Are restaurants closed on Mondays all over the UK?



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I have visited the UK (London, Reading, Swindon) several times so far. During my last trip to Swindon, I noticed that many restaurants are closed on Mondays.



Is this practice specific to Swindon or valid all over the UK?



Edit: Since Monday is not a common holiday in Turkey, it is not common for me either.







share|improve this question


















  • 18




    I don't even think it's specific to the UK. It's not uncommon for some restaurants to be closed Mondays in many western countries, including the US.
    – Zach Lipton
    Jun 6 at 8:51






  • 3




    @ZachLipton Probably it was not so obvious for me in large cities (especially in Germany), that's why I noticed in Swindon.
    – ahmedus
    Jun 6 at 9:27






  • 4




    It’s not specific to restaurants either, in many small cities especially, local shops, beauty salons, hairdressers etc may be closed on Mondays.
    – Traveller
    Jun 6 at 9:39






  • 2




    I have been in England and France many weekends, often staying into the next week and I have never gone hungry on the Mondays, but there is less choice there as well.
    – Willeke♦
    Jun 6 at 15:46






  • 3




    @reirab I just did a quick Yelp search for restaurants within a 5mi radius in San Francisco. Of the 2,745 places open for dinner on Friday night, 14% were closed Monday night and 20% closed Sunday night. Certainly chains and most counter service types of places are most likely to be open, but if I restrict it to $$$ and $$$$ restaurants (272 open Friday night), 38% are closed Monday nights and 31% closed Sunday nights. So it's somewhat common, but by no means universal—you're not going to starve on Mondays, and varies depending on the type of restaurant.
    – Zach Lipton
    Jun 7 at 8:22
















up vote
29
down vote

favorite
5












I have visited the UK (London, Reading, Swindon) several times so far. During my last trip to Swindon, I noticed that many restaurants are closed on Mondays.



Is this practice specific to Swindon or valid all over the UK?



Edit: Since Monday is not a common holiday in Turkey, it is not common for me either.







share|improve this question


















  • 18




    I don't even think it's specific to the UK. It's not uncommon for some restaurants to be closed Mondays in many western countries, including the US.
    – Zach Lipton
    Jun 6 at 8:51






  • 3




    @ZachLipton Probably it was not so obvious for me in large cities (especially in Germany), that's why I noticed in Swindon.
    – ahmedus
    Jun 6 at 9:27






  • 4




    It’s not specific to restaurants either, in many small cities especially, local shops, beauty salons, hairdressers etc may be closed on Mondays.
    – Traveller
    Jun 6 at 9:39






  • 2




    I have been in England and France many weekends, often staying into the next week and I have never gone hungry on the Mondays, but there is less choice there as well.
    – Willeke♦
    Jun 6 at 15:46






  • 3




    @reirab I just did a quick Yelp search for restaurants within a 5mi radius in San Francisco. Of the 2,745 places open for dinner on Friday night, 14% were closed Monday night and 20% closed Sunday night. Certainly chains and most counter service types of places are most likely to be open, but if I restrict it to $$$ and $$$$ restaurants (272 open Friday night), 38% are closed Monday nights and 31% closed Sunday nights. So it's somewhat common, but by no means universal—you're not going to starve on Mondays, and varies depending on the type of restaurant.
    – Zach Lipton
    Jun 7 at 8:22












up vote
29
down vote

favorite
5









up vote
29
down vote

favorite
5






5





I have visited the UK (London, Reading, Swindon) several times so far. During my last trip to Swindon, I noticed that many restaurants are closed on Mondays.



Is this practice specific to Swindon or valid all over the UK?



Edit: Since Monday is not a common holiday in Turkey, it is not common for me either.







share|improve this question














I have visited the UK (London, Reading, Swindon) several times so far. During my last trip to Swindon, I noticed that many restaurants are closed on Mondays.



Is this practice specific to Swindon or valid all over the UK?



Edit: Since Monday is not a common holiday in Turkey, it is not common for me either.









share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 2 days ago

























asked Jun 6 at 8:47









ahmedus

2,25241643




2,25241643







  • 18




    I don't even think it's specific to the UK. It's not uncommon for some restaurants to be closed Mondays in many western countries, including the US.
    – Zach Lipton
    Jun 6 at 8:51






  • 3




    @ZachLipton Probably it was not so obvious for me in large cities (especially in Germany), that's why I noticed in Swindon.
    – ahmedus
    Jun 6 at 9:27






  • 4




    It’s not specific to restaurants either, in many small cities especially, local shops, beauty salons, hairdressers etc may be closed on Mondays.
    – Traveller
    Jun 6 at 9:39






  • 2




    I have been in England and France many weekends, often staying into the next week and I have never gone hungry on the Mondays, but there is less choice there as well.
    – Willeke♦
    Jun 6 at 15:46






  • 3




    @reirab I just did a quick Yelp search for restaurants within a 5mi radius in San Francisco. Of the 2,745 places open for dinner on Friday night, 14% were closed Monday night and 20% closed Sunday night. Certainly chains and most counter service types of places are most likely to be open, but if I restrict it to $$$ and $$$$ restaurants (272 open Friday night), 38% are closed Monday nights and 31% closed Sunday nights. So it's somewhat common, but by no means universal—you're not going to starve on Mondays, and varies depending on the type of restaurant.
    – Zach Lipton
    Jun 7 at 8:22












  • 18




    I don't even think it's specific to the UK. It's not uncommon for some restaurants to be closed Mondays in many western countries, including the US.
    – Zach Lipton
    Jun 6 at 8:51






