Both platforms help restaurants serve customers better, but they solve very different problems. Here's an honest look at what each does well — and where each falls short.
6 min read
If you're shopping for restaurant technology, you've probably come across both Toast and Qrambl. They're both built for restaurants, but they take fundamentally different approaches. Toast is a full-featured point-of-sale system with hardware, payment processing, and enterprise tools. Qrambl is a lightweight QR code ordering platform that focuses on getting your menu in front of customers fast. Neither is universally better — the right choice depends on what your restaurant actually needs.
Toast is a comprehensive restaurant management platform, primarily built for the US market. It provides POS hardware (terminals, kitchen displays, handheld devices), integrated payment processing, payroll management, online ordering, delivery integration, and detailed reporting. Toast is essentially an operating system for your entire restaurant. It handles everything from credit card transactions to employee scheduling. For large restaurants with complex needs — multiple revenue centers, tipping workflows, delivery logistics — Toast is a powerful, well-established solution. It's been around since 2012 and serves hundreds of thousands of restaurants across the United States.
Qrambl takes a different approach. Instead of replacing your entire operations stack, it adds one focused capability: QR code table ordering. You create your menu, generate QR codes for each table, and customers scan to browse and order from their phone. Orders flow to a kitchen display in real time. There's no hardware to buy, no payment processing to configure, and no lengthy setup process. You can go live in about 10 minutes. Qrambl costs a flat $20/month per restaurant — no per-transaction fees, no hardware leases, no long-term contracts. It supports 8 languages out of the box, works in any country, and includes analytics, staff management, push notifications, and a public storefront page for takeaway orders.
Here's how the two platforms compare on the factors that matter most to restaurant owners.
| Criteria | Toast | Qrambl |
|---|---|---|
| Cost | $0-$69+/mo + hardware fees + processing fees | Flat $20/month, no extra fees |
| Setup Time | Days to weeks (hardware install, training) | About 10 minutes |
| Hardware Required | Yes — POS terminals, card readers | No — just printed QR codes |
| Payment Processing | Built-in (2.49-3.69% + $0.15 per transaction) | Not included — use your existing method |
| International Availability | US, Canada, UK, Ireland | Works in any country |
| Multi-language Menus | English primarily | 8 languages built in |
If you run a mid-to-large restaurant in the US and need a full POS system — with integrated payment processing, payroll, online ordering, delivery, and hardware at every station — Toast is hard to beat. It's purpose-built for that use case and has years of refinement behind it. If your staff needs handheld devices to take orders tableside, or if you need detailed tipping and tip-pooling workflows, Toast handles that out of the box. It's also a strong choice if you want a single vendor for everything — one system, one support line, one monthly bill that covers POS, payments, and payroll.
If you want to add QR code ordering without overhauling your existing setup, Qrambl is purpose-built for that. It works especially well for cafes, coffee shops, food trucks, casual restaurants, and any venue where customers order at the table. It's also the better fit if you're outside the US, since Qrambl works globally and supports multiple languages from day one. If you don't need integrated payments — because you already handle payment your way (cash, card machine, mobile pay) — Qrambl gives you everything else at a fraction of the cost. There's no hardware investment, no processing fees eating into your margins, and no contract locking you in.
Toast is a restaurant operating system. Qrambl is a focused ordering tool. Toast gives you everything under one roof, but with that comes complexity, cost, and a longer setup. Qrambl gives you one thing — QR code ordering — and does it simply, affordably, and globally. If you need a full POS replacement, go with Toast. If you want to add digital ordering to your restaurant without changing how everything else works, give Qrambl a try. Both are good products. The question isn't which is better — it's which solves the problem you actually have.
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