
How to Hire a Bartender: Bartender Jobs Guide
The essential steps on how to hire a bartender who elevates your bar. Screening criteria, bartender interview questions, and more to find the perfect addition to your bar or restaurant team.
Isabelle HahnAuthor

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The bar is a well-oiled machine. Actually, it’s multiple creative, dedicated, service-oriented individuals who are always on their feet.
Hiring the right bartender makes all the difference in providing an exceptional experience. The best bartenders make you feel at ease. They know your customers, and oftentimes, they have their own regulars.
When hiring a bartender, restaurant owners and managers want to ensure their chosen candidate meets all their expectations and fits into their restaurant family. This is easier said than done, as more than half of restaurant owners cite hiring staff as the top challenge faced by their restaurants.
Building out a plan to hire your new bartender makes that challenge easier.
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How to Hire a Bartender
First, know who you’re looking for.
What is a bartender?
Social, creative, service-oriented, physical. A bartender is all of these things at once.
A bartender mixes and serves drinks to patrons, directly or through waitstaff. They serve nightclubs, music venues, craft cocktail bars, fine dining, small restaurants, pubs, chains – you name it.
A bartender is also responsible for the bar itself, making sure it is well-stocked for service and ordering or restocking any necessary supplies if something runs out, making sure the bar is clean during and after service.
According to Toast research, restaurant employees (46%) are motivated by making money and supporting their lifestyle — while 18% of restaurant employees are motivated by career development and growth within the restaurant industry.
The easiest way to hire a fantastic bartender is to know who you’re looking for.
Define Your Needs
Hiring a bartender for a small/medium chain looks slightly different than hiring a bartender for a nightclub. Here’s what to consider when identifying what you need in this position:
Schedule: Does your bar/restaurant close at 2 a.m., and closing takes until 4:30? Or does the restaurant take last call at 10:30 p.m. and out by 11? How many days of the week? Is this a seasonal position? The majority (56%) of restaurant employees said they accepted their most recent restaurant job because of the flexible schedule.
Salary range: What can you afford to pay a new employee? What does the tipping structure look like?
Service: Quick service, full service, full bar or not.
Experience: How many years of experience are you looking for in restaurant work and/or bartending?
Culture: How can you build the most efficient, effective team? Consider ways to bring new perspectives and points of view into your team.
Create an Effective Bartender Job Posting
A typical job posting has:
Job details such as position, location, position type (full-time/part-time), and salary range
A description of the role, the restaurant, and what you’re looking for
Information on who to contact
Write a Detailed Job Description
To attract the right candidates, you must have a well-written job description with the skills necessary to excel.
Since you’ve already defined your needs, this part should be easy. Write out in a few sentences what you’re looking for.
Here’s an example we found on LinkedIn:
“In search of bartender for high-volume restaurant and craft cocktail bar program in Charlotte, North Carolina. This position is ideal for someone with a creative mind and the drive to create unique cocktails based on seasonal ingredients. Should have at least 3 years of bartending experience.
Duties include:
Ordering
Maintaining supplier relationships