  • 3




    @ZachLipton Probably it was not so obvious for me in large cities (especially in Germany), that's why I noticed in Swindon.
    – ahmedus
    Jun 6 at 9:27






  • 4




    It’s not specific to restaurants either, in many small cities especially, local shops, beauty salons, hairdressers etc may be closed on Mondays.
    – Traveller
    Jun 6 at 9:39






  • 2




    I have been in England and France many weekends, often staying into the next week and I have never gone hungry on the Mondays, but there is less choice there as well.
    – Willeke♦
    Jun 6 at 15:46






  • 3




    @reirab I just did a quick Yelp search for restaurants within a 5mi radius in San Francisco. Of the 2,745 places open for dinner on Friday night, 14% were closed Monday night and 20% closed Sunday night. Certainly chains and most counter service types of places are most likely to be open, but if I restrict it to $$$ and $$$$ restaurants (272 open Friday night), 38% are closed Monday nights and 31% closed Sunday nights. So it's somewhat common, but by no means universal—you're not going to starve on Mondays, and varies depending on the type of restaurant.
    – Zach Lipton
    Jun 7 at 8:22







18




18




I don't even think it's specific to the UK. It's not uncommon for some restaurants to be closed Mondays in many western countries, including the US.
– Zach Lipton
Jun 6 at 8:51




I don't even think it's specific to the UK. It's not uncommon for some restaurants to be closed Mondays in many western countries, including the US.
– Zach Lipton
Jun 6 at 8:51




3




3




@ZachLipton Probably it was not so obvious for me in large cities (especially in Germany), that's why I noticed in Swindon.
– ahmedus
Jun 6 at 9:27




@ZachLipton Probably it was not so obvious for me in large cities (especially in Germany), that's why I noticed in Swindon.
– ahmedus
Jun 6 at 9:27




4




4




It’s not specific to restaurants either, in many small cities especially, local shops, beauty salons, hairdressers etc may be closed on Mondays.
– Traveller
Jun 6 at 9:39




It’s not specific to restaurants either, in many small cities especially, local shops, beauty salons, hairdressers etc may be closed on Mondays.
– Traveller
Jun 6 at 9:39




2




2




I have been in England and France many weekends, often staying into the next week and I have never gone hungry on the Mondays, but there is less choice there as well.
– Willeke♦
Jun 6 at 15:46




I have been in England and France many weekends, often staying into the next week and I have never gone hungry on the Mondays, but there is less choice there as well.
– Willeke♦
Jun 6 at 15:46




3




3




@reirab I just did a quick Yelp search for restaurants within a 5mi radius in San Francisco. Of the 2,745 places open for dinner on Friday night, 14% were closed Monday night and 20% closed Sunday night. Certainly chains and most counter service types of places are most likely to be open, but if I restrict it to $$$ and $$$$ restaurants (272 open Friday night), 38% are closed Monday nights and 31% closed Sunday nights. So it's somewhat common, but by no means universal—you're not going to starve on Mondays, and varies depending on the type of restaurant.
– Zach Lipton
Jun 7 at 8:22




@reirab I just did a quick Yelp search for restaurants within a 5mi radius in San Francisco. Of the 2,745 places open for dinner on Friday night, 14% were closed Monday night and 20% closed Sunday night. Certainly chains and most counter service types of places are most likely to be open, but if I restrict it to $$$ and $$$$ restaurants (272 open Friday night), 38% are closed Monday nights and 31% closed Sunday nights. So it's somewhat common, but by no means universal—you're not going to starve on Mondays, and varies depending on the type of restaurant.
– Zach Lipton
Jun 7 at 8:22










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
17
down vote



accepted










Let's use a bit of real data to give you a full answer. I've checked Yelp to find the opening times of restaurants in London, Reading and Swindon (thanks to @ZachLipton for the idea!). The findings are summarised below:



| City | Open on Fri 7PM | Open on Mon 7PM | % closed on Mon | 
|---------|-----------------|-----------------|-----------------|
| London | 8073 | 7326 | 9.3% |
| Reading | 130 | 125 | 3.8% |
| Swindon | 41 | 36 | 12.2% |


So the answer is no, it is not too common for a restaurant to be closed on Mondays in the UK.



We can also compare our findings with equivalent statistics for the Turkish cities of Istanbul, Ankara, Izmir:



| City | Open on Fri 7PM | Open on Mon 7PM | % closed on Mon | 
|----------|-----------------|-----------------|-----------------|
| Istanbul | 3174 | 3119 | 1.7 |
| Ankara | 481 | 473 | 1.7 |
| Izmir | 270 | 266 | 1.5 |


The data above confirms your observation that it is very uncommon for Turkish restaurants to be closed on Monday.






share|improve this answer
















  • 1




    Those numbers are awesome. :)
    – ahmedus
    Jun 8 at 8:12










  • Nice one. But I wonder if there's a correlation betwen places that have an old-fashioned attitude to their opening hours (or are simply very small businesses) and those who don't maintain much of an online presence. An example: I happened to cycle past an Indian restaurant in Cardiff yesterday and noticed that it's closed Mondays. It's not on Google maps even though it was apparently reviewed on Yelp in 2010. Yelp doesn't have opening hours.
    – Chris H
    Jun 8 at 8:52











  • @ChrisH: What do you mean by "old-fashioned attitude to their opening hours"? Not being open 24/7?
    – O. R. Mapper
    Jun 8 at 11:00






  • 3




    @JonathanReez exactly. While I agree with the conclusions (and like your method) I suspect that any online approach will be subject to selection bias. That wouldn't matter, except that in the context of travel we might be interested in avoiding chain places (with a web department) and more interested in seeking out intersting and maybe cheap places, which I suggest are likely to both lack a web-presence and close for a day a week. I've faced this in France (Morlaix, Brittany) and ended up in Buffalo Grill because anywhere more interesting was closed on a Monday.
    – Chris H
    Jun 8 at 14:09






  • 1




    Interesting numbers. I'm not sure Yelp's the best choice, though -- it doesn't seem to be nearly as big a thing in the UK as it is in the US, for example.
    – David Richerby
    Jun 8 at 14:40

















up vote
47
down vote













It is common but not universal. Chain restaurants are usually open all days, smaller restaurants may take a day off during the week and Monday is a sensible choice because more people eat out over the weekend.



