Taro is a next-generation POS and restaurant operations system built for Mexican restaurants. It covers dine-in, counter-service fast food, delivery, inventory, CFDI 4.0 invoicing, self-service ordering, KDS kitchen displays, loyalty, and real-time reporting. This is clearly not a generic SaaS product; it is an integrated system designed around Mexico’s restaurant industry, SAT invoicing requirements, and local hardware ecosystem.
The feature set is fairly comprehensive. Front-of-house functions support table service, quick service, delivery pipelines, and marketplace orders. Kitchen operations support ESC/POS network printing and KDS. The back office includes multi-warehouse inventory, recipe-based stock deduction, purchasing, wastage tracking, inventory alerts, X/Z shift closing, and real-time business dashboards. Customer-facing tools include online ordering pages, order tracking, WhatsApp notifications, and QR-code self-invoicing via Factaro. The loyalty module supports tiers, stamp cards, cashback, coupons, birthday campaigns, and referral promotions. Deployment information indicates that it can run on a local server/LAN, with unlimited workstations on the same network, while Taro Live enables remote data viewing. However, the boundary between cloud and local deployment is not fully explained.
Pricing is transparent: the main subscription is 800 Mexican pesos/month, IVA included, with all features and unlimited workstations on the same LAN. Annual billing appears to include 2 months free. Tablet ordering integration costs a one-time payment of 500 MXN. CFDI timbres are purchased separately in packages and do not expire. Installation, configuration, and training are not included in the base price. The official website offers an interactive demo without registration, but it does not specify a formal free trial period.
Its strengths are a complete restaurant operations loop, strong CFDI localization, clear hardware compatibility, and migration support from SoftRestaurant 10/11/12, making it a practical low-cost switch for restaurants already using older systems. Pricing is relatively clear, and it offers good value for single-store, multi-terminal scenarios. The drawbacks are that it does not disclose an API, developer documentation, a detailed permissions model, or security certifications. Merchants with high invoicing volumes need to factor in additional timbre costs, and installation and training may also add to the budget.
Taro is best suited for small and medium-sized restaurants, cafés, fast-food shops, and small chains in Mexico, especially merchants that care about CFDI invoicing, self-service invoicing, and local support. Access from China is unknown. Even if accessible, the product language, tax setup, payment workflows, and hardware scenarios are heavily Mexico-oriented. Chinese restaurant operators should first compare local alternatives such as 客如云, 二维火, 哗啦啦, and 美团餐饮系统.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on taro.com.mx official site.
taro.com.mx is an Mexico SaaS Tools provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach taro.com.mx directly.