Why Every Restaurant Needs a Menu QR Code
QR codes for restaurant menus went from a pandemic-era workaround to an expected feature. Customers now routinely pull out their phone expecting to scan a code rather than wait for a physical menu. Beyond the convenience factor, a digital menu linked via QR code gives you real advantages:
- Update your menu instantly — change prices, add specials, remove sold-out items without reprinting anything
- No printing costs — once the QR code is printed on your table tent or menu holder, it works forever
- Reduce wait time — customers can browse while waiting to be seated
- Track engagement — if your menu is hosted online, you can see how many scans it gets
- Hygiene — no shared physical menus being passed between customers
Important: Most "free" QR code generators online create dynamic QR codes — your code redirects through their server. When your free trial ends (usually 30 days), the code shows an error page to your customers. If you've already printed that code on your table tents and menus, you now have a problem. The solution is a static QR code that embeds your URL directly — no server, no subscription, no expiry date. That's exactly what QRForge generates.
What You Need Before You Start
Before creating your QR code, decide what you want customers to see when they scan it. You have several options:
- Your website menu page — if you have a website with a menu section, use that URL
- A Google Drive PDF — upload your menu as a PDF to Google Drive and share the link
- A photo on Google Drive or Dropbox — works for simple menus
- A third-party menu service — Linktree, Canva, or dedicated menu platforms like Menu Tiger or GloriaFood
- Your Google Business listing — if your menu is already on Google Maps
The most important thing: make sure the URL works on mobile. Test it on your own phone before printing anything. A menu that's hard to read on a phone screen defeats the purpose.
Use Google Drive to host your menu PDF for free. Upload the file, set sharing to "Anyone with the link can view", and copy the share link. This gives you a permanent URL you can update by replacing the file without changing the QR code link.
Step-by-Step: Creating Your Restaurant Menu QR Code
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Go to qrforge.store
Open QRForge in your browser. No account or login required. The generator loads instantly.
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Select the URL tab
Click the URL tab at the top of the generator. This is the correct type for linking to your online menu, Google Drive PDF, or any web address.
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Paste your menu URL
Paste the link to your online menu into the URL field. Make sure it starts with https:// and test it once to confirm it opens correctly on your phone.
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Customise colours (optional)
Use the foreground and background colour pickers to match your restaurant's branding. Dark codes on light backgrounds scan best — avoid reversing this for print materials.
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Set size to 512px
Use the slider to select 512px. This gives you the highest quality image for both digital use and print. For very large prints (A3 and above), download the SVG instead.
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Click Generate QR Code
Your QR code appears instantly in the preview panel on the right. Scan it with your phone immediately to test that it opens the correct page.
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Download as SVG for print
Click the SVG button to download a vector file. SVG scales to any size without pixelation — essential for table tents, menu covers, and wall signage. Use PNG for digital-only use.
How to Use Your Menu QR Code in Your Restaurant
Once you have your QR code file, there are several practical ways to deploy it in your restaurant.
Table tents and table stickers
The most common placement. Print your QR code on a small tent card or sticker and place one on every table. Include a short instruction like "Scan to view our menu" — not everyone is familiar with QR codes, especially older customers. Table tents should have the QR code sized at a minimum 3cm × 3cm to scan reliably at arm's length.
On the physical menu cover
Print the QR code on the inside cover of your physical menu. Customers who want to browse digitally can scan it, while those who prefer physical menus still have one in hand. This hybrid approach works well for fine dining where completely removing physical menus might feel unwelcoming.
At the entrance and on signage
Place a QR code at your entrance or host stand so customers can browse the menu while waiting to be seated. This reduces the feeling of waiting and helps parties decide faster once seated.
On takeaway packaging
Add your menu QR code to takeaway bags, boxes, and receipts. Customers who enjoyed their meal can scan to reorder or view your full menu for next time.
PNG vs SVG — Which to Download for Restaurant Use?
| Use case | Best format | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Table tent (printed small) | SVG | Crisp at any print size |
| Menu cover print | SVG | No pixelation when scaled up |
| Large wall sign | SVG | Vector scales infinitely |
| Website / social media | PNG | Universal image format for screens |
| WhatsApp / email | PNG | Easy to share digitally |
| Google My Business | PNG | Upload directly to your listing |
Best Practices for Restaurant QR Codes
Always include a short instruction
Never assume customers know what to do. Add text next to or below the QR code: "Scan with your phone camera to view our menu." This single line dramatically increases the number of people who actually use it.
Test before printing in bulk
Always test your QR code with multiple devices before printing. Test on an iPhone, an Android, and ideally an older phone. If it scans reliably on all three, you're good to print.
Keep the minimum size at 3cm × 3cm
Anything smaller becomes unreliable for phone cameras. For table stickers, 4cm × 4cm is a comfortable size that most phones can read from 20–30cm away.
Dark code on white background always
High contrast is essential for reliable scanning. Black on white is the gold standard. If you're matching brand colours, ensure the foreground is significantly darker than the background. Avoid printing QR codes on dark backgrounds with light modules — many phone cameras struggle with this.
Leave a quiet zone around the code
QR codes need a margin of blank space around them (called a "quiet zone") of at least 4 modules wide. When placing your QR code in a design, leave at least 3–5mm of white space around all four sides.
What If My Menu URL Changes?
This is one of the most important considerations for restaurants. If you ever move your website, switch menu providers, or change the link to your online menu, a static QR code will stop working. The solution is to use a permanent, stable URL from the very beginning.
The best approach is to use a URL you control permanently — your own website's menu page. If you're using Google Drive, the share link is permanent as long as you don't delete the file. If you use a third-party menu service, check whether they guarantee permanent URLs or whether they could change.
If you need to change the URL in future and you've already printed QR codes, you'll need to generate a new code and reprint. This is why choosing the right URL from the start matters.
Create Your Restaurant Menu QR Code
Free forever. No login, no subscription. Download as SVG for perfect print quality.
Generate Free QR Code →Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need an app to create a QR code for my menu?
No. QRForge runs entirely in your web browser — no app download needed. Open qrforge.store on your phone, tablet, or computer and generate your code in seconds.
Will my QR code stop working?
No. QRForge generates static QR codes that embed your URL directly into the QR pattern. There is no expiry date, no subscription, and no server in between. The code will work for as long as the URL it points to remains active.
How big should I print my QR code?
For table tents, a minimum of 3cm × 3cm is recommended. For wall signs, 10cm × 10cm or larger ensures scanning from a distance. Download as SVG for print to ensure sharpness at any size.
Can I customise the QR code colours to match my restaurant branding?
Yes. QRForge allows you to set custom foreground and background colours. Keep the foreground dark and the background light for reliable scanning.
What's the best way to host my menu online for free?
Upload your menu as a PDF to Google Drive, set sharing to "Anyone with the link", copy the share URL, and use that as your QR code target. It's free, reliable, and you can update the menu by replacing the file.