Other businesses, particularly small businesses, may do the same if most of their trade is weekend shoppers.



If you are wanting to visit a particular restaurant, or are staying in an area with only a couple of places to eat out available, it would certainly be worth checking out in advance. In most areas, though, there will be other restaurants around that are open so it is only a minor inconvienience.






share|improve this answer




















  • I was planning to accept your answer, but @JonathanReez came with the numbers. Thank you anyway.
    – ahmedus
    Jun 8 at 8:17






  • 3




    no probs, the numbers should always win!
    – nkjt
    Jun 8 at 8:46










  • "Monday is a sensible choice because more people eat out over the weekend" - based upon that reasoning (that I agree with), each day from Monday to Thursday is an equally sensible choice.
    – O. R. Mapper
    Jun 8 at 11:01


















up vote
37
down vote













I would say that most restaurants in the UK are open seven days a week. However, if a restaurant is going to close for a day, that day will almost always be Monday.



The same holds for shops and museums – and any other business that does most of its trade at the weekend. (And, if such a business is closed for two days, they'll likely be Monday and Tuesday.) This isn't unique to the UK: I've seen the same thing in the US, for example.



It's noted in the comments below the question that public holidays in the UK are commonly on Mondays. In England, Wales and Northern Ireland, the day after Easter Sunday, the first and last Mondays in May and the last Monday in August; in Scotland, the first and last Mondays in May and the first Monday in August. However, I don't think that's an issue: restaurants and shops aren't legally obliged to close on these days and, since they're holidays, they're likely to be very good for business. I'd certainly expect a museum that usually closes on Mondays to open on holiday Mondays.






share|improve this answer


















  • 1




    Germany used to have that as well. There's even a specific word for it.
    – simbabque
    Jun 6 at 12:57






  • 1




    @simbabque My experience is that restaurants (and even shops) with a Ruhetag (closed for one day of the week) are much commoner in the Black Forest than they were in Cambridge. (Although it is often not on a Monday.)
    – Martin Bonner
    Jun 6 at 13:23










  • @MartinBonner my experience with growing up in a restaurant owner family in northern Germany is that it's mostly Monday or Tuesday there. The Black Forrest area would be more traditional, and thus you'd indeed see this thing more there.
    – simbabque
    Jun 6 at 13:24










  • Tuesday is also a common day to close.
    – Jack Aidley
    Jun 7 at 11:32






  • 1




    Many shops still follow the tradition of closing for half a day on Wednesdays, in small market towns especially/
    – JeffUK
    Jun 7 at 12:17

















up vote
6
down vote













From my experience this is more common in smaller towns and possibly in the North. I live in the South (about 50 miles North of London) in a fairly large town and it's not terribly common here. I know of a few places which are closed on Mondays but it tends to be smaller and often take-away places (Chinese, chip shops, etc.). On the other hand, I have been on holiday to smaller towns (one springs to mind in the Peak District) where almost everything was closed on a Monday night except for one Indian take-away place. It may be a regional thing or may be more due to the size of town, or a bit of both.



So I would say that it's somewhat common, but far from universal, and may be more common in some regions than others.






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    4 Answers
    4






    active

    oldest

    votes








    4 Answers
    4






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes








    up vote
    17
    down vote



    accepted










    Let's use a bit of real data to give you a full answer. I've checked Yelp to find the opening times of restaurants in London, Reading and Swindon (thanks to @ZachLipton for the idea!). The findings are summarised below:



    | City | Open on Fri 7PM | Open on Mon 7PM | % closed on Mon | 
    |---------|-----------------|-----------------|-----------------|
    | London | 8073 | 7326 | 9.3% |
    | Reading | 130 | 125 | 3.8% |
    | Swindon | 41 | 36 | 12.2% |


    So the answer is no, it is not too common for a restaurant to be closed on Mondays in the UK.



    We can also compare our findings with equivalent statistics for the Turkish cities of Istanbul, Ankara, Izmir:



    | City | Open on Fri 7PM | Open on Mon 7PM | % closed on Mon | 
    |----------|-----------------|-----------------|-----------------|
    | Istanbul | 3174 | 3119 | 1.7 |
    | Ankara | 481 | 473 | 1.7 |
    | Izmir | 270 | 266 | 1.5 |


    The data above confirms your observation that it is very uncommon for Turkish restaurants to be closed on Monday.






    share|improve this answer
















    • 1




      Those numbers are awesome. :)
      – ahmedus
      Jun 8 at 8:12










    • Nice one. But I wonder if there's a correlation betwen places that have an old-fashioned attitude to their opening hours (or are simply very small businesses) and those who don't maintain much of an online presence. An example: I happened to cycle past an Indian restaurant in Cardiff yesterday and noticed that it's closed Mondays. It's not on Google maps even though it was apparently reviewed on Yelp in 2010. Yelp doesn't have opening hours.
      – Chris H
      Jun 8 at 8:52











