffee cart or a pop-up, that is exactly right. The question for a restaurant, bar or events space is different. Once you need reservations, a guest record, loyalty that survives a refund, marketing that drives repeat visits, and a till that ties to all of it, SumUp is a payments device with software bolted around it — not a hospitality platform.

How they compare

Side by side.

Pricing model1

Grace

£99 / £179 / £299 / Enterprise. Per venue, per month. Whole product on every plan. 0% Grace fee on in-venue card payments.

SumUp

No monthly fee on standard pay-as-you-go; 1.69% per in-person card payment (0.99% on Payments Plus at £19/month). POS Pro from £49/month. Readers from £25 +VAT. Online/links 2.50%.

SumUp keeps the original processing fee when you refund a card transaction — it is not returned. Matters most in deposit- and event-heavy venues.

What it is

Grace

A hospitality operating platform — reservations, guest CRM, EPOS, loyalty, marketing, WiFi, analytics and AI on one guest record.

SumUp

A payment processor that grew a light POS. Payments-first; everything else is thin or absent.

Reservations

Grace

Native booking widget on your domain, deposits, OTP-verified guest identity, service-aware availability, walk-ins, waitlists, host screen.

SumUp

None. SumUp has no reservation system.

Guest CRM

Grace

One record per guest across every channel. Behavioural tiers, dietary/allergy notes, marketing consent per channel, walk-in identification via WiFi.

SumUp

Knows the card, not the guest. Basic customer/contact capture only; no unified guest record.

Loyalty

Grace

Universal tiers, points on bookings and on spend, EPOS redemption, automatic reversal on refunded transactions — included.

SumUp

No native loyalty programme.

Marketing

Grace

Always-on email + SMS journeys, UK SMS from a venue-specific number, revenue attribution as the headline metric — included.

SumUp

None native. You would add a separate email/SMS tool.

EPOS depth

Grace

Native iPad EPOS with hash-chained audit trail, accrual accounting, native KDS, dual-attribution on sensitive actions.

SumUp

POS Lite/Pro covers a basic till, items and simple stock. Built for fast, simple service — not table-service workflow.

WiFi guest capture

Grace

Captive WiFi turns anonymous walk-ins into identifiable guests automatically.

SumUp

None.

AI

Grace

Grace AI as the primary operator interface — plain-English commands across every module.

SumUp

None.

Hardware

Grace

Bring your own iPad; pair your existing card reader or move to Mollie. No vendor hardware lock-in.

SumUp

SumUp readers/terminals; pay-as-you-go owned hardware (cheap and yours — a genuine plus at the smallest scale).

Target venue type

Grace

Independent UK table-service hospitality with a returning-guest base.

SumUp

Sole traders, market stalls, coffee carts, pop-ups, micro-businesses, counter service.

What Grace does

Specific to Grace, missing in SumUp.

A platform, not a payment device.

One guest record across reservations, EPOS, CRM, marketing, loyalty and WiFi.

  • Reservations, deposits and a host screen SumUp doesn't have
  • Loyalty and marketing in the box, not bolted on from other vendors
  • Native EPOS with audit and accrual accounting
  • One login, one record, one bill

Know your guests, not just the card.

SumUp sees a transaction. Grace sees a guest.

  • Walk-ins identified via the WiFi captive portal
  • Behavioural tiers assigned automatically
  • Visit history, preferences, consent per channel
  • Returning guests recognised on the host screen

Marketing and loyalty included.

Always-on journeys and universal loyalty tiers, on the same record as the till.

  • Welcome, win-back, birthday journeys ship by default
  • Revenue attribution back to bookings and covers
  • Points on bookings and spend, EPOS redemption
  • No separate subscriptions to stitch together

0% Grace fee on in-venue payments.

Keep your processor or use native Mollie. Grace doesn't take a cut.

  • Processing fees go to your provider, not us
  • Integrate SumUp itself if you want to keep it
  • No hardware lock-in to one card vendor
  • Predictable per-venue monthly price

Where SumUp leads

What they do that Grace doesn't (yet).

Honest reverse. If these matter to your venue, SumUp is worth looking at.

The cheapest, simplest start in the market

A £25 reader, 1.69% per tap, no monthly fee and no contract. For the smallest operations, nothing beats it on cost or simplicity, and Grace would be overkill. SumUp is the right tool when all you do is take a payment.

Owned hardware, no commitment

You buy the reader once and there is no monthly software cost on the standard plan. For seasonal, pop-up or very low-volume trading, that economics is hard to argue with.

Global and instant to set up

SumUp works in many countries and you can be taking payments within minutes of unboxing. Grace is UK-only by design and is a platform you set up, not a reader you switch on.

Customer fit

Two different venues.

Grace is built for…

Independent UK venues running table service with a returning-guest base — who need reservations, CRM, marketing, loyalty and EPOS to work as one, and want to actually know who comes back.

SumUp is built for…

Sole traders, market stalls, coffee carts, pop-ups and the smallest counter-service operations who need cheap, simple card acceptance and little else.

Common questions

Things operators ask before switching.

Claims verified as of June 2026. Competitor pricing and features change — we update this page as we notice changes worth noting. If you spot something stale, tell us.

Want to see Grace at work?

30 minutes, no slides, just the product running at a real venue.