Every reservation made through Zomato or Swiggy costs you 18–30% in commission. Every table booked through your own website costs you nothing.
Most restaurants in Delhi NCR don’t have a website that captures direct bookings. They have a placeholder page, or a Facebook profile from 2019, or a Zomato listing they didn’t even set up themselves. So they keep paying commission — indefinitely — on customers who would have happily booked direct if there was anywhere to do it.
This is a choice, even if it doesn’t feel like one.
What Customers in Delhi NCR Search for Before Choosing a Restaurant
When someone in Saket or Connaught Place decides to eat out tonight, they don’t open Zomato first. They open Google and type something like “restaurants in Hauz Khas for dinner” or “best north Indian food near me.”
What comes up? Google Maps listings, a few Zomato pages, and occasionally — if the restaurant has a properly built website — the restaurant’s own page.
The restaurants that show up in that Google search without being filtered through Zomato’s algorithm are the ones collecting direct enquiries. They’re also the ones building a customer list, running their own offers, and not splitting revenue with a platform that could change its commission structure tomorrow.
4 Things Your Restaurant Website in Delhi NCR Must Do
A restaurant website isn’t a brochure. It’s a sales tool. It has four specific jobs:
1. Show the food. This sounds obvious, but most restaurant websites show stock photographs of generic dishes or low-quality photos taken on a phone with bad lighting. If a potential customer can’t see what your food actually looks like, they default to the platform that shows user photos — which is Zomato. Invest in one professional food photography session. It pays back every month.
2. Make the menu easy to find. The number of restaurant websites where you have to click through three pages to find the menu is embarrassing. The menu should be one click from the homepage, load fast, and be readable on a phone. A PDF menu that doesn’t zoom on mobile is as bad as no menu.
3. Enable direct reservations or enquiries. A simple form — date, time, number of people, phone number — is enough. You don’t need a complex booking system. A WhatsApp button works better for most Delhi NCR restaurants because it fits how customers already communicate. Every reservation that comes through WhatsApp or your own form instead of Zomato saves you commission.
4. Tell people where you are and when you’re open. This sounds basic because it is basic. And yet a significant number of restaurant websites in Delhi don’t have their exact address, a Google Maps embed, or their opening hours clearly visible. Customers who can’t confirm you’re open and accessible move on to the next option.
Local SEO for Restaurants in Delhi NCR: What Most Owners Miss
Google ranks local businesses based on three things: relevance, distance, and prominence. You can’t control distance, but you can control relevance and prominence.
Relevance means your website uses the words customers search for. If you’re a Mughlai restaurant in Lajpat Nagar, your website should say “Mughlai restaurant Lajpat Nagar” — not in a spammy way, but naturally, in your about section, your meta description, and your page title.
Prominence is built through your Google Business Profile: consistent address, up-to-date phone number, real photos, and — most importantly — reviews. A restaurant with 200 Google reviews and a 4.3 rating beats a restaurant with 15 reviews and a 4.8 rating in most searches. Getting existing customers to leave a Google review is free marketing that compounds.
Your website and your Google Business Profile work together. A website with no Google Business Profile attached to it is invisible to local searches. A Google Business Profile with a broken or nonexistent website loses customers who want more information before deciding.
What Most Restaurant Websites in Delhi NCR Get Wrong
There’s a pattern in restaurant website failures in this market.
Built once, never updated. The menu from three years ago is still live. A dish that’s been discontinued is still listed. Prices haven’t been updated since GST changed. Customers who show up expecting a dish that’s no longer served don’t come back.
No mobile optimisation. Over 85% of restaurant searches in Delhi happen on a phone. A website that doesn’t work properly on a phone isn’t a website — it’s a liability.
No personality. Chain restaurants have corporate websites. Your competitive advantage is that you’re not a chain. The story of why you started the restaurant, the chef’s background, what makes your biryani different from the restaurant three doors down — that’s what makes someone choose you over a nameless Google listing. Most restaurant websites in Delhi read like a corporate press release. Nobody is moved by “we are committed to quality dining experiences.”
Hidden contact information. Your phone number should be in the header of every page. Not buried in a contact page. People looking for restaurants make quick decisions. If your number isn’t immediately visible, they call the next place.
How Much Does a Restaurant Website Cost in Delhi NCR?
A restaurant website with professional food photography integration, a clean mobile-optimised menu, a direct reservation/enquiry form, Google Maps embed, and proper local SEO setup should cost between ₹20,000 and ₹50,000 in Delhi NCR, depending on the number of locations and how much content needs to be created.
What it should not cost: monthly “maintenance” fees for a website that never changes. If your restaurant’s menu and hours don’t change, your website doesn’t need monthly maintenance. Any agency charging ₹3,000–5,000 a month for a static restaurant website is charging for work that isn’t happening.
The ROI of a Restaurant Website in Delhi NCR vs Zomato Commission
Say your restaurant does 15 Zomato reservations a week at an average order value of ₹800. At 25% commission, you’re paying ₹3,000 a week — ₹1,56,000 a year — to Zomato for customers who found you on Google, clicked to Zomato, and booked there because your own website had no booking option.
If even 30% of those customers had booked direct, that’s ₹46,800 a year saved. A proper website pays for itself in under a year. Usually in three or four months.
That’s before counting the new customers who find you directly through Google because your website now shows up in local search.
What Delhi NCR Restaurant Owners Should Do Next
You don’t need to rebuild your entire website at once. Start with the things that directly cost you money: a mobile-optimised menu, a WhatsApp booking button, and a claimed Google Business Profile with accurate information and real photos.
Those three things, done properly, will move the needle before anything else.
If you want an honest assessment of what your restaurant’s current website is costing you in lost direct reservations, we’ll audit it at no charge — and show you specifically what to fix, whether you hire us or not.
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