    • @ChrisH: What do you mean by "old-fashioned attitude to their opening hours"? Not being open 24/7?
      – O. R. Mapper
      Jun 8 at 11:00






    • 3




      @JonathanReez exactly. While I agree with the conclusions (and like your method) I suspect that any online approach will be subject to selection bias. That wouldn't matter, except that in the context of travel we might be interested in avoiding chain places (with a web department) and more interested in seeking out intersting and maybe cheap places, which I suggest are likely to both lack a web-presence and close for a day a week. I've faced this in France (Morlaix, Brittany) and ended up in Buffalo Grill because anywhere more interesting was closed on a Monday.
      – Chris H
      Jun 8 at 14:09






    • 1




      Interesting numbers. I'm not sure Yelp's the best choice, though -- it doesn't seem to be nearly as big a thing in the UK as it is in the US, for example.
      – David Richerby
      Jun 8 at 14:40














    up vote
    17
    down vote



    accepted










    Let's use a bit of real data to give you a full answer. I've checked Yelp to find the opening times of restaurants in London, Reading and Swindon (thanks to @ZachLipton for the idea!). The findings are summarised below:



    | City | Open on Fri 7PM | Open on Mon 7PM | % closed on Mon | 
    |---------|-----------------|-----------------|-----------------|
    | London | 8073 | 7326 | 9.3% |
    | Reading | 130 | 125 | 3.8% |
    | Swindon | 41 | 36 | 12.2% |


    So the answer is no, it is not too common for a restaurant to be closed on Mondays in the UK.



    We can also compare our findings with equivalent statistics for the Turkish cities of Istanbul, Ankara, Izmir:



    | City | Open on Fri 7PM | Open on Mon 7PM | % closed on Mon | 
    |----------|-----------------|-----------------|-----------------|
    | Istanbul | 3174 | 3119 | 1.7 |
    | Ankara | 481 | 473 | 1.7 |
    | Izmir | 270 | 266 | 1.5 |


    The data above confirms your observation that it is very uncommon for Turkish restaurants to be closed on Monday.






    share|improve this answer
















    • 1




      Those numbers are awesome. :)
      – ahmedus
      Jun 8 at 8:12










    • Nice one. But I wonder if there's a correlation betwen places that have an old-fashioned attitude to their opening hours (or are simply very small businesses) and those who don't maintain much of an online presence. An example: I happened to cycle past an Indian restaurant in Cardiff yesterday and noticed that it's closed Mondays. It's not on Google maps even though it was apparently reviewed on Yelp in 2010. Yelp doesn't have opening hours.
      – Chris H
      Jun 8 at 8:52











    • @ChrisH: What do you mean by "old-fashioned attitude to their opening hours"? Not being open 24/7?
      – O. R. Mapper
      Jun 8 at 11:00






    • 3




      @JonathanReez exactly. While I agree with the conclusions (and like your method) I suspect that any online approach will be subject to selection bias. That wouldn't matter, except that in the context of travel we might be interested in avoiding chain places (with a web department) and more interested in seeking out intersting and maybe cheap places, which I suggest are likely to both lack a web-presence and close for a day a week. I've faced this in France (Morlaix, Brittany) and ended up in Buffalo Grill because anywhere more interesting was closed on a Monday.
      – Chris H
      Jun 8 at 14:09






    • 1




      Interesting numbers. I'm not sure Yelp's the best choice, though -- it doesn't seem to be nearly as big a thing in the UK as it is in the US, for example.
      – David Richerby
      Jun 8 at 14:40












    up vote
    17
    down vote



    accepted







    up vote
    17
    down vote



    accepted






    Let's use a bit of real data to give you a full answer. I've checked Yelp to find the opening times of restaurants in London, Reading and Swindon (thanks to @ZachLipton for the idea!). The findings are summarised below:



    | City | Open on Fri 7PM | Open on Mon 7PM | % closed on Mon | 
    |---------|-----------------|-----------------|-----------------|
    | London | 8073 | 7326 | 9.3% |
    | Reading | 130 | 125 | 3.8% |
    | Swindon | 41 | 36 | 12.2% |


    So the answer is no, it is not too common for a restaurant to be closed on Mondays in the UK.



    We can also compare our findings with equivalent statistics for the Turkish cities of Istanbul, Ankara, Izmir:



    | City | Open on Fri 7PM | Open on Mon 7PM | % closed on Mon | 
    |----------|-----------------|-----------------|-----------------|
    | Istanbul | 3174 | 3119 | 1.7 |
    | Ankara | 481 | 473 | 1.7 |
    | Izmir | 270 | 266 | 1.5 |


    The data above confirms your observation that it is very uncommon for Turkish restaurants to be closed on Monday.






    share|improve this answer












    Let's use a bit of real data to give you a full answer. I've checked Yelp to find the opening times of restaurants in London, Reading and Swindon (thanks to @ZachLipton for the idea!). The findings are summarised below:



    | City | Open on Fri 7PM | Open on Mon 7PM | % closed on Mon | 
    |---------|-----------------|-----------------|-----------------|
    | London | 8073 | 7326 | 9.3% |
    | Reading | 130 | 125 | 3.8% |
    | Swindon | 41 | 36 | 12.2% |


    So the answer is no, it is not too common for a restaurant to be closed on Mondays in the UK.



