Run a cooking class for guests in your own kitchen. They come as much for you as for the food.
Sign up to hostMost hosts run a cooking class or workshop. Guests cook alongside you and leave with a skill they can talk about. It’s easier to price - people benchmark it against a class, not a restaurant - and the prep is lighter than cooking a full meal. Shared meals are also an option, but most cooks find a class is the easier path.
Most hosts who do well on Eataway fall into one of these patterns. Find the one closest to yours - it’s the easiest path to your first guests.
Locals in your adopted city want to learn authentic dishes from someone who grew up cooking them. Your country and your grandmother’s recipes are your strongest hook.
Travellers want to step into your culture and food beyond what restaurants offer. Living there and cooking the local food daily is exactly what they came for.
Cook professionally without working in a restaurant. You set your own hours and cook from your own kitchen; guests come for skill they can’t easily learn at home.
You don’t have to be a native or live in a tourist city. If you love cooking and you’re a welcoming host, find your angle - a regional cuisine you’ve mastered, a technique you teach well, a theme worth building a session around.
Most new hosts find their first guests through a friend, neighbour, or local food group on Facebook or WhatsApp. Your first 2–3 reviews on Eataway unlock more visibility in search. From there, word-of-mouth tends to do the heavy lifting.
You set the price. Eataway takes 15% of the booking subtotal - the rest is yours. Guests also pay a small service fee on top, which helps to cover platform running costs.
Apply to host. It’s a short form. We just need a phone number and a few lines about you.
Sign up to host