Comparison
XPR vs Bite
XPR and Bite are both POS-integrated self-ordering kiosk platforms, and both report 20%+ average-check lift. The differences are breadth and resilience: XPR runs on Windows or Android, pairs cloud menu management and reporting with a real-time ordering flow that keeps running offline, includes native fleet management, and spans kiosk, mobile/QR, linebusting, order-ready board, and AI voice. Bite is a US-focused kiosk-and-AI-upsell specialist that uses a cloud-based architecture. Cloud-based ordering is typically susceptible to connectivity and performance issues. Both serve QSR and fast-casual chains; XPR adds more channels, more verticals, multi-OS hardware flexibility, and scale across 100+ brands in 15+ countries.
Last reviewed June 2026. Comparisons are based on publicly available information as of that date and are intended to be fair and factual. Bite is a trademark of its respective owner.
The bottom line
If you want hardware flexibility, offline resilience, built-in fleet monitoring, and more ordering channels than the kiosk alone, XPR comes out ahead. Bite offers a self-order kiosk with an AI-driven upsell engine for US QSR, fast-casual, and convenience stores.
Why operators choose XPR
Why operators choose XPR over Bite
Windows or Android hardware flexibility
XPR kiosks run on Windows (its largest installed base) or Android, so operators can choose from a wide range of hardware — and enterprise IT teams get the Windows manageability they prefer (MDM, antivirus, security policy). Bite’s supported kiosk OS is not stated publicly.
Keeps selling when the internet drops
XPR is a hybrid platform: you manage menus and view sales reporting in the cloud, while the real-time ordering flow runs locally with payment store-and-forward — so kiosks keep taking orders during outages. You get cloud convenience without an internet dependency at the moment of sale. Bite uses a cloud-based architecture, with menu and order data on a cloud server. Cloud-based ordering is typically susceptible to internet connectivity and performance issues, such as outages or slow connections.
More than a kiosk
XPR is one platform for kiosk, mobile & QR ordering, linebusting, an order-ready board, and AI voice ordering. Bite centers on self-order kiosks plus a handheld linebuster and its Bite Lift AI-upsell engine.
Native fleet management, built in
XPR Fleet Manager monitors connectivity, CPU, memory, disk, printer paper, and peripherals, with remote restart and updates across every kiosk — no separate monitoring tool to license.
A UI you can make your own
XPR’s kiosk UI is highly configurable — layouts, items per screen, themes, fonts, colors, and workflow components — so it matches your brand and service model.
At a glance
XPR vs Bite, side by side
| XPR | Bite | |
|---|---|---|
| Kiosk OS & hardware | Windows or Android (Windows is the largest installed base), optional Tizen — widest choice of hardware. | Supported kiosk OS is not stated publicly. |
| Cloud & offline resilience | Hybrid model: menu management and sales reporting run in the cloud; the real-time ordering flow runs locally with payment store-and-forward, so kiosks keep selling during outages, then sync to the POS. | Uses a cloud-based architecture (menu and order data on a cloud server). Cloud-based ordering is typically susceptible to connectivity and performance issues. |
| Channels | Kiosk, mobile & QR ordering, linebusting, order-ready board, AI voice ordering. | Self-order kiosk plus a handheld linebuster; no publicly offered drive-thru or AI voice product. |
| Native fleet management | Built-in Fleet Manager: connectivity, CPU/memory/disk, peripherals, uptime, remote restart and updates. | A native device-fleet monitoring solution is not described in its public materials. |
| POS integration | Direct, certified integrations (Oracle Simphony STSG2, PAR/Brink, Heartland/Genius, NCR Aloha) — no middleware. | Connects to Oracle Simphony and other POS platforms. |
| UI configurability | Layouts, items per screen, themes, fonts, colors, and workflow components are all configurable to your brand. | Kiosk UI with an AI-driven upsell focus; configuration options are not detailed publicly. |
| Best for | QSR & fast-casual chains (a few sites to several hundred), foodservice operators, airports, stadiums, parks, and casinos. | US QSR, fast-casual, and convenience-store operators wanting a kiosk with AI-driven upsell. |
In summary
Where XPR fits best
XPR fits QSR and fast-casual chains of every size, foodservice operators, and complex venues such as airports, stadiums, parks, casinos, and campus dining, with proven scale across 100+ brands in 15+ countries. It is built for operators who want more than a kiosk: one POS-integrated platform across kiosk, mobile/QR, linebusting, order-ready board, and AI voice, with Windows-or-Android hardware flexibility, offline resilience, native fleet management, and 15+ languages including right-to-left support.
About Bite
Bite offers self-order kiosks with an AI-driven upsell engine (Bite Lift) and contactless/QR ordering, focused on US QSR, fast-casual, and convenience stores.
Frequently asked questions
XPR vs Bite: common questions
- What is the difference between XPR and Bite?
- Both are POS-integrated self-ordering kiosk platforms with 20%+ check-lift claims. XPR runs on Windows or Android, pairs cloud menu management and reporting with a real-time ordering flow that keeps running offline, includes native fleet management, and spans kiosk, mobile/QR, linebusting, order-ready board, and AI voice. Bite is a US-focused kiosk-and-AI-upsell specialist that uses a cloud-based architecture.
- Does Bite run on Windows kiosks?
- Bite’s supported kiosk operating system is not stated publicly. XPR kiosks run on Windows or Android (Windows is XPR’s largest installed base), which gives operators broader hardware choice and the Windows manageability enterprise IT teams often require.
- Does Bite offer mobile ordering or AI voice ordering?
- Bite centers on self-order kiosks plus a handheld linebuster and its Bite Lift AI-upsell engine; it does not publicly offer a drive-thru or AI voice product. XPR offers kiosk, mobile & QR ordering, linebusting, an order-ready board, and AI voice ordering in one platform.
- Which is better for multi-unit chains and venues?
- XPR is built for multi-unit rollouts — native fleet management, offline resilience, direct POS integration, and 15+ languages — and serves QSR and fast-casual chains as well as airports, stadiums, parks, and casinos, across 100+ brands in 15+ countries. Bite focuses on US QSR, fast-casual, and convenience stores.
More comparisons
Ready when you are
See your menu, your brand, your POS — running on XPR.
Book a 30-minute demo. We’ll set it up with your menu, your brand colors, and the full ordering-to-kitchen flow on your POS — not a generic walkthrough.