    We can also compare our findings with equivalent statistics for the Turkish cities of Istanbul, Ankara, Izmir:



    | City | Open on Fri 7PM | Open on Mon 7PM | % closed on Mon | 
    |----------|-----------------|-----------------|-----------------|
    | Istanbul | 3174 | 3119 | 1.7 |
    | Ankara | 481 | 473 | 1.7 |
    | Izmir | 270 | 266 | 1.5 |


    The data above confirms your observation that it is very uncommon for Turkish restaurants to be closed on Monday.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Jun 8 at 4:43









    JonathanReez♦

    46.5k35210457




    46.5k35210457







    • 1




      Those numbers are awesome. :)
      – ahmedus
      Jun 8 at 8:12










    • Nice one. But I wonder if there's a correlation betwen places that have an old-fashioned attitude to their opening hours (or are simply very small businesses) and those who don't maintain much of an online presence. An example: I happened to cycle past an Indian restaurant in Cardiff yesterday and noticed that it's closed Mondays. It's not on Google maps even though it was apparently reviewed on Yelp in 2010. Yelp doesn't have opening hours.
      – Chris H
      Jun 8 at 8:52











    • @ChrisH: What do you mean by "old-fashioned attitude to their opening hours"? Not being open 24/7?
      – O. R. Mapper
      Jun 8 at 11:00






    • 3




      @JonathanReez exactly. While I agree with the conclusions (and like your method) I suspect that any online approach will be subject to selection bias. That wouldn't matter, except that in the context of travel we might be interested in avoiding chain places (with a web department) and more interested in seeking out intersting and maybe cheap places, which I suggest are likely to both lack a web-presence and close for a day a week. I've faced this in France (Morlaix, Brittany) and ended up in Buffalo Grill because anywhere more interesting was closed on a Monday.
      – Chris H
      Jun 8 at 14:09






    • 1




      Interesting numbers. I'm not sure Yelp's the best choice, though -- it doesn't seem to be nearly as big a thing in the UK as it is in the US, for example.
      – David Richerby
      Jun 8 at 14:40












    • 1




      Those numbers are awesome. :)
      – ahmedus
      Jun 8 at 8:12










    • Nice one. But I wonder if there's a correlation betwen places that have an old-fashioned attitude to their opening hours (or are simply very small businesses) and those who don't maintain much of an online presence. An example: I happened to cycle past an Indian restaurant in Cardiff yesterday and noticed that it's closed Mondays. It's not on Google maps even though it was apparently reviewed on Yelp in 2010. Yelp doesn't have opening hours.
      – Chris H
      Jun 8 at 8:52











    • @ChrisH: What do you mean by "old-fashioned attitude to their opening hours"? Not being open 24/7?
      – O. R. Mapper
      Jun 8 at 11:00






    • 3




      @JonathanReez exactly. While I agree with the conclusions (and like your method) I suspect that any online approach will be subject to selection bias. That wouldn't matter, except that in the context of travel we might be interested in avoiding chain places (with a web department) and more interested in seeking out intersting and maybe cheap places, which I suggest are likely to both lack a web-presence and close for a day a week. I've faced this in France (Morlaix, Brittany) and ended up in Buffalo Grill because anywhere more interesting was closed on a Monday.
      – Chris H
      Jun 8 at 14:09






    • 1




      Interesting numbers. I'm not sure Yelp's the best choice, though -- it doesn't seem to be nearly as big a thing in the UK as it is in the US, for example.
      – David Richerby
      Jun 8 at 14:40







    1




    1




    Those numbers are awesome. :)
    – ahmedus
    Jun 8 at 8:12




    Those numbers are awesome. :)
    – ahmedus
    Jun 8 at 8:12












    Nice one. But I wonder if there's a correlation betwen places that have an old-fashioned attitude to their opening hours (or are simply very small businesses) and those who don't maintain much of an online presence. An example: I happened to cycle past an Indian restaurant in Cardiff yesterday and noticed that it's closed Mondays. It's not on Google maps even though it was apparently reviewed on Yelp in 2010. Yelp doesn't have opening hours.
    – Chris H
    Jun 8 at 8:52





    Nice one. But I wonder if there's a correlation betwen places that have an old-fashioned attitude to their opening hours (or are simply very small businesses) and those who don't maintain much of an online presence. An example: I happened to cycle past an Indian restaurant in Cardiff yesterday and noticed that it's closed Mondays. It's not on Google maps even though it was apparently reviewed on Yelp in 2010. Yelp doesn't have opening hours.
    – Chris H
    Jun 8 at 8:52













    @ChrisH: What do you mean by "old-fashioned attitude to their opening hours"? Not being open 24/7?
    – O. R. Mapper
    Jun 8 at 11:00




    @ChrisH: What do you mean by "old-fashioned attitude to their opening hours"? Not being open 24/7?
    – O. R. Mapper
    Jun 8 at 11:00




    3




    3




    @JonathanReez exactly. While I agree with the conclusions (and like your method) I suspect that any online approach will be subject to selection bias. That wouldn't matter, except that in the context of travel we might be interested in avoiding chain places (with a web department) and more interested in seeking out intersting and maybe cheap places, which I suggest are likely to both lack a web-presence and close for a day a week. I've faced this in France (Morlaix, Brittany) and ended up in Buffalo Grill because anywhere more interesting was closed on a Monday.
    – Chris H
    Jun 8 at 14:09




    @JonathanReez exactly. While I agree with the conclusions (and like your method) I suspect that any online approach will be subject to selection bias. That wouldn't matter, except that in the context of travel we might be interested in avoiding chain places (with a web department) and more interested in seeking out intersting and maybe cheap places, which I suggest are likely to both lack a web-presence and close for a day a week. I've faced this in France (Morlaix, Brittany) and ended up in Buffalo Grill because anywhere more interesting was closed on a Monday.
    – Chris H
    Jun 8 at 14:09




    1




    1




    Interesting numbers. I'm not sure Yelp's the best choice, though -- it doesn't seem to be nearly as big a thing in the UK as it is in the US, for example.
    – David Richerby
    Jun 8 at 14:40




    Interesting numbers. I'm not sure Yelp's the best choice, though -- it doesn't seem to be nearly as big a thing in the UK as it is in the US, for example.
    – David Richerby
    Jun 8 at 14:40












    up vote
    47
    down vote













    It is common but not universal. Chain restaurants are usually open all days, smaller restaurants may take a day off during the week and Monday is a sensible choice because more people eat out over the weekend.



