Link in bio
The best link in bio for restaurants
Linky gives restaurants a single link page that shows their location on a map, links to their menu and reservation system, and highlights signature dishes with images - so hungry guests can act the moment they find you on social.
Blocks
Blocks made for restaurants
- Map
An embedded map pointing visitors to your location.
- Link
A prominent, tappable button linking anywhere you choose.
- Image
Showcase a photo, cover art, logo, or product shot.
Why Linky
Why creators choose Linky
- Custom domains
- Connect your own domain on a paid plan to make your page feel truly yours.
- Beautiful themes
- Make it yours with custom colours, fonts, and a palette that matches your brand.
- Rich blocks
- Music, video, social feeds, and more - not just links. Your page stays fresh automatically.
- Analytics
- See views and clicks on your blocks and links with built-in analytics on Premium.
- Fast & simple
- Build your page in minutes with a drag-and-drop editor. No coding required.
- Verified pages
- Get a verified badge on your page to show your audience that it is the real you.
01
Why restaurants need more than one link in their bio
A restaurant's social media presence does a lot of jobs at once: it tells the story of the food, builds anticipation for specials, and handles practical questions like hours, location, and reservations. Trying to route all of that through a single URL means you are always compromising - send people to the menu and the booking link disappears; send people to OpenTable and new visitors can not find your address. A link-in-bio page solves this by keeping every destination live simultaneously so guests can find what they need without friction.

A real Linky page
Playing Now
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Live blocks that refresh automatically
02
Linky blocks that work hardest for restaurants
The Map block is the standout choice for restaurants: it embeds a live map pinned to your address so guests can tap straight into their navigation app without ever copying an address or Googling your name. Pair it with an Image block to pin a hero shot of your best dish or your dining room - the visual hook that makes a hungry scroll stop. Link Box blocks handle the functional layer: one for your online menu, one for your reservation platform (OpenTable, Resy, or direct booking), and one for your delivery app profile. If you run a loyalty programme or email list, a Waitlist Email block captures sign-ups without sending guests away from the page.
03
A suggested page setup for restaurants
Start with a Header block: restaurant name, a short one-liner about the cuisine or vibe ('Modern Italian in the heart of Shoreditch'), and a strong profile image or logo. Below that, place an Image block featuring a dish that best represents your menu - ideally your most photogenic item or current seasonal special. Follow with a Map block so location and directions are immediately accessible. Then stack Link Box blocks: 'View menu', 'Reserve a table', 'Order delivery', and optionally 'See our events'. Keep the block order aligned with the most common intent: most visitors will want the menu before they book.
Your theme, your colours

Built-in analytics on every page
04
Keeping your restaurant page current across seasons and specials
Restaurants change constantly - seasonal menus, tasting nights, holiday closures, new delivery partnerships. Because Linky publishes changes instantly, you can update your Image block when a new dish launches, swap a Link Box URL when you add a new delivery platform, or temporarily add a Link Box for a ticketed event without touching the rest of the page. No waiting for a developer to update your website. For recurring specials, update the Image block on the day and add a brief note in the Header bio - that is enough to make the page feel timely even without a full refresh.
05
Choosing a theme that reflects your restaurant brand
Orange Punch works well for casual, high-energy dining concepts - street food, brunch spots, pizza by the slice - where the brand is warm, approachable, and lively. Forest suits farm-to-table and sustainability-focused restaurants whose visual identity runs to earthy greens and natural textures. Classic (off-white) is a strong choice for fine dining establishments where restraint signals quality. Midnight works for cocktail bars, omakase counters, and late-night venues where the atmosphere is part of the experience. Pick the palette that guests would recognise as yours before they even read the name.

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