Restaurant Patio Furniture

Outdoor Dining Furniture That Handles Sun, Rain, and Heavy Traffic

Outdoor dining adds revenue that most restaurants can't afford to leave on the table. A well-planned patio section can add 30 to 50 seats without expanding your building, and guests will wait longer for an outdoor table on a nice evening than they will for one inside. The catch is that everything on that patio takes a beating that indoor furniture never sees. Rain, UV exposure, wind, temperature swings, bird droppings, and spilled drinks that sit in the sun for hours. If you buy the wrong materials, you're replacing chairs and tables after two seasons instead of ten.

The right commercial patio furniture starts with choosing materials rated for weather exposure, then matching those materials to your climate, venue type, and the level of maintenance your staff can handle. This guide covers chair and table materials, venue-specific picks, accessories, durability, cleaning, and bulk ordering.

Outdoor Chair Materials: What Holds Up and What Doesn't

Aluminum and Powder-Coated Steel

Patio chairs in aluminum are the most popular choice for commercial patios because they're lightweight, stackable, and rust-resistant. Aluminum frames weigh 30 to 50 percent less than steel frames, making them easier for staff to move and stack at closing time. Most commercial aluminum chairs stack 8 to 10 high, which saves serious storage space during winter or bad-weather shutdowns. Powder-coated steel chairs are heavier, which helps in windy locations, but they need a quality coating to prevent rust. Steel works well on covered patios and courtyards where direct exposure to rain is limited.

Resin, Wicker, and Faux Teak

Resin chairs molded from polypropylene are waterproof, UV-stable, and virtually maintenance-free. They won't crack, peel, or fade the way painted wood does. Rattan-style chairs use synthetic wicker woven over an aluminum frame, delivering an upscale resort look without the fragility of natural rattan, which can fall apart in humidity. Synthetic teak chairs use slats that look like real teak wood but don't need oiling, sanding, or sealing. These materials are popular at boutique hotels, rooftop bars, and upscale cafes where the look drives the furniture choice.

Outdoor Tables and Coordinated Dining Sets

Patio tables need tops that resist moisture, UV fading, and temperature swings without warping or delaminating. Aluminum tops with synthetic teak slats are the most common commercial choice because they drain quickly after rain, don't expand or contract with temperature changes, and wipe clean in seconds. Solid wood tops in teak or treated hardwoods offer a warmer look but need seasonal oiling to prevent graying and surface checks. For a complete coordinated look from day one, outdoor dining sets pair matched chairs and tables in a single purchase. Bolt-down table bases are a smart pick for rooftop patios and any location where wind is a regular concern.

Bar-Height Seating and Outdoor Booth Options

Patio bar stools sit 28”- 30” tall and pair with 42” bar-height tables. They're used in outdoor bar areas, brewery patios, and poolside bars where guests stand or perch rather than settling in for a full meal. Look for models with footrests and wider bases, since tall stools on uneven patio surfaces tip more easily than dining-height chairs. Patio booths bring the privacy and comfort of indoor booth seating to your outdoor section. They work well along patio walls, fences, and partition boundaries where you want to define seating zones without blocking sightlines.

Picking Outdoor Furniture for Your Restaurant Type

Full-service restaurants should pair aluminum chairs with matching tables for a unified look that photographs well and handles nightly table turns. Casual restaurants and pizzerias do best with resin furniture that staff can hose down at closing. Bars and breweries lean toward heavier steel setups that stay put when crowds bump through. Rooftop venues need bolt-down outdoor table bases and wind-rated furniture across the board. Hotels and resorts often choose outdoor dining sets that include matching chairs and tables in a coordinated package. Coffee shops and bakeries with small sidewalk patios should look at compact two-top tables and stackable chairs that fit in tight spaces without blocking foot traffic. If your indoor dining room uses wood restaurant chairs, carry that same material language outside with synthetic teak patio chairs so the transition from inside to outside feels intentional.

Shade, Heat, and Patio Accessories

A patio without shade isn't usable during lunch service in summer. Commercial umbrellas with aluminum or wood poles and Sunbrella-grade canopies block UV and light rain without flipping in moderate wind. Pair them with weighted bases rated for your canopy size. For a full guide on umbrella sizing and placement, read our patio umbrella technical guide. Patio heaters extend your outdoor season by 6 to 10 weeks in most climates. Propane tower heaters cover a 10-to-15-foot radius and don't require gas lines. Wall-mounted infrared heaters work better in covered patios with lower ceilings. Patio partitions and planters define your outdoor dining boundary, block street-level wind, and create a visual barrier that helps with local permitting requirements for sidewalk seating.

Seasonal Maintenance and Material-Specific Care

Aluminum furniture is the lowest-maintenance option: rinse with a hose, wipe with mild soap, and you're done. Resin cleans the same way and doesn't need any protective coatings. Synthetic rattan should be rinsed weekly during peak season to prevent dirt from settling into the weave. Wood patio furniture needs oiling once or twice a year, and any bare spots where the finish has worn should be sanded and resealed before the rainy season. Covers help extend the life of your furniture, but they're not a substitute for choosing the right material in the first place. For a deeper dive on material care, read our patio furniture fundamentals guide. Umbrella canopies should be hosed down monthly and stored when not in use during extended off-season closures. Replace any canopy that shows mildew or UV degradation before it tears in a gust.

Bulk Outdoor Orders and Spare Planning

Stock outdoor chairs and tables ship from our US warehouse within 5 to 10 business days. Volume discounts start at 10-15 units. If you're outfitting a new patio from scratch, order chairs, tables, umbrellas, and accessories in a single purchase to consolidate shipping and qualify for a deeper volume break. Plan for 5 to 10% extra chairs beyond your seating count, because outdoor furniture is more susceptible to impact damage than indoor pieces, and having spares on hand avoids mismatched replacements later. Many items in our outdoor collection are American-made, so lead times stay short and warranty claims are straightforward.

Why Affordable Seating for Outdoor Furniture

Every outdoor chair, table, and accessory on this site is rated for daily commercial use in weather-exposed environments. Materials are tested for UV stability, moisture resistance, and the kind of daily wear that comes from hundreds of guests a week. Need help matching materials to your climate or sizing furniture for your patio layout? Call us at (866) 573-0712 or start a live chat.

Browse the full patio furniture collection, or shop by type: patio chairs, patio tables, patio bar stools,patio booths, commercial umbrellas, and outdoor dining sets. When you're ready to outfit the rest of your space, we carry restaurant chairs, bar stools, restaurant tables, table bases, and booths.

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