    Other businesses, particularly small businesses, may do the same if most of their trade is weekend shoppers.



    If you are wanting to visit a particular restaurant, or are staying in an area with only a couple of places to eat out available, it would certainly be worth checking out in advance. In most areas, though, there will be other restaurants around that are open so it is only a minor inconvienience.






    share|improve this answer




















    • I was planning to accept your answer, but @JonathanReez came with the numbers. Thank you anyway.
      – ahmedus
      Jun 8 at 8:17






    • 3




      no probs, the numbers should always win!
      – nkjt
      Jun 8 at 8:46










    • "Monday is a sensible choice because more people eat out over the weekend" - based upon that reasoning (that I agree with), each day from Monday to Thursday is an equally sensible choice.
      – O. R. Mapper
      Jun 8 at 11:01















    up vote
    47
    down vote













    It is common but not universal. Chain restaurants are usually open all days, smaller restaurants may take a day off during the week and Monday is a sensible choice because more people eat out over the weekend.



    Other businesses, particularly small businesses, may do the same if most of their trade is weekend shoppers.



    If you are wanting to visit a particular restaurant, or are staying in an area with only a couple of places to eat out available, it would certainly be worth checking out in advance. In most areas, though, there will be other restaurants around that are open so it is only a minor inconvienience.






    share|improve this answer




















    • I was planning to accept your answer, but @JonathanReez came with the numbers. Thank you anyway.
      – ahmedus
      Jun 8 at 8:17






    • 3




      no probs, the numbers should always win!
      – nkjt
      Jun 8 at 8:46










    • "Monday is a sensible choice because more people eat out over the weekend" - based upon that reasoning (that I agree with), each day from Monday to Thursday is an equally sensible choice.
      – O. R. Mapper
      Jun 8 at 11:01













    up vote
    47
    down vote










    up vote
    47
    down vote









    It is common but not universal. Chain restaurants are usually open all days, smaller restaurants may take a day off during the week and Monday is a sensible choice because more people eat out over the weekend.



    Other businesses, particularly small businesses, may do the same if most of their trade is weekend shoppers.



    If you are wanting to visit a particular restaurant, or are staying in an area with only a couple of places to eat out available, it would certainly be worth checking out in advance. In most areas, though, there will be other restaurants around that are open so it is only a minor inconvienience.






    share|improve this answer












    It is common but not universal. Chain restaurants are usually open all days, smaller restaurants may take a day off during the week and Monday is a sensible choice because more people eat out over the weekend.



    Other businesses, particularly small businesses, may do the same if most of their trade is weekend shoppers.



    If you are wanting to visit a particular restaurant, or are staying in an area with only a couple of places to eat out available, it would certainly be worth checking out in advance. In most areas, though, there will be other restaurants around that are open so it is only a minor inconvienience.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Jun 6 at 9:43









    nkjt

    2,5892811




    2,5892811











    • I was planning to accept your answer, but @JonathanReez came with the numbers. Thank you anyway.
      – ahmedus
      Jun 8 at 8:17






    • 3




      no probs, the numbers should always win!
      – nkjt
      Jun 8 at 8:46










    • "Monday is a sensible choice because more people eat out over the weekend" - based upon that reasoning (that I agree with), each day from Monday to Thursday is an equally sensible choice.
      – O. R. Mapper
      Jun 8 at 11:01

















    • I was planning to accept your answer, but @JonathanReez came with the numbers. Thank you anyway.
      – ahmedus
      Jun 8 at 8:17






    • 3




      no probs, the numbers should always win!
      – nkjt
      Jun 8 at 8:46










    • "Monday is a sensible choice because more people eat out over the weekend" - based upon that reasoning (that I agree with), each day from Monday to Thursday is an equally sensible choice.
      – O. R. Mapper
      Jun 8 at 11:01
















    I was planning to accept your answer, but @JonathanReez came with the numbers. Thank you anyway.
    – ahmedus
    Jun 8 at 8:17




    I was planning to accept your answer, but @JonathanReez came with the numbers. Thank you anyway.
    – ahmedus
    Jun 8 at 8:17




    3




    3




    no probs, the numbers should always win!
    – nkjt
    Jun 8 at 8:46




    no probs, the numbers should always win!
    – nkjt
    Jun 8 at 8:46












    "Monday is a sensible choice because more people eat out over the weekend" - based upon that reasoning (that I agree with), each day from Monday to Thursday is an equally sensible choice.
    – O. R. Mapper
    Jun 8 at 11:01





    "Monday is a sensible choice because more people eat out over the weekend" - based upon that reasoning (that I agree with), each day from Monday to Thursday is an equally sensible choice.
    – O. R. Mapper
    Jun 8 at 11:01











    up vote
    37
    down vote













    I would say that most restaurants in the UK are open seven days a week. However, if a restaurant is going to close for a day, that day will almost always be Monday.



