QR code menu vs printed menu
A QR code menu wins on cost, instant updates, multilingual support and the ability to order and pay — while a printed menu still helps for ambiance and guests who prefer paper. Most restaurants do best with a QR-first menu and a few printed copies on hand.
Cost and flexibility
Printed menus cost money every time prices or items change and go stale the moment something sells out. A QR menu updates live for every table in seconds, at no reprint cost.
- No reprint cost on price/menu changes
- Sold-out items hidden instantly
- One menu across dine-in, takeaway and delivery
Guest experience and sales
A QR menu shows photos, adapts to the guest's language for tourists, and lets guests order and pay from their phone — which speeds up service and raises average ticket with structured upsells. On your own QR there is no per-order commission.
When printed still helps
Fine-dining ambiance, guests without a smartphone, or spotty connectivity are good reasons to keep a few printed copies. A hybrid — QR-first with printed backups — covers everyone without the full reprint bill.
FAQ
Is a QR code menu better than a printed one?
For most restaurants, yes — lower cost, instant updates, multilingual and order-and-pay. Keep a few printed copies for guests who prefer paper.
Do QR menus increase sales?
They can — photos, language adaptation and upsells at checkout tend to raise average ticket, and ordering on your own channel avoids marketplace commission.
Do guests need an app to use a QR menu?
No — a good QR menu opens in the phone browser; guests scan and go.