·Live restaurant menu page
A menu page your team can keep current during service.
Kitch gives restaurants a live menu page for QR codes, websites, social links, and guest questions — updated by message instead of uploading another PDF.
$99 CAD / mo·Two seats·30-day money back
01 · Who it's for
Right fit
Restaurants, cafés, bakeries, bars, food trucks, and catering teams that change menu items, availability, prices, specials, or service windows often enough that a static PDF becomes a liability.
·How it works
Say it. Done.
Who this is for
A live menu page is for operators who want the menu link to be trusted. It is useful for full-service restaurants with rotating features, quick-service counters with sold-out items, cafés with seasonal drinks, bakeries with daily inventory, and food trucks with location-specific availability.
It also helps teams that do not need a heavy e-commerce menu. Many restaurants simply need the guest to see what is available, what it costs, and what action to take next: order, visit, book, call, or ask staff.
The common problem
Static menus create a hidden operations cost. A wrong item on a QR menu causes disappointment. A wrong price causes awkward staff conversations. A missing promo means guests never know what is available. A menu PDF may be beautifully designed, but if it requires a design export for every change, the team will stop updating it.
Kitch treats menu edits as operational changes. Hide, add, edit, and organize menu items in the dashboard, then keep the guest page in sync. The QR code and public URL do not need to change.
What Kitch replaces
Kitch replaces menu PDFs, ad-hoc menu pages, link lists that point to old files, and manual website tickets for small menu edits. It can be the menu page linked from your main website, the menu behind a table QR, or the live menu section of your Kitch restaurant page.
Instead of asking which file is current, the team has one live source of truth for guests.
Practical examples
A seafood restaurant hides oysters after the final tray sells out. A bakery marks a croissant flavor unavailable after the morning rush. A bar adds a two-hour cocktail feature. A catering kitchen updates a package description before sending clients the link.
These are not major redesigns. They are small truth updates. Kitch is built so those updates can happen when they matter.
CTA and pricing
Kitch Starter includes the live restaurant page, menu, hours, promos, QR, link, two seats, and first setup for $99 CAD per month billed annually. If the menu page is the first use case, the rest of the restaurant page is already there when you need it.
·Real updates operators make
One message. Live.
Mark a brunch item hidden when it sells out.
Add a happy-hour menu before service.
Update a catering platter price without redesigning a PDF.
Group items by category and preview what guests see immediately.
Can I keep using the same QR code?+
Yes. The QR code can point to the same live Kitch menu page while the content changes behind it.
Can staff hide sold-out items?+
Yes. The live menu editor supports availability changes so unavailable items can be removed from the guest view quickly.
Is this only for dine-in menus?+
No. It works for QR menus, social bio links, website menu links, takeout pages, and event or catering menus.
Do I need design software?+
No. Kitch is designed for operational menu updates, not PDF exports.