Designing a Menu Layout That Focuses on Best-Selling Items

February 20, 2026 · 11 min read
Designing a Menu Layout That Focuses on Best-Selling Items

Why Layout Is the Invisible Salesperson

Every element of your menu layout communicates something to the guest before they read a single word. The item that appears first in a category will receive disproportionate attention. The dish displayed in a larger card will be considered more seriously than one in a compact text line. The section labelled with a "Popular" badge will attract guests who are hesitant and looking for social proof. None of this is accidental in a well-engineered menu. It is deliberate design in service of a clear business objective: directing attention toward the items that matter most.

For a printed menu, layout decisions are made once per print run and are expensive to change. For a digital menu accessed via QR code, layout is fluid. You can reorder categories, reposition items, add or remove badges, and restructure your hero section this afternoon and see whether your changes improved average order value by next week. This ability to test, learn, and adjust is one of the most powerful advantages digital menus offer over print — but only if you understand the principles well enough to make deliberate changes rather than random ones.

This guide covers the five strategic tools available to any restaurant designing a layout that sells: the hero section, visual anchors, badges, premium item framing, and structured variation testing. Each section explains the mechanism, provides concrete implementation guidance, and identifies the common mistakes that undermine otherwise sound strategies.

Hero Section Positioning: The First Impression Is the Sale

The hero section is the first thing a guest sees when they open your menu. On a mobile device, this is typically a prominent image, a featured item, or a curated selection of two to three dishes displayed at a larger size and with more visual prominence than anything else on the page. Research on digital menu navigation consistently shows that items appearing in the hero position are ordered at rates two to four times higher than the same items when positioned in a standard list. The hero is not just a design element. It is your most powerful selling space.

What to Put in the Hero Section

The decision of which item or items to feature in the hero position should be driven by a deliberate combination of three factors:

  • Profit margin: The items in your hero section should be among your highest-margin dishes. Not necessarily your most expensive — margin and price are different things. A pasta dish at 16 EUR with a food cost of 3.50 EUR is a better hero candidate than a steak at 35 EUR with a food cost of 18 EUR.
  • Visual impact: Hero items need a photograph that communicates appeal, craft, and desirability at a glance. A beautiful presentation in an attractive setting, photographed well, will convert hero placement into orders. A poorly photographed dish in the hero position can actively suppress interest by setting a low-quality first impression.
  • Broad appeal: The hero section represents your menu to guests who may not scroll further. If your hero features a dish with strong allergen concerns, unusual ingredients, or a very specific taste profile, you are excluding a significant portion of your audience from the first screen. Lead with dishes that the broadest range of guests can consider ordering.

Hero Section Formats That Work

There is more than one way to implement a hero section on a digital menu. The most effective formats for mobile viewing are:

  • Single featured item: One large photograph occupying most of the initial viewport, with the item name, a one-line description, and price overlaid or positioned immediately below. This format creates the strongest visual focus and works best when you have one item that genuinely outperforms everything else in both margin and visual quality.
  • Featured item carousel: A horizontally scrollable row of two to four featured items, each displayed as a card with a photograph, name, and price. The carousel surfaces multiple strong items without committing the entire hero position to one. Guests can swipe through the featured selection before scrolling into the full menu.
  • Category highlight grid: A two-by-two or three-item grid showing one strong item from each major category — a starter, a main, a dessert, a drink. This format gives the guest an immediate overview of the menu's range while featuring high-performing items from each section.

Updating the Hero Section Regularly

A static hero section that never changes trains returning guests to skip it. They have already seen those items and made their decision. Rotate your hero items quarterly at minimum, more frequently if you have seasonal specials or new menu additions. On a digital menu, changing the hero section takes minutes. There is no reason to let it stagnate.

Timing the hero rotation with meaningful events — a new seasonal menu launch, a chef's special, a local ingredient at peak season — gives you a natural narrative to share with guests who ask what is new. It also gives you content for your social channels and email list: "We've updated our menu highlights for spring" is a genuine reason to re-engage past customers.

Creating Visual Anchors Throughout the Menu

A visual anchor is any design element that causes the eye to pause and focus on a specific item. In menu design, anchors are used to draw attention to items that need more prominence than their natural position in a list would give them. Without intentional anchors, guests read a menu like a shopping list — linearly, quickly, and with equal attention to every item. With anchors, you create a visual hierarchy that guides the guest's eye through the menu in the order that serves your business objectives.

