QR menu for street food stalls

A QR menu for street food that is simple enough to actually use.

Create a small, visual QR menu with photos, prices, item numbers, and Thai/English-friendly structure for busy stalls serving local guests and tourists.

iMango

A small QR menu for small-menu operations.

iMango works for street-food stalls that need a compact, visual, multilingual menu guests can understand quickly. It keeps setup practical and avoids forcing the stall into a complex ordering system.

Photo-led

Let dishes explain themselves

Photos, prices, and short descriptions help guests choose quickly in a busy stall environment.

Item numbers

Reduce pronunciation friction

Guests can point to or say a number when local dish names are hard to pronounce.

Fast updates

Hide sold-out items without reprinting

Owners can update prices, availability, and photos from the admin workspace.

Visual menu

Make the menu clear even when the stall is busy.

Street-food guests often choose by sight. A QR menu should make the stall easier to understand, not slow the line down. iMango keeps each item card focused on the essentials.

  • Show dish photos, names, short descriptions, prices, and item numbers.
  • Keep food and drink categories clear for quick scanning.
  • Use a browser-based menu so guests do not need an app.

Setup

Start from the menu you already have.

Many stalls already have a small printed menu or board. iMango can help convert menu photos into an editable draft, then the owner reviews every item before publishing.

  • Upload paper-menu photos to prepare the first draft.
  • Review names, prices, descriptions, and translations before publishing.
  • Keep the final menu editable after launch.

Tourist ordering

Use language support without making service complicated.

Tourist-heavy stalls need practical language support. Translations help guests understand ingredients, while item numbers give everyone a fallback if the translation is not enough.

  • Enable Thai and English for the most common tourist flow.
  • Add Russian or Chinese when those guests matter for the location.
  • Use item numbers to keep verbal ordering simple.

A street-food setup flow that stays lightweight.

1

Capture the current menu

Add items manually or upload menu-board photos to create an editable draft.

2

Clean up the draft

Review photos, prices, item numbers, and translations so the menu matches the stall.

3

Publish and keep it current

Print one QR code for the stall and update sold-out items or prices from the workspace.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Can a small stall use iMango without table ordering?+

Yes. A stall can use iMango as a browse-only QR menu with photos, prices, item numbers, and translations.

Can the menu be created from paper-menu photos?+

Yes. Owners can upload paper-menu photos, review the editable AI draft, correct the content, and publish only when ready.

Why are item numbers useful for street food?+

Item numbers give guests and staff a simple fallback when dish names are difficult to read, pronounce, or translate perfectly.

Make your street-food menu easier for tourists to order from.

Turn a compact street-food menu into a photo-led QR menu that tourists can understand and staff can update quickly.