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Why Restaurants Are Switching to QR Menus (2026)

Why are so many restaurants moving to QR-code menus? The real benefits — instant updates, no reprints, ordering without commissions — and an honest look at where printed menus still win.

The Drentio TeamJul 3, 20266 min read

A few years ago, scanning a QR code to see a menu felt novel. Now it's on tables in cafés, bars, food trucks, and fine-dining rooms alike. The shift started out of necessity and stuck around for a simpler reason: a QR menu quietly solves problems that printed menus never could — even if it's not the right fit for every table.

Here's an honest look at why so many restaurants have made the switch, and where a printed menu still earns its place.

A restaurant table set for a meal
QR menus moved from novelty to normal — because of what they fix behind the scenes.

The quiet problems with printed menus

Paper menus have hidden costs that add up:

  • Reprints. Every price change, new dish, or seasonal swap means designing, printing, and replacing a stack of menus.
  • They go stale. The moment you 86 a dish or nudge a price, every printed menu is out of date until the next reprint.
  • Wear and tear. Menus get sticky, torn, and (post-2020) raise hygiene questions.
  • They're static. A printed menu can't show a photo gallery, switch languages, or tell a diner what's sold out right now.

Why restaurants are switching

A QR-code menu — one diners open by scanning a small code on the table — fixes most of that:

  1. Update anything instantly. Change a price, add a special, or mark a dish sold out from your phone, and every table sees it immediately. No reprints, ever.
  2. Cut printing costs to near zero. The code doesn't change even when the menu does, so you print once (or not at all).
  3. Show more. Photos, descriptions, allergens, and calories — without cramming a page.
  4. Speak your diners' language. Multilingual menus switch automatically, which matters in tourist-heavy spots.
  5. Take orders and payments (optional). Many restaurants add contactless ordering so diners order from their phones — often without the 15–30% commission delivery apps charge.
  6. See what's working. Because it's digital, you can tell which items get viewed and ordered most.

Are QR menus actually good for diners?

Here's the honest part: not everyone loves a QR-only menu. Some diners find scanning fiddly, some don't want to stare at a phone over dinner, and accessibility matters — older guests or anyone without a smartphone can be left out.

The restaurants that get it right treat the QR menu as the default, not the only option: a clean, fast-loading menu that opens in one scan, with a few printed copies on hand for anyone who prefers paper. Done that way, you get the operational upside without alienating a single guest.

Getting started is quick

Setting up a QR menu is a job of minutes, not weeks: add your items, get a QR code, and place it on tables or windows. If you'd like to see how it works, Drentio lets you build a QR-code menu with instant updates, sold-out toggles, and optional online ordering — free to start with a view-only menu.

FAQ

Are QR code menus good for restaurants?

For most, yes — they eliminate reprints, update instantly, and can add ordering without app commissions. The main trade-off is diner preference, which is easily solved by keeping a few printed menus on hand.

Do QR menus cost money to set up?

You can launch a view-only QR menu for free. Contactless ordering and payments typically come with a paid plan.

Do diners need an app to use a QR menu?

No — they scan the code and the menu opens in their phone's browser. Nothing to install.

Can I still offer printed menus too?

Yes, and it's a good idea. Use the QR menu as the default and keep a few printed copies for guests who prefer them.

Modern menu, zero reprints

Launch a contactless QR menu you update in seconds — free to start.

Build your QR menu — free