Types of Visual Anchors

  • Size contrast: An item displayed in a larger card or with a larger photograph than surrounding items immediately commands more attention. On a digital menu where most items appear in uniform list rows, a single oversized card for a featured dish stands out dramatically. Use this sparingly — if every item is oversized, nothing is. Reserve large cards for two or three items per category at most.
  • Color contrast: A subtle background color on a specific item card — a warm cream instead of the standard white, or a very light brand color — differentiates that item from its neighbours. The contrast does not need to be strong to be effective. Even a barely perceptible tonal difference is enough to cause the eye to pause.
  • Whitespace manipulation: Adding additional padding or margin above and below a specific item visually separates it from the crowd. The extra breathing room signals importance without adding any explicit design element.
  • Typography weight: Bolding the name of a key item while leaving others in regular weight creates a clear visual hierarchy. Combined with a slightly larger font size, this is one of the subtlest and most effective anchoring techniques — guests feel the emphasis without consciously registering a design decision.
  • Photography as an anchor: The single most powerful visual anchor available is a high-quality photograph next to an item in a section where other items are text-only. The image pulls the eye immediately. If you cannot photograph every item in a section, strategically photograph the two or three items you most want to sell and leave the others as text. The photographic items will receive a dramatically disproportionate share of consideration.

The First-Position and Last-Position Effect

Within any category or section, the first item listed receives significantly more attention and orders than items in the middle of the list. This is well-documented in menu engineering research and is consistent across printed and digital menus. The last item in a section also performs above the middle — this is the serial position effect, a well-established principle of human memory and attention.

Position your highest-margin item first in each category. Position your second-highest-margin item last. Fill the middle positions with your volume sellers and standard offerings. This structure exploits natural attention patterns to serve your business objectives without any visible manipulation from the guest's perspective.

Using Badges Strategically: Popular, Chef's Choice, and Beyond

Badges are small visual labels attached to specific menu items — typically appearing as a pill-shaped tag, a small icon, or a colored ribbon overlay on the item photograph. Common examples include "Popular," "Chef's Choice," "New," "Seasonal," "Staff Favorite," and "Award-Winning." Used correctly, badges function as social proof, reduce decision anxiety for hesitant guests, and draw attention to specific items without requiring the guest to read any additional descriptive text.

The Psychology of Badges

When a guest is scanning a menu with 30 or 40 items, they are engaged in rapid decision filtering. Most items are evaluated in under a second and either noted or dismissed. A badge interrupts this automatic scanning and causes a brief pause — the guest reads the badge label and incorporates its message into their evaluation. A "Popular" badge communicates: other guests have ordered this, it is a known quantity, and choosing it carries low risk of disappointment. For hesitant or unfamiliar guests, this signal is often enough to tip the decision.

Behavioral economics research supports the power of social proof in low-certainty decisions. When a guest is unfamiliar with a cuisine, uncertain about portion sizes, or visiting for the first time, external signals of quality and popularity reduce the cognitive load of choosing. Badges provide exactly this signal efficiently and without requiring any additional engagement from the guest.

Badge Types and When to Use Them

  • "Popular" or "Best Seller": Reserve this badge for items that are genuinely your top sellers by order volume. The credibility of this badge depends entirely on it being factually accurate. If guests order an item labeled "Popular" and find it mediocre, they will not trust your labels in future. Verify with your actual sales data before applying this badge. Limit it to two or three items per category maximum — if everything is popular, nothing is.
  • "Chef's Choice": This badge carries a different signal than "Popular." It communicates expert endorsement rather than crowd wisdom. Use it on dishes where the chef has genuine pride of authorship — a signature preparation, an unusual ingredient combination, a technically complex dish that exemplifies the kitchen's skill. It is particularly effective on items that might otherwise be passed over because they are unfamiliar or unconventional.
  • "New": Straightforward and effective. Guests who are returning customers will be drawn to new additions. Guests who are visiting for the first time will notice that the menu is actively maintained and evolving. Remove this badge after four to six weeks, or the urgency it creates becomes meaningless.
  • "Seasonal": Signals limited availability, which creates soft urgency. Guests know seasonal items will not be available indefinitely, which encourages them to order now rather than "next time." This badge is most effective when it is genuinely accurate — a seasonal dish that appears year-round trains guests to ignore the label.
  • "Staff Favorite": Similar to Chef's Choice but with a different source of authority. Where Chef's Choice signals technical excellence, Staff Favorite signals approachability and genuine enjoyment. Effective for items that might otherwise be perceived as inaccessible or pretentious.
  • "Award-Winning" or "As Featured In": If you have received external recognition — a regional food award, a press mention from a respected publication — a badge noting this is powerful social proof. External validation carries more weight than self-applied labels because it is independently verifiable.

