What does restaurant website design in Miami cost and include?

A restaurant website in Miami starts at $599 for a single-page build and $1,499 for a full multi-page site with menu, gallery, and reservations. Miami's dining market is dense and bilingual, so what your site includes, and how well it ranks for neighborhood searches, matters as much as how it looks.

What does a Miami restaurant website specifically need?

Miami is not a generic American dining market. Your website competes in a city where nearly every block in Brickell, Wynwood, Little Havana, and Coral Gables has multiple restaurants, where a large share of your potential guests search and read in Spanish, and where tourists are comparing you to dozens of other options from their phones before they ever step outside their hotel.

A restaurant site built for Miami needs to address all of this directly. That means neighborhood-specific copy so Google connects you to searches like "best brunch Wynwood" or "Cuban food Hialeah," bilingual menus and contact details for Spanish-speaking guests, fast load times because visitors are almost always on mobile, and a design that communicates your concept within the first three seconds. A generic template site that could belong to any restaurant in any city will not compete here.

What drives the cost of a Miami restaurant website?

The starting price is clear: a single-page restaurant presence begins at $599, and a complete multi-page site starts at $1,499. What pushes a project beyond that base is almost always one of the following:

  • Number of pages. A home page, full menu, gallery, reservations page, private dining page, and about page is a typical six-page restaurant site. Each page beyond the base is $150 as an add-on, so scope is the single biggest cost variable.
  • Bilingual content. If your menu and key pages need to read naturally in both English and Spanish, copywriting per page is $90. Machine-translated menus look careless to fluent readers and reflect on the food before anyone has tasted it.
  • Online ordering or booking integration. A direct reservation system or online ordering setup is a Premium feature quoted from $2,999. A booking or scheduling widget add-on is $300. This is where third-party platforms like OpenTable or Resy often make more sense for smaller restaurants versus a fully custom flow.
  • Photography and brand. FineWright offers a logo and brand kit for $350. If you are starting without professional food photography, a strong design can only go so far. Great food photos are one of the highest-return investments a restaurant can make before launching a site.
  • SEO depth. On-page and technical SEO basics are included in every build. An advanced SEO package is $400 and covers structured data, schema markup for menus and hours, and deeper keyword targeting for Miami neighborhood searches.

Typical Miami restaurant builds: A sharp single-page launch site with menu and contact is $599. A full multi-page site with gallery, reservations, bilingual menu, and advanced SEO typically runs $1,800 to $2,400 depending on page count and add-ons. Online ordering starts a new conversation from $2,999.

How do Miami diners actually find restaurants online?

Most Miami restaurant searches happen on Google Maps and Google Search, often from a phone, often within a mile or two of where the person already is. The two things that determine whether you show up are your Google Business Profile and your website's on-page signals.

Your Google Business Profile is free to claim and is the most important local listing you have. It needs accurate hours, your correct address and phone number, category tags, and recent photos. But the website behind it matters too. Google reads your site to confirm the details on your profile, to understand what neighborhood you serve, and to judge whether you are a credible local business or a thin page someone threw together.

Every FineWright restaurant build includes the following from the first line of code:

  • Restaurant schema markup so Google can read your name, address, phone, hours, cuisine type, and price range as structured data.
  • Consistent NAP (name, address, phone) on every page, matching what is on your Google Business Profile exactly.
  • Neighborhood-specific copy woven naturally into headings and body text, not stuffed awkwardly.
  • A fast, mobile-first build, because page speed is a ranking factor and Miami diners are almost always on their phones.

Should your Miami restaurant website be bilingual?

This depends on your concept, your neighborhood, and your target guest. A high-end Japanese omakase in Brickell probably does not need a Spanish version. A family-owned Cuban restaurant in Hialeah absolutely does, and its regulars will notice immediately if the site feels like it was translated by software.

For most Miami restaurants, the answer is somewhere in the middle. A bilingual menu and contact section is the minimum that shows respect for Spanish-speaking guests. Neighborhoods where bilingual content is essentially required include Little Havana, Hialeah, Doral, Westchester, and parts of Kendall. Neighborhoods where it is strongly beneficial include Coral Gables, Flagami, and Sweetwater. Even in South Beach and Brickell, a significant share of your guests will arrive from Latin America and feel more comfortable booking or checking the menu in Spanish.

FineWright's copywriting add-on is $90 per page and can be scoped to cover bilingual menu and contact pages without paying for full-site translation when you do not need it.

What pages does a Miami restaurant website actually need?

