5 Menu Font Pairing Mistakes That Make Your Restaurant Look Cheap
Your menu font pairing can instantly signal whether you run a premium establishment or a budget operation. Restaurant typography matters more than most owners realize—it affects readability, brand perception, and even how much guests are willing to spend.
5 Font Pairing Mistakes to Avoid
Using more than two font families creates visual chaos. Pairing two script fonts makes your menu nearly impossible to read. Mixing fonts with clashing weights (like ultra-thin with extra-bold) looks amateurish. Choosing trendy fonts that don't match your cuisine confuses diners—Comic Sans on an Italian menu sends the wrong message. Finally, ignoring hierarchy by using similar-sized fonts for headers and descriptions makes scanning impossible.
The fix is simple: pair one classic serif or sans-serif for headers with a clean complementary font for descriptions. For digital menu fonts, ensure your pairing works on mobile screens where most QR code menus are viewed. Tools like DineCard (dinecard.in) let you preview menu design fonts instantly, helping you test readability before going live for just $9/month.
Test your menu font pairing by viewing it from 3 feet away. If you squint to read prices or item names, your guests will too.
Create a QR code menu for your restaurant in 5 minutes with DineCard.
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