    The same holds for shops and museums – and any other business that does most of its trade at the weekend. (And, if such a business is closed for two days, they'll likely be Monday and Tuesday.) This isn't unique to the UK: I've seen the same thing in the US, for example.



    It's noted in the comments below the question that public holidays in the UK are commonly on Mondays. In England, Wales and Northern Ireland, the day after Easter Sunday, the first and last Mondays in May and the last Monday in August; in Scotland, the first and last Mondays in May and the first Monday in August. However, I don't think that's an issue: restaurants and shops aren't legally obliged to close on these days and, since they're holidays, they're likely to be very good for business. I'd certainly expect a museum that usually closes on Mondays to open on holiday Mondays.






    share|improve this answer


















    • 1




      Germany used to have that as well. There's even a specific word for it.
      – simbabque
      Jun 6 at 12:57






    • 1




      @simbabque My experience is that restaurants (and even shops) with a Ruhetag (closed for one day of the week) are much commoner in the Black Forest than they were in Cambridge. (Although it is often not on a Monday.)
      – Martin Bonner
      Jun 6 at 13:23










    • @MartinBonner my experience with growing up in a restaurant owner family in northern Germany is that it's mostly Monday or Tuesday there. The Black Forrest area would be more traditional, and thus you'd indeed see this thing more there.
      – simbabque
      Jun 6 at 13:24










    • Tuesday is also a common day to close.
      – Jack Aidley
      Jun 7 at 11:32






    • 1




      Many shops still follow the tradition of closing for half a day on Wednesdays, in small market towns especially/
      – JeffUK
      Jun 7 at 12:17














    up vote
    37
    down vote













    I would say that most restaurants in the UK are open seven days a week. However, if a restaurant is going to close for a day, that day will almost always be Monday.



    The same holds for shops and museums – and any other business that does most of its trade at the weekend. (And, if such a business is closed for two days, they'll likely be Monday and Tuesday.) This isn't unique to the UK: I've seen the same thing in the US, for example.



    It's noted in the comments below the question that public holidays in the UK are commonly on Mondays. In England, Wales and Northern Ireland, the day after Easter Sunday, the first and last Mondays in May and the last Monday in August; in Scotland, the first and last Mondays in May and the first Monday in August. However, I don't think that's an issue: restaurants and shops aren't legally obliged to close on these days and, since they're holidays, they're likely to be very good for business. I'd certainly expect a museum that usually closes on Mondays to open on holiday Mondays.






    share|improve this answer


















    • 1




      Germany used to have that as well. There's even a specific word for it.
      – simbabque
      Jun 6 at 12:57






    • 1




      @simbabque My experience is that restaurants (and even shops) with a Ruhetag (closed for one day of the week) are much commoner in the Black Forest than they were in Cambridge. (Although it is often not on a Monday.)
      – Martin Bonner
      Jun 6 at 13:23










    • @MartinBonner my experience with growing up in a restaurant owner family in northern Germany is that it's mostly Monday or Tuesday there. The Black Forrest area would be more traditional, and thus you'd indeed see this thing more there.
      – simbabque
      Jun 6 at 13:24










    • Tuesday is also a common day to close.
      – Jack Aidley
      Jun 7 at 11:32






    • 1




      Many shops still follow the tradition of closing for half a day on Wednesdays, in small market towns especially/
      – JeffUK
      Jun 7 at 12:17












    up vote
    37
    down vote










    up vote
    37
    down vote









    I would say that most restaurants in the UK are open seven days a week. However, if a restaurant is going to close for a day, that day will almost always be Monday.



    The same holds for shops and museums – and any other business that does most of its trade at the weekend. (And, if such a business is closed for two days, they'll likely be Monday and Tuesday.) This isn't unique to the UK: I've seen the same thing in the US, for example.



    It's noted in the comments below the question that public holidays in the UK are commonly on Mondays. In England, Wales and Northern Ireland, the day after Easter Sunday, the first and last Mondays in May and the last Monday in August; in Scotland, the first and last Mondays in May and the first Monday in August. However, I don't think that's an issue: restaurants and shops aren't legally obliged to close on these days and, since they're holidays, they're likely to be very good for business. I'd certainly expect a museum that usually closes on Mondays to open on holiday Mondays.






    share|improve this answer














    I would say that most restaurants in the UK are open seven days a week. However, if a restaurant is going to close for a day, that day will almost always be Monday.



    The same holds for shops and museums – and any other business that does most of its trade at the weekend. (And, if such a business is closed for two days, they'll likely be Monday and Tuesday.) This isn't unique to the UK: I've seen the same thing in the US, for example.



    It's noted in the comments below the question that public holidays in the UK are commonly on Mondays. In England, Wales and Northern Ireland, the day after Easter Sunday, the first and last Mondays in May and the last Monday in August; in Scotland, the first and last Mondays in May and the first Monday in August. However, I don't think that's an issue: restaurants and shops aren't legally obliged to close on these days and, since they're holidays, they're likely to be very good for business. I'd certainly expect a museum that usually closes on Mondays to open on holiday Mondays.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Jun 6 at 11:47

























    answered Jun 6 at 11:29









    David Richerby

    9,17753768




    9,17753768







    • 1




      Germany used to have that as well. There's even a specific word for it.
      – simbabque
      Jun 6 at 12:57






    • 1




      @simbabque My experience is that restaurants (and even shops) with a Ruhetag (closed for one day of the week) are much commoner in the Black Forest than they were in Cambridge. (Although it is often not on a Monday.)
      – Martin Bonner
      Jun 6 at 13:23










