How to choose internet cafe software in 2026
Every vendor's feature list looks the same. The list is not what decides it. Here is what actually matters when you pick the software that runs your floor, from someone who has built it for two decades.
Key takeaways
Pick software for the room you actually run. What decides it: how flexibly it bills, whether you can control the whole floor from the counter, whether you get real member accounts and whether your data survives a dead disk. Free is not a price, it is a trade.
- Match the tool to your venue type: gaming PCs, consoles or tables.
- Flexible time-of-day pricing matters more than a long feature list.
- You should run the floor from the counter, not on foot.
- If your data lives only on one disk, you do not have a backup.
- Free software is paid for by ads on your customers' screens.
On this page
Open three vendor sites and you will read the same feature list three times. Sessions, members, reports, remote control, all ticked. The list is not what decides this. What decides it is whether the thing fits the room you actually run and whether it holds up on your busiest night.
Here is what I would look at, in the order that actually matters.
Start with the room, not the features
The first question is not a feature at all. What are you renting by the hour?
If it is gaming PCs at desks, you want PC cafe software: session billing, screen control, member accounts, the works. If it is PlayStation couches, billiards tables or a board-game room, PC software will fight you the whole way. That is a different tool. Our own answer to that split is honest: HandyCafe for PC and esports venues, CafeTimer for consoles and tables. Any vendor who tells you one product is perfect for every venue is selling, not advising.
If you run both, check the software genuinely bills consoles next to PCs rather than bolting it on.
How it bills is the whole business
This is the part people skim and then regret. A flat hourly rate is the easiest thing to configure and the most expensive habit you can keep. It leaves money on the table when every seat is full and it empties the room when a lower price would have brought people in.
What you want is pricing that follows your week: a quiet-afternoon rate, a peak evening rate, something for the overnight crowd, all applied automatically. Then prepaid and postpaid on the same floor, because a stranger and a regular are not the same risk. That is a whole subject on its own in pricing that fits how your cafe runs.
Ask a vendor to show you the pricing schedule screen. If it is a single rate box, keep walking.
Can you run the floor without leaving the counter
On a quiet Tuesday any software looks fine. Judge it against a full Saturday with a queue at the till and a frozen game on station 12.
You want to see any screen, take it over, close the stuck game and hand it back without standing up. You want to add time, lock a station, send a message and shut the room down at closing from one place. This is the difference between running the floor and chasing it. There is a full walkthrough in running every computer from one screen.
Real accounts, not just a stopwatch
A timer knows how long someone sat down. It does not know who they are. Member accounts with a prepaid wallet, a history and a fast login are what turn a walk-in into someone who comes back on a slow Tuesday. If the software treats every customer as an anonymous session, you are selling hours instead of building a venue. More in member accounts, wallets and QR login.
What happens the day the disk dies
Ask every vendor this one question: where does my data live and what happens when that disk fails?
Your members, their balances and your whole history sit in one database. If the only copy is on the counter machine, you are one dead drive, one theft or one ransomware away from starting over from a paper notebook. Off-site backup is not a nice extra at that point. That story, with the phone call that prompted it, is in why cloud backup exists.
The free question
Free cafe software is not a gift. It is funded by advertising shown to your customers, which means you pay with their screen space and their attention. That model is also breaking down, because a whole cafe shares one IP address and ad networks cannot count the visitors. The money behind free is drying up. The full explanation is in why internet cafe software is no longer free.
Judge price against what one badly billed evening costs you, not against a memory of free.
The short checklist
| What to check | Why it matters | Ask the vendor |
|---|---|---|
| Venue fit | PC software does not fit a console or table venue | Show me a room like mine |
| Pricing schedule | A flat rate costs you money every week | Show me the time-of-day rates |
| Prepaid and postpaid | Strangers and regulars are different risks | Can I run both at once |
| Floor control | Tournaments and frozen games do not wait | Take over a screen from the counter |
| Member accounts | Regulars fill your slow hours | Show me a wallet and a history |
| Off-site backup | One dead disk should not end the business | Where does my data live |
| PC and console | Two counters is a tax on your staff | Bill both on one screen |
| Reporting | You cannot fix what you cannot see | Show me a shift breakdown |
What I would actually do
Shortlist two tools that fit your venue type. Ask each for the pricing schedule, a live screen takeover and a restore. Those three demos tell you more than any feature list, because they are the things you will lean on when the room is full and something goes wrong.
Then pick the one that answers to you rather than to an advertiser and set up your backup on day one.
Frequently asked questions
What is the most important feature in internet cafe software?
Flexible billing. Everything else is recoverable. But a pricing model that cannot follow your busy and quiet hours quietly costs you money every single day. After that comes controlling the floor from the counter and keeping your data off the one disk it lives on.
Is free internet cafe software a good idea?
Free software is funded by advertising shown to your customers. You pay with their screen space and attention rather than with money. That model is also collapsing, because a cafe shares one IP and ad networks cannot count the visitors. Expect free tools to shrink, break or turn paid.
Do I need different software for a PlayStation or billiards venue?
Usually yes. PC cafe software is built around gaming PCs. If you rent consoles, tables or couches by the hour, a tool built for that fits better. CafeTimer at cafetimer.com is built for PlayStation, billiards and board-game venues.
Can one system handle both PCs and consoles?
Yes, if it is built for it. HandyCafe manages PC and console stations side by side with the same billing, member accounts and controls, which saves you running two counters.
How much should internet cafe software cost?
Judge it against what one lost evening costs you. The right question is not the monthly figure, it is whether the tool pays for itself in filled seats, correct billing and a disaster you did not have. Compare what you get, not a memory of free.
Built for the floor, not for a feature list
HandyCafe runs PC and console venues: flexible pricing, remote control of every station, member accounts, cloud backup and reporting in one place.
Related articles
Billing
Pricing that fits how your cafe actually runs
Flat hourly rates leave money on the table on a Saturday night and scare people off on a slow Tuesday. Here is how HandyCafe charges sessions: prepaid or postpaid, rates that move with the clock and different prices for PCs, consoles and members.
Remote management
Remote Management: run every computer in your cafe from one screen
See any station live, take over the mouse and keyboard, add time, send a message or shut a machine down without leaving the counter. Here is how HandyCafe Remote Management works and when you actually reach for it.
Industry
Why is internet cafe software no longer free?
For twenty years the cafe program was free because ads on the screens paid for it. That deal is ending and the reason is not greed. It is that the internet cannot count the people sitting in an internet cafe.