What Is a QR Menu? The Complete 2026 Guide
A QR menu lets guests scan, browse, order and pay from their own phone — no app, no waiter relay. Here's how it works, what it costs, and why it's now the default.
A QR menu is a digital restaurant menu that guests open by scanning a QR code with their phone camera. Instead of a printed card, each table has a small code; the guest points their camera at it and the menu opens in the browser — no app to download, no account to create. From there they can browse with photos, filter by allergens, order, and in many cases pay, all from their own phone.
How a QR menu works, step by step
- Scan: the guest points their phone camera at the code on the table. The menu opens instantly in the browser.
- Browse: they see categories, photos, prices and descriptions — translated into their own language automatically.
- Order: they tap the items they want. With a full platform, the order lands on the kitchen display in real time.
- Pay: they settle the bill at the table or pick up for takeaway, often splitting the bill and adding a tip in a tap.
QR menu vs. printed menu
A printed menu is static: reprinting costs money every time a price changes or a dish sells out, and it can't take an order. A QR menu updates instantly, hides sold-out items automatically, speaks every guest's language, and — with a real platform behind it — turns a glance into an order without a waiter relaying it. That difference shows up as faster table turns, fewer mistakes, and a higher average order value.
Is a QR menu just an image of the menu?
Many free "QR menu generators" stop at showing a PDF or image. That's the most basic form — better than paper, but it still can't take orders, sync stock, or handle payment. A modern QR menu like Qoro is a live system: the same scan that shows the menu also sends the order to the kitchen and closes the bill at the cashier.
What does a QR menu cost?
A simple display-only QR menu can be free. A full ordering-and-payment platform is a monthly subscription — Qoro starts at $14/month with a 14-day free trial, and takes 0% commission on your guests' orders. Compared with delivery marketplaces that take 15–30% per order, the flat-fee model pays for itself quickly for any venue with table service.
Do customers need an app?
No. This is the most common misconception. A QR menu runs entirely in the phone's browser. The guest scans and the menu opens — there is nothing to install and no sign-up. That zero-friction start is exactly why QR menus convert browsing into orders so well.
Which businesses use QR menus?
Restaurants, cafés, bars, patisseries, bakeries, pizzerias, food trucks and multi-branch chains all use QR menus. Anywhere a guest sits down — or walks up to a counter — a QR menu shortens the path from "what should I get" to "order placed."
Want to see one in action? Explore Qoro's features or start a free trial.