·QR code menu
A QR code menu that does not become stale after printing.
Kitch gives restaurants a permanent QR destination for a live menu, hours, promos, and guest information — so the printed code can stay put while the page changes.
$9.99 CAD / mo · annual
·What this replaces
Drop the stack that can't keep up.
$9.99 CAD / mo · annual · cancel anytime.
See Kitch QR →01 · Who it's for
Right fit
Restaurants, cafés, bars, food trucks, bakeries, counters, pop-ups, and catering teams that need one scannable guest page that stays current without reprinting table cards.
·How it works
Say it. Done.
Who this is for
A QR code menu is useful anywhere guests need fast information from their phone: dining rooms, counters, trucks, windows, event booths, hotel lobbies, markets, catering packages, and social handouts. The important part is not the code itself. The important part is the page it opens.
Kitch is for teams that want one QR destination they can trust. The code can live on a table tent, business card, sign, or sticker while the restaurant page behind it changes as service changes.
The common problem
Many restaurants solved paper menus with QR codes, then inherited a new problem: the QR page is stale. A static PDF is hard to update. A generic website page is too slow to edit. A link-in-bio page might not show the menu clearly. Guests scan, but the information is not reliable.
Kitch makes the QR destination live. Menu availability, hours, promo messages, and calls to action can change without changing the code. The QR becomes a durable doorway, not a disposable campaign asset.
What Kitch replaces
Kitch replaces standalone QR menu tools when the restaurant also needs hours, promos, location, brand, and calls to action. It also replaces the habit of linking a QR to a PDF file that only one person knows how to update.
A good QR menu should answer more than what is on the menu. It should answer whether you are open, what is special, where to order, and what changed today.
Examples
A bar can print one QR on every table and change the featured cocktail each week. A café can use one window QR for menu, hours, and online ordering. A food truck can use a QR on the truck that always reflects the current stop, hours, and sold-out items.
Because the same scan opens a live page, the operational update happens once and the guest experience stays consistent.
Pricing CTA
Kitch Starter includes the live restaurant page and QR-ready destination for $99 CAD per month billed annually. For most restaurants, the QR page is not a separate product — it is the same current page guests can also find from your website, Instagram bio, or Google listing.
·Real updates operators make
One message. Live.
Use the same table QR while changing happy hour promos.
Update food truck location and menu before lunch.
Keep bakery daily availability current from one page.
Send guests to menu, hours, ordering, and specials from a single scan.
Do I need to reprint my QR code when the menu changes?+
No. Keep the same QR code pointed at the live Kitch page and update the content behind it.
Can the QR page include promos and hours?+
Yes. Kitch is built for menu, hours, promos, contact, location, and calls to action.
Can I use Kitch with an existing printed QR?+
Usually yes if you can control the destination or redirect behind the existing short link. Otherwise, Kitch can provide a better permanent destination for the next print run.
Is this mobile-first?+
Yes. QR scans are phone-first, so the page is designed around quick mobile reading.