Badge Design Principles

Badges must be visually distinctive enough to register quickly but restrained enough that they do not clutter the menu. Key guidelines:

  • Use a maximum of two different badge types active simultaneously. More than two creates visual noise.
  • Apply no more than two badges per category section. If more than two items in a category are badged, the badges lose their differentiating function.
  • Use consistent color coding if you use multiple badge types. Popular might always be amber, New always blue, Chef's Choice always dark green. Guests learn these colors quickly and can scan for them.
  • Keep badge text to one or two words. "Chef's Choice" is the upper limit of comfortable badge text length.
  • Position badges consistently — always the same corner of the item photo or always inline with the item name. Inconsistent positioning looks disorganized.

Highlighting Premium Items Without Alienating Budget-Conscious Guests

Premium items — your highest-priced dishes, your signature preparations, your finest wines — need visibility to justify their place on the menu and to attract the guests who are inclined to order them. But aggressive premium promotion on a menu that serves a mixed-price clientele risks making budget-conscious guests feel unwelcome or pressured. The goal is to make premium items highly visible and desirable to those who want them, while keeping the overall menu experience comfortable and non-judgmental for every guest.

Premium Item Framing Techniques

  • The dedicated premium section: Creating a small, clearly labelled premium section — "Chef's Signature Dishes," "Reserve Wines," "From the Robata Grill" — gives premium items their own visual territory without forcing every guest to pass through them on the way to standard items. Guests who want premium options know where to find them. Guests who do not can browse the rest of the menu without feeling that premium items are unavoidable.
  • Richer descriptions: Standard items get functional descriptions: "Grilled chicken breast, lemon butter, roasted vegetables." Premium items deserve language that communicates the source, technique, and experience: "Free-range Herdwick lamb slow-roasted for six hours with rosemary and garlic from our kitchen garden, served with dauphinoise potatoes and a rich jus." The added detail justifies the higher price by making the value tangible and specific.
  • Origin and provenance callouts: A one-line note about where a key ingredient comes from — "Hand-dived Orkney scallops," "Wagyu beef sourced from a single farm in Kagoshima Prefecture," "Estate-bottled Burgundy, 2019 vintage" — adds perceived value that a price alone cannot convey. Guests who understand what they are paying for are more comfortable paying it.
  • Premium photography treatment: If resources are limited, allocate your highest-quality photography to premium items. A beautifully lit, carefully styled photograph of your most expensive dish signals that it is worth the investment. A premium dish without a photo looks like an afterthought, regardless of how good the dish actually is.

Price Anchoring in Action

The way prices are ordered in a category shapes how every price in that category is perceived. Place your most expensive item first. This creates a reference point — an anchor — against which every subsequent price is compared. When a guest sees a 42 EUR steak first and then a 28 EUR chicken dish, the chicken feels like a reasonable, moderate choice. If the guest had seen the chicken first, without the steak as an anchor, the 28 EUR price might feel high in isolation.

This technique is particularly effective for wine lists and premium food sections. A bottle of wine listed at 85 EUR at the top of the list makes every bottle below it feel more accessible. The anchor does not need to sell itself. It needs to recalibrate the guest's price expectations for the entire section.

Avoiding the Trap of Aggressive Upselling

Every technique described in this section should feel, from the guest's perspective, like helpful curation — not pressure. A menu that leads with the most expensive items in every section, with no accessible alternatives clearly visible, communicates that the restaurant does not respect guests who are not spending at the top of the price range. The structure that achieves the right balance is: one premium anchor item at the top of the category, a range of mid-tier options forming the bulk of the selection, and one value-positioned item near the bottom as a clear accessible option. This structure feels curated rather than manipulative and ensures that every guest can find something in their comfort zone while premium items receive their deserved visibility.

Testing Layout Variations: Learning What Your Guests Actually Respond To

Every principle described in this guide is based on research, behavioral economics, and accumulated best practices from thousands of restaurant menus. But your guests are specific people with specific preferences, and your menu exists in a specific context. The only way to know with certainty what layout decisions produce the best results for your restaurant is to test them systematically and measure the outcomes.

What to Test and What to Measure

Not every design decision is worth formal testing. Focus your testing effort on the decisions with the highest potential impact on revenue:

  • Hero section content: Test which items perform best in the hero position. Run Item A for two weeks, then Item B for two weeks, comparing order rates for each featured item and overall average order value for each period.
  • Category order: Test whether placing high-margin categories earlier in the menu sequence increases their order rates without reducing orders in other sections.
  • Badge effectiveness: Add a "Popular" badge to your third-best-selling item in a category and measure whether its order rate increases to compete with the genuine top two. If it does, the badge is working. If it does not, the item has other issues — price, description, photo — that a badge alone cannot fix.
  • Item position within category: Move your second-highest-margin item from mid-list to the last position in its category. Track whether the last-position boost improves its order rate.
  • Description length: Test short, punchy descriptions (one sentence) against longer, more evocative descriptions (three sentences) for the same premium items. Which version drives more orders?

