Build a Digital QR Menu with AI in under 5 minutes

Build a QR-code digital menu — dishes grouped by category with prices, dietary tags, and a sold-out toggle, editable from a phone. Generated by AI in minutes.

Comment ça fonctionne

Étape 1

Décrivez votre idée

Rédigez une invite en texte libre décrivant ce que vous souhaitez.

Étape 2

L'IA le construit

FloopFloop génère instantanément du code prêt pour la production.

Étape 3

Déployez et passez en ligne

Votre projet est hébergé sur son propre sous-domaine en quelques minutes.

Pourquoi créer avec l'IA plutôt que de faire appel à un développeur ?

FloopFloopDéveloppeur traditionnel
Délai de lancementMoins de 5 minutes2 à 8 semaines
CoûtÀ partir de 0 $5 000 $ - 50 000 $+
MaintenanceInclusePrestataire récurrent

What is a digital menu?

A digital menu is the scannable page a restaurant, café, or bar puts behind a QR code so guests read the menu on their own phone instead of a laminated card. It exploded after 2020 and stuck because it solves a real operational problem: a printed menu is frozen the moment it's printed, while a dish sells out, a price changes, or a seasonal special arrives every single day. The category is distinct from a restaurant website — guests opening a digital menu at the table don't want a hero video and an about-us story, they want the dishes, the prices, and which things are vegan, fast and legible on a phone held over a table. The tools that own this space (menu-QR SaaS apps) charge a monthly fee per location to host what is, underneath, a list of dishes and a .png QR code, and they put your menu on their domain with their branding and an upsell banner. The mechanics that matter are humble: dishes grouped under clear category headings, prices that line up on a leader-dot row, dietary tags, a way to mark something sold out without deleting it, and an owner who can edit all of it from the same phone the guests are using.

Common features

  • Dishes grouped by category (Starters, Mains, Drinks…) in your order
  • Prices stored exactly (integer cents — no rounding drift) with your currency
  • Dietary tags (vegan, gluten-free, spicy) shown as pills
  • Sold-out toggle that dims an item instead of deleting it
  • Admin desk (ADMIN_KEY) to add, reorder, and edit items + the header
  • Mobile-first layout — it's opened from a QR scan at the table
  • Server-rendered with schema.org Menu structured data for search
  • Editable restaurant name, tagline, and currency symbol
  • Your own domain, no per-location subscription or upsell banner

Real-world examples

Café / coffee shop

A QR on each table opens the menu — Coffee, Pastries, Brunch — with prices and vegan tags, updated from the counter when something sells out.

Bar / cocktail list

Signatures, Classics, and zero-proof sections with short descriptions and prices, restyled to a dark candlelit theme for evening service.

Food truck / pop-up

One scannable page the owner edits between stops, marking items sold out as the day's prep runs down — no reprint, no app.

Why FloopFloop fits digital menu projects

Menu-QR apps charge a monthly fee per location to host a list of dishes and generate a QR code — and they put your menu on their domain, with their branding and an upsell banner under your prices. FloopFloop builds the whole thing on your domain from one prompt: the categorised menu, the prices and dietary tags, the sold-out toggle, and the admin desk to edit it all from your phone. Because the menu renders server-side with schema.org structured data, it's real content search engines can read, not a PDF or an image that's invisible to Google. Change a price, add a special, restyle it for the evening service — you describe it and the menu redeploys at the same URL printed on your QR code. You own the domain and the data, and there's no subscription ticking per table.

Essayez ces invites

Copiez l'une des invites ci-dessous et collez-la dans FloopFloop pour commencer.

Build a digital menu for my café that I can put behind a QR code on the tables. Group items by category (Coffee, Pastries, Brunch), show prices, let me mark things sold out, and give me an admin area to add or remove dishes. Warm, cream paper look.

Create a QR-code menu for a cocktail bar. Sections for Signatures, Classics, and Zero-proof, each drink with a short description and price, dietary/vegan tags, and a private admin page to edit everything. Dark candlelit theme.

Make an online menu for a food truck. One scannable page, items grouped by category with prices in euros, a 'sold out' marker for when we run out, and an admin login so I can update it between stops. Bold and simple.

Design a restaurant menu page for a trattoria: antipasti, pasta, secondi, and dolci with prices and descriptions, gluten-free and vegetarian tags, and an owner area to reorder dishes and edit the menu. Elegant serif look.

Foire aux questions

Is this the same as a restaurant website?
No. A restaurant website is the full marketing site — hero, photos, hours, reservations, about. A digital menu is just the menu itself: the scannable page a diner opens at the table to see what's on offer and the price. If you only need the menu behind a QR code, this is the focused, faster choice; if you need the whole site, pick Restaurant Website.
Can I put it behind a QR code on the tables?
Yes — that's the main use. Point a QR code (printed on the table, the door, or a flyer) at the menu's URL; guests scan it and the menu opens instantly on their phone. The layout is mobile-first because that's where it's read.
Can I update prices and dishes myself?
Yes. A private admin page (gated by an ADMIN_KEY you set) lets you add items, edit the header, reorder dishes, and mark anything sold out. Changes go live instantly — no reprinting, no agency, no redeploy wait.
Does it handle categories and dietary tags?
Yes. Each dish has a category (Starters, Mains, Drinks…) and items group under their category automatically, in the order you set. You can add dietary tags like vegan, gluten-free, or spicy, shown as small pills next to the dish.
Will the menu show up in Google?
The menu renders server-side and emits schema.org Menu structured data (sections, dishes, and prices), so search engines can read and potentially surface your menu — not just a screenshot or a PDF that's invisible to search.
Does it take payments or orders?
No — it's a menu, not a checkout. It shows dishes and prices for guests to read and order from a server. That keeps it fast and simple; if you want online ordering and a cart, the Online Store or Restaurant Website categories cover that.

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