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TablePass vs AutoRes vs TableTurn: Which NYC Reservation Service Actually Works?

By Claire from the TablePass Team

There are now a handful of services that promise to get you into NYC's hardest restaurants — the ones where prime-time slots sell out in single-digit seconds and cancellations vanish before you can pull out your phone. TablePass, AutoRes, and TableTurn are the three that come up most. We're obviously biased (you're reading this on tablepass.nyc), but we're also going to be factual. Here's how they actually compare.

What These Services Do

Same core idea across the board: software monitors restaurant availability on Resy and books faster than any human can. That covers both the morning drop (when new reservations go live) and cancellation monitoring (when someone releases a table at a random hour). The differences come down to pricing, coverage, support, and how much thought has gone into the actual experience.

Side-by-Side Comparison

Feature TablePass AutoRes TableTurn
Per-booking cost $18 per success (as low as $6.90/booking on plans) $18.99 per success ~$50/month flat subscription
Charged if you don't get in? No No Yes
Cancellation monitoring 24/7 24/7 24/7
Drop sniping Yes Yes Yes
Platforms covered Resy + OpenTable Resy + OpenTable Resy only
Restaurant count 100+ ~30+ ~40+
Customer support Text/call concierge + email Email only No listed support channel
Blog / booking guides Restaurant-specific with real drop times None AI-generated filler

Pricing Breakdown

This is where the choice gets obvious.

TableTurn charges around $50 per month whether or not you get a single reservation. Book zero restaurants? That's $50 gone. Book one? Still $50 — for a service that only covers Resy. Over a year, that's $600 regardless of results.

AutoRes is better. $18.99 per successful booking, no charge if they don't get the table. Fair model. But $19 per reservation is $19 per reservation. Two bookings a month and you're at $38.

TablePass starts at $18 per successful booking — comparable to AutoRes on a one-off basis. But on a subscription plan, that drops to as low as $6.90 per booking. Two reservations on a TablePass plan costs you roughly $14 total. Same two reservations on AutoRes: $38. Same two on TableTurn: $50+ (and you're locked into next month too).

For anyone who eats out more than once a month — which, in New York, is basically everyone — the math isn't close.

The Support Problem

This matters more than people think, because things go wrong. A restaurant changes its drop time. A booking doesn't go through and you need to know why. You want to adjust your preferences last-minute because your dinner party grew from two to four.

TablePass has a concierge you can actually reach — text, call, or email, and a real person responds. Not a chatbot. Not a ticket system that takes three business days. An actual human who can fix your problem while you're standing on the sidewalk trying to figure out dinner.

AutoRes has email support. Fine for non-urgent questions, less fine when you need something handled right now.

TableTurn? We genuinely could not find a public support channel. No phone number, no chat, no obvious email. If something goes wrong with your booking or your subscription, it's not clear who you'd even contact. Coincidentally, one of the more prominent search results for TableTurn is a chargeback complaint site where users report difficulty canceling and unexpected charges. Not exactly confidence-inspiring for a service that needs your credit card on file.

Coverage and Platform Support

TablePass and AutoRes both cover Resy and OpenTable. TableTurn only covers Resy.

That matters because a number of NYC restaurants — Peter Luger, certain locations — use OpenTable exclusively. If you're only on Resy, you're missing a chunk of the market. It's not a dealbreaker for everyone, but it's a gap.

On raw restaurant count, TablePass covers 100+ venues. AutoRes lists around 30+. TableTurn lists around 40+. More coverage means more flexibility — you're not limited to just the ten hardest restaurants in the city. You can set up monitoring for the places you're genuinely curious about, not just the trophy bookings.

The Content Thing

AutoRes doesn't have a blog. No drop-time guides, no booking strategies, no information about specific restaurants. Their site is a landing page, a pricing page, and an FAQ. If you want to know when Tatiana drops (it's noon, by the way, not morning), you're on your own.

TableTurn does have a blog. Read it. Articles about "exploring culinary delights in Manhattan's SoHo" and "mastering the art of booking at Carbone NYC." They read exactly like what they are — AI-generated content designed to game search engines. No real drop times. No actual strategies. No evidence that anyone at the company has personally tried to book any of these restaurants. One article says Carbone drops "typically at midnight" — it drops at 10 AM. That kind of misinformation actively hurts the people trying to use it.

TablePass publishes restaurant-specific guides with verified drop times, booking-window breakdowns, time-of-week difficulty data, and strategies that come from actually attempting these reservations. When we say Monkey Bar drops at 9 AM with a 20-day window, it's because we've confirmed it. The Resy drop-time guide on our blog is one of the most comprehensive public references for NYC restaurant release schedules.

This isn't just a marketing flex — it's genuinely useful whether you use our service or not.

Quick Note on TableTurn's History

TableTurn used to be called "Resy Sniper." They've since rebranded, but the name tells you something about the original positioning. We'll leave it at that.

Who Should Use What

TablePass makes the most sense for anyone who books hard-to-get NYC restaurants with any regularity. Lower per-booking cost (especially on plans), both Resy and OpenTable, more restaurant coverage, real customer support you can actually reach, and content that's actually useful. That's us, and we think the comparison speaks for itself.

AutoRes is a reasonable option if you book very infrequently — maybe once every couple months — and you don't want any ongoing commitment. At $18.99 per booking it's slightly more expensive per reservation, but it's straightforward and pay-per-success.

TableTurn is hard to recommend at $50/month with Resy-only coverage, no identifiable support channel, and blog content that contains factually incorrect drop times. The subscription model means you're paying whether or not you get anything, which is a tough sell when both competitors only charge on success.

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the best NYC restaurant reservation booking service?

TablePass offers the lowest per-booking cost (as low as $6.90 on a plan), covers both Resy and OpenTable, monitors 100+ NYC restaurants 24/7, and provides concierge support via text, phone, or email. It's the most comprehensive option for regular NYC diners.

Is AutoRes worth it?

AutoRes is a decent service with a straightforward $18.99-per-booking model. It only charges on success, which is fair. The main drawbacks are higher per-booking cost compared to TablePass plans, no editorial content or drop-time guides, and email-only support.

How much does TableTurn cost?

TableTurn charges approximately $50 per month as a flat subscription, regardless of whether you receive any reservations. It only covers Resy (not OpenTable) and has limited public support options.

Can these services get me into Carbone, Torrisi, or 4 Charles?

All three services monitor high-demand restaurants like Carbone, Torrisi, and 4 Charles. The difference is pricing, platform coverage, and support. TablePass monitors these restaurants 24/7 and books the moment a table opens, starting at $18 per successful booking or as low as $6.90 on a subscription plan.

Do I get charged if the service doesn't get my reservation?

TablePass and AutoRes only charge when a reservation is successfully booked. TableTurn charges a monthly subscription fee regardless of results.

What's the difference between drop sniping and cancellation monitoring?

Drop sniping targets the exact moment restaurants release new tables each morning (like Carbone at 10 AM, 30 days out). Cancellation monitoring watches for openings throughout the day and night when people release existing reservations. Both are important — TablePass handles both automatically.

Browse restaurants on TablePass →

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