A QR code for your restaurant menu

Drop your menu as a PDF or a simple webpage and get a live link plus a QR code ready to print on table tents, window clings, or a sign by the door.

Drag & drop your file here

or — zip a folder, or drop a single page

Diners expect a QR code that opens the current menu, not a stale PDF cached from last year or a link to a third-party ordering app cluttered with ads. Pagedrop hosts your actual menu file and hands you a QR code pointed straight at it, so updating dishes or prices is a matter of dropping a new file rather than reprinting every table tent.

How to put a restaurant menu online with a QR code

1

Prepare the menu

Export your menu as a PDF, or drop a simple .html page if you want something that scrolls nicely on a phone.

2

Drop it in

Drop the file onto the box above and it publishes to a live link in seconds.

3

Print the QR code

Save the QR code Pagedrop generates and print it on table tents, a window cling, or a sign — it points straight at your live menu.

Frequently asked questions

What happens when I update the menu or prices?

A fresh upload gets a fresh link, so a printed QR code will not silently update behind the scenes. A paid plan lets you pick your site's link name — delete the old version with your manage token and republish under the same name to keep one QR code working.

Does it work for both a PDF menu and a webpage menu?

Both are supported — drop a PDF for a fast, print-accurate menu, or a small HTML page (zip it if it has separate images) for something more mobile-friendly.

Will the QR code work on any phone?

Yes — it is a standard QR code pointing at a normal HTTPS link, so any phone camera or QR scanner app opens it without a special app.

Can multiple locations each have their own menu link?

Yes, each upload gets its own link and QR code. The free tier holds 3 live sites at once; paid plans raise that to 5 or 25 for a small chain.