What used to be called appetizers, sides or bar snacks is increasingly becoming something else entirely. In 2025, restaurants began treating “bites” as a category of their own as menus adapted to changing dining habits. Still in 2026, smaller plates, snackable portions and mix-and-match foods are a popular and flexible way to eat, whether as a quick lunch, a lighter dinner or something to share at the table.

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The trend indicates several consumer habits moving at the same time. Restaurants across the United States are adding smaller plates, petite portions and snack-style menus as diners look for lower prices, more flexibility and lighter meals. In March 2026, The Associated Press reported that chains and independent restaurants alike were expanding smaller-format menu options as consumers increasingly snack throughout the day and move away from traditional full-size meals.
Restaurants now build menus around how people eat
The traditional structure of breakfast, lunch and dinner has been losing traction for years. Many people now eat in smaller moments throughout the day rather than sitting down for three full meals. That change opened the space for food between snacks and meals.
A plate of sliders, dumplings, loaded fries, mini tacos or crispy cauliflower can satisfy hunger without feeling heavy. Several small dishes can also feel more social than one large entree, especially when ordered for the table. The format suits groups, solo diners and anyone looking for something lighter than a standard restaurant meal.
Price has helped push the trend further. As full entrees continue to climb in cost, bite-sized dishes offer customers a lower entry point. Ordering one or two smaller plates can feel easier to justify than spending significantly more on a single main course.
Chains are proving bites can drive traffic
Large restaurant brands have leaned into the trend by expanding shareables, snack plates and smaller-format menu items that sit outside traditional appetizer categories. The Cheesecake Factory is known for its large appetizer section composed of shareable starters that encourage tables to order multiple dishes. Arby’s continues to rotate limited-time snack-style items and smaller portions that work well as add-ons or lighter meal options.
Noodles & Company offers customizable bowls, sides and entree-and-side combinations that let guests build meals according to their preferences and appetites. Fogo de Chão also offers bar-side appetizers and shareable items in its lounge areas, giving diners lighter options alongside its full churrasco experience.
These are just a few examples of different menus, but with the same message: flexibility now matters as much as portion size.
The trend also translates easily at home
What restaurants serve on menus translates easily to home entertaining, especially in May, when gatherings become more casual. Bite-sized foods work for Mother’s Day brunches, pre-cookout snacking and easy weeknight dinners built around grazing rather than formal courses.
A brunch board with mini croissants, berries, deviled eggs and smoked salmon lets everyone build their own plate. Before a cookout, sliders, chips, cheese cubes and pickles keep guests happy while the grill heats up. On busy weeknights, hummus, pita, vegetables, olives and sliced chicken can replace a more formal dinner with almost no effort.
Seasonal produce also fits naturally into the format. Caprese skewers, roasted potato bites and puff pastry asparagus pieces all feel timely in spring and can be prepared ahead. For dessert, brownie squares, fruit and small scoops of ice cream keep the same easy energy going.
Smaller plates now match how people eat
Bite-sized foods succeeded because they fit how many people already prefer to eat: casually, socially and in smaller portions throughout the day. Restaurants recognized that shift in 2025, but it is just as relevant at home in 2026. For many spring gatherings, a table full of small bites feels more inviting than a single large meal, and far easier to pull off.
Mandy Applegate is the creator behind Splash of Taste and seven other high-profile food and travel blogs. She’s also the co-founder of Food Drink Life Inc., a unique and highly rewarding collaborative blogger project. Her articles appear frequently on major online news sites, and she always has her eyes open to spot the next big trend.