The right page count depends on what you offer, but here is what most full-service Miami restaurants need to compete effectively:

Recommended pages for a Miami restaurant website
PageWhat it doesNotes for Miami
HomeCommunicates concept, sets the tone, drives to reservationsInclude neighborhood name and cuisine type in H1 for local SEO
MenuShows food and prices, often the most visited pageBilingual if you serve Spanish-speaking neighborhoods; never a PDF
GalleryFood and ambiance photos that sell the experienceReal photography converts; stock photos signal cheap
Reservations / ContactDrives bookings and directionsEmbedded Google Map, hours, parking notes if relevant
About / Our StoryBuilds trust, especially for chef-driven or family-owned spotsMiami diners respond to authenticity and origin stories
Private Dining / EventsCaptures high-value group bookingsWynwood, Brickell, and Coral Gables all have strong event demand

A single-page build works well for a new restaurant that wants to get online fast with menu, hours, and a contact form. It is the right starting point if you are still building your following. The small business website guide covers how to think about page count and structure for any business type, not just restaurants.

What do most Miami restaurant sites get wrong on the menu page?

The menu page is the most visited page on almost every restaurant website, and it is the page most restaurants handle poorly. The two most common mistakes:

Uploading a PDF menu. A PDF menu cannot be read by Google, does not work well on phones, looks dated, and cannot be updated without replacing the file every time. An HTML menu, built as a real page with section headings and item names as actual text, is readable by both Google and guests, loads faster, and can be kept current without any technical skill.

Not updating it. A menu page with prices or dishes that no longer exist damages trust the moment a guest arrives and finds the reality is different. If you need easy updates, FineWright's easy-to-edit setup on the Professional plan is designed for exactly this. You do not need to call a developer to change a price or add a seasonal item.

Making it hard to find on mobile. If a guest has to pinch and scroll a tiny PDF on their phone, they will close the tab and go to a competitor. A mobile-first HTML menu is not optional for a Miami restaurant in 2026.

How does FineWright build restaurant websites in Miami?

Every build starts with a concept-first conversation, not a template selection. Before a single line of code is written, the design is shown in high fidelity so you can see your actual site with your menu, your colors, and your photography in place. Restaurants in particular benefit from this because the atmosphere you are trying to communicate needs to be designed in, not bolted on afterward.

Builds are hand-coded, not assembled from page-builder templates. That means the site is fast, the code is clean, and there are no unnecessary plugins slowing down the load time or creating security vulnerabilities. For a restaurant where most guests arrive from a Google Maps tap on a phone, a site that loads in under a second is a competitive advantage.

Single-page restaurant sites are typically delivered in about one week. Multi-page sites take about two weeks. The timeline depends largely on how quickly menu content, photography, and copy are ready. FineWright includes copywriting help on the Professional plan and copywriting per page as an add-on, so you do not need to arrive with everything written.

After launch, care plans start at $49 per month and cover hosting, backups, security monitoring, and monthly edits. For a restaurant where the menu changes seasonally and hours shift around holidays, having a monthly edit allowance means you are never paying for a small update or sitting on outdated information.

Full details on every plan and add-on are on the FineWright pricing page.

How competitive is restaurant web design across Miami neighborhoods?

Miami's restaurant neighborhoods vary significantly in how polished the competition's web presence is. Wynwood and Brickell restaurants tend to have strong visual identities and well-maintained sites, because the clientele there expects it and investors often fund a proper launch. Little Havana and Hialeah have more variation: some established spots have excellent sites, but many long-running family restaurants are still operating with outdated or missing web presences. That gap is an opportunity. A well-built, bilingual site in a neighborhood where competitors have nothing, or have a broken mobile experience, is one of the faster ways to gain ground in local search.

Coral Gables restaurants compete for a high-income, discerning guest who will absolutely judge the site before making a reservation. South Beach competes heavily for tourist and nightlife traffic where first visual impression on a phone decides everything.

The common thread across every Miami neighborhood: Google Maps results and the speed of your mobile site are the two variables that win or lose the most searches. Everything else builds on those foundations.

Frequently asked questions

How much does a restaurant website cost in Miami?

A single-page restaurant site in Miami starts at $599 with FineWright. A multi-page site with a full menu, gallery, reservations, and bilingual content starts at $1,499. Larger builds with online ordering or event booking are quoted individually from $2,999.

Does a Miami restaurant website need to be in Spanish and English?

Not every Miami restaurant needs a fully bilingual site, but most benefit from at least bilingual menus and contact information. Miami has a large Spanish-speaking population, and a site that speaks both languages signals hospitality and widens your reach significantly, particularly in neighborhoods like Little Havana, Hialeah, and Doral.

What pages does a restaurant website in Miami need?

At minimum: a home page with your concept and neighborhood, a menu page, a location and hours page with an embedded map, and a reservations or contact page. Most Miami restaurants also benefit from a gallery, a private dining or events page, and an about page that tells the story behind the food.

Should my restaurant website include online ordering?

If you do takeout or delivery, yes. A direct online ordering integration reduces the commission fees you pay to third-party delivery apps for every order. This is a custom feature that FineWright quotes as part of a Premium build starting