Find the SEO gaps hiding in your menu page
Paste menu text or HTML. The checker looks for crawlable dish names, sections, prices, allergens, dietary labels, image alt text, Menu schema, and paths back to reservations.
Menu pages rank
A menu is not just a PDF behind a button.
Guests search for dishes, cuisines, allergens, dietary options, and prices before they book. If your menu is locked in a PDF, rendered as an image, or missing basic structure, search engines have little to work with. A crawlable menu page is one of the most useful local SEO assets a venue can own.
This checker reads pasted content only. It does not validate legal allergen compliance or fetch live pages.
Check your menu
Paste menu text, page HTML, or a copied section from your website.
Menu SEO score
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Passed
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Needs work
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Missing
Menu search basics
Menu SEO FAQ
Is a PDF menu bad for SEO?
A PDF can be indexed, but it is usually weaker than a proper HTML menu. HTML is easier to scan, update, link, translate, and connect to reservations or ordering.
Should every dish have its own page?
Usually no. Most restaurants need one strong menu page with crawlable sections and dish descriptions. Separate pages only make sense for signature dishes with real search demand.
Do allergens help SEO?
They help guests and can support long-tail searches around dietary needs. The bigger point is clarity: allergens, dietary tags, and descriptions make the menu more useful.
How does Guestavo help menu SEO?
Guestavo stores menu items as structured records with allergens, dietary tags, sections, QR access, and public menu pages instead of treating the menu as a static file.
Make the menu a living page, not a dead file.
Digital menus in Guestavo connect QR scans, allergens, guest capture, reservations, and loyalty in one flow.