Burger King’s AI Is Listening

Burger King is piloting a headset assistant that tracks service language and manages kitchen systems
Burger King is piloting an AI platform called BK Assistant in 500 U.S. restaurants, according to reporting by The Verge. BK Assistant is a system that connects restaurant data, drive-thru audio and operational software through a headset interface worn by employees.
It is also testing AI voice ordering in fewer than 100 locations, Chief Digital Officer Thibault Roux told The Verge.
The platform includes an OpenAI-powered chatbot called Patty. Employees interact with Patty through their headsets to ask questions about menu preparation or cleaning procedures.
In a promotional video shared with BBC News, Patty alerts staff when a machine is running low on Diet Coke and provides recipe reminders through the headset.
The assistant is integrated with Burger King’s cloud-based point-of-sale system, according to the company. If a product runs out or equipment goes offline, the system updates ordering channels, including kiosks and digital menu boards "within 15 minutes."
In addition to operational support, the system compiles what the company describes as “friendliness scores.” Managers can review how their location is performing on those measures.
The analysis is based on audio from live drive-thru conversations.
Some social media users described the monitoring feature as “disgusting” and questioned whether AI should monitor employees.
Burger King has said the technology is not designed to record conversations or evaluate individual employees, according to the BBC.
The company said it explored using “aggregated keywords, such as common hospitality phrases” to understand overall service and recognize teams delivering strong hospitality.
Restaurant Brands International, Burger King’s parent company, said the tool is “designed to streamline restaurant operations” so managers can focus more on guest service and team leadership.
Roux also addressed the company’s testing of AI voice ordering.
“We’re tinkering with it, we’re playing around with it, but it’s still a risky bet,” he told The Verge. “Not every guest is ready for this.”
Inside Store Operations
BK Assistant builds on Burger King’s broader shift toward cloud-based point-of-sale systems and centralized digital infrastructure across its U.S. restaurants.
Those systems allow ordering activity, equipment status and inventory data to flow through integrated platforms. Analysts have noted that this modernization laid the groundwork for real-time AI tools to operate inside restaurant workflows.
In international markets, Burger King has also experimented with AI beyond front-line restaurant operations. In France, teams use an AI-powered internal data chatbot known as REBEKA to query transactional and customer data using natural language, according to Artefact, the consultancy involved in the project.
The U.S. rollout places AI directly inside day-to-day employee workflow.
Industry Experiments With AI
Fast-food chains have been experimenting with artificial intelligence across different parts of their businesses.
McDonald's previously partnered with IBM to test AI voice ordering in more than 100 U.S. drive-thrus before ending that trial after reported order accuracy issues. The company has continued investing in artificial intelligence systems focused on equipment monitoring and order accuracy. Wendy's last year expanded its FreshAI voice ordering system in partnership with Google Cloud, deploying the technology in hundreds of locations.
Taco Bell, owned by Yum Brands, rolled out AI voice ordering in more than 500 U.S. drive-thrus earlier this year using its Byte platform. The deployment faced technical glitches and viral prank orders, including an incident in which a customer placed an order for 18,000 cups of water.
Yum Brands CEO David Gibbs later said, “We see automation as a tool to support our team members, and we want to keep the human element that makes our brands unique.”
Read more: Taco Bell’s Drive-Thru Pause Shows Where Automation Stumbles
Burger King plans to expand BK Assistant nationwide by the end of 2026. For now, its largest disclosed AI pilot operates through employee headsets inside the restaurant.