Running a Clean Test

For a layout test to produce meaningful data, it needs to run long enough to generate a statistically significant sample. For most restaurants, this means at least 200–300 menu sessions per variation — the number of times the menu is opened and browsed by different guests. If you serve 150 covers per week and roughly 80% scan the menu, that is approximately 120 sessions per week. A test needs at least two weeks to produce enough data to draw reliable conclusions, and ideally four weeks to account for day-of-week variation in guest behavior.

Change one thing at a time. Testing two variables simultaneously — different hero item and different category order — makes it impossible to attribute the outcome to either change specifically. The discipline of testing one variable per cycle is slower but produces clear, actionable insights.

Reading the Results

After each test cycle, compare three metrics between the baseline period and the test period:

  1. Order rate for the tested item: Did the featured or repositioned item receive more orders per menu session?
  2. Category-level metrics: Did the changes affect how many items per category were ordered per cover? Did starter order rates change? Did dessert attachment change?
  3. Average order value: Did the overall average spend per cover change? This is the ultimate measure of whether your layout decisions are serving your business objectives.

Look for changes that are both statistically meaningful — not within the normal day-to-day variation range — and practically meaningful — large enough to affect your revenue in a way that matters. A layout change that increases average order value by 1.50 EUR across 200 covers per week — an additional 300 EUR per week in revenue — is both real and significant.

Building a Testing Culture

The restaurants that extract the most value from digital menus treat the menu as an ongoing experiment rather than a finished product. They run a layout test every four to six weeks. They track the results in a simple spreadsheet. They accumulate knowledge about what their specific guests respond to, which compounds over time into a menu that is genuinely optimized for their customer base rather than generically optimized for average restaurants.

Assign one person to own the testing process, give them the authority to make layout changes without committee sign-off for each test, and review results in a monthly operations meeting. The digital nature of the medium makes implementation easy — change a position, note the date, read the analytics in four weeks. The discipline is organizational, not technical.

A Layout Blueprint for High-Performing Digital Menus

The principles in this guide work together as a system. Applying any one of them in isolation produces a small improvement. Applying all of them together produces a menu that is consistently and meaningfully more effective at generating revenue than the default layout of equal-weighted items in flat lists.

Here is the complete layout structure that integrates all five strategies:

  1. Hero section: One to three items with large photos, featuring your highest-margin dishes with the strongest visual presentation. Rotated quarterly. Updated immediately for seasonal specials.
  2. Category order: Categories ordered by the strategic sequence that serves your margin priorities and natural dining flow — not alphabetical, not default, deliberately designed.
  3. Within each category: First position holds your highest-margin item. Last position holds your second-highest-margin item. Visual anchors applied to the two items you most want to sell per category.
  4. Badges: Two badge types maximum active simultaneously. Applied to no more than two items per category. Factually accurate. Consistently designed. Reviewed quarterly for relevance.
  5. Premium items: Framed with richer descriptions, origin callouts, and the best photography. Priced as anchors at the top of their category. Presented in a dedicated section if the menu has a strong premium tier.
  6. Testing cadence: One layout variable tested per four-to-six-week cycle. Results tracked, analyzed, and incorporated into the next iteration. The menu improves continuously based on your guests' actual behavior, not assumptions.

The Mindset Shift That Makes It Work

The final and most important point is this: a menu layout is not a document that describes what you sell. It is a tool that shapes what guests choose. Every decision — position, size, badge, description length, price order — influences behavior in measurable ways. Treating these decisions as random or purely aesthetic is leaving revenue on the table every single service.

The advantage of a digital menu on a platform like Scan2Order is that the gap between insight and implementation is measured in minutes, not weeks. When you realize that moving your signature dish to the first position in its category would likely increase its order rate, you can make that change before the next service begins and start measuring the result the same day. That speed of iteration is available to every restaurant using a digital menu, and using it systematically is one of the clearest competitive advantages available to modern hospitality businesses.

Tags

menu-design menu-engineering layout conversion best-sellers

Related Articles

Ready to Transform Your Restaurant?

Start your free 14-day trial today — no credit card required

We use cookies

Take a look at our Cookies Policy for more information.

Essential

Session, security & basic functionality. Always active.

Analytics

Google Analytics & usage statistics to improve our service.

Preferences

Theme, language & personalization settings.

Third-party

Stripe payments, embedded content & external services.