    • @MartinBonner my experience with growing up in a restaurant owner family in northern Germany is that it's mostly Monday or Tuesday there. The Black Forrest area would be more traditional, and thus you'd indeed see this thing more there.
      – simbabque
      Jun 6 at 13:24










    • Tuesday is also a common day to close.
      – Jack Aidley
      Jun 7 at 11:32






    • 1




      Many shops still follow the tradition of closing for half a day on Wednesdays, in small market towns especially/
      – JeffUK
      Jun 7 at 12:17












    • 1




      Germany used to have that as well. There's even a specific word for it.
      – simbabque
      Jun 6 at 12:57






    • 1




      @simbabque My experience is that restaurants (and even shops) with a Ruhetag (closed for one day of the week) are much commoner in the Black Forest than they were in Cambridge. (Although it is often not on a Monday.)
      – Martin Bonner
      Jun 6 at 13:23










    • @MartinBonner my experience with growing up in a restaurant owner family in northern Germany is that it's mostly Monday or Tuesday there. The Black Forrest area would be more traditional, and thus you'd indeed see this thing more there.
      – simbabque
      Jun 6 at 13:24










    • Tuesday is also a common day to close.
      – Jack Aidley
      Jun 7 at 11:32






    • 1




      Many shops still follow the tradition of closing for half a day on Wednesdays, in small market towns especially/
      – JeffUK
      Jun 7 at 12:17







    1




    1




    Germany used to have that as well. There's even a specific word for it.
    – simbabque
    Jun 6 at 12:57




    Germany used to have that as well. There's even a specific word for it.
    – simbabque
    Jun 6 at 12:57




    1




    1




    @simbabque My experience is that restaurants (and even shops) with a Ruhetag (closed for one day of the week) are much commoner in the Black Forest than they were in Cambridge. (Although it is often not on a Monday.)
    – Martin Bonner
    Jun 6 at 13:23




    @simbabque My experience is that restaurants (and even shops) with a Ruhetag (closed for one day of the week) are much commoner in the Black Forest than they were in Cambridge. (Although it is often not on a Monday.)
    – Martin Bonner
    Jun 6 at 13:23












    @MartinBonner my experience with growing up in a restaurant owner family in northern Germany is that it's mostly Monday or Tuesday there. The Black Forrest area would be more traditional, and thus you'd indeed see this thing more there.
    – simbabque
    Jun 6 at 13:24




    @MartinBonner my experience with growing up in a restaurant owner family in northern Germany is that it's mostly Monday or Tuesday there. The Black Forrest area would be more traditional, and thus you'd indeed see this thing more there.
    – simbabque
    Jun 6 at 13:24












    Tuesday is also a common day to close.
    – Jack Aidley
    Jun 7 at 11:32




    Tuesday is also a common day to close.
    – Jack Aidley
    Jun 7 at 11:32




    1




    1




    Many shops still follow the tradition of closing for half a day on Wednesdays, in small market towns especially/
    – JeffUK
    Jun 7 at 12:17




    Many shops still follow the tradition of closing for half a day on Wednesdays, in small market towns especially/
    – JeffUK
    Jun 7 at 12:17










    up vote
    6
    down vote













    From my experience this is more common in smaller towns and possibly in the North. I live in the South (about 50 miles North of London) in a fairly large town and it's not terribly common here. I know of a few places which are closed on Mondays but it tends to be smaller and often take-away places (Chinese, chip shops, etc.). On the other hand, I have been on holiday to smaller towns (one springs to mind in the Peak District) where almost everything was closed on a Monday night except for one Indian take-away place. It may be a regional thing or may be more due to the size of town, or a bit of both.



    So I would say that it's somewhat common, but far from universal, and may be more common in some regions than others.






    share|improve this answer


























      up vote
      6
      down vote













      From my experience this is more common in smaller towns and possibly in the North. I live in the South (about 50 miles North of London) in a fairly large town and it's not terribly common here. I know of a few places which are closed on Mondays but it tends to be smaller and often take-away places (Chinese, chip shops, etc.). On the other hand, I have been on holiday to smaller towns (one springs to mind in the Peak District) where almost everything was closed on a Monday night except for one Indian take-away place. It may be a regional thing or may be more due to the size of town, or a bit of both.



      So I would say that it's somewhat common, but far from universal, and may be more common in some regions than others.






      share|improve this answer
























        up vote
        6
        down vote










        up vote
        6
        down vote









        From my experience this is more common in smaller towns and possibly in the North. I live in the South (about 50 miles North of London) in a fairly large town and it's not terribly common here. I know of a few places which are closed on Mondays but it tends to be smaller and often take-away places (Chinese, chip shops, etc.). On the other hand, I have been on holiday to smaller towns (one springs to mind in the Peak District) where almost everything was closed on a Monday night except for one Indian take-away place. It may be a regional thing or may be more due to the size of town, or a bit of both.



        So I would say that it's somewhat common, but far from universal, and may be more common in some regions than others.






        share|improve this answer














        From my experience this is more common in smaller towns and possibly in the North. I live in the South (about 50 miles North of London) in a fairly large town and it's not terribly common here. I know of a few places which are closed on Mondays but it tends to be smaller and often take-away places (Chinese, chip shops, etc.). On the other hand, I have been on holiday to smaller towns (one springs to mind in the Peak District) where almost everything was closed on a Monday night except for one Indian take-away place. It may be a regional thing or may be more due to the size of town, or a bit of both.



        So I would say that it's somewhat common, but far from universal, and may be more common in some regions than others.







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Jun 6 at 15:33

























        answered Jun 6 at 15:28









        WhatEvil

        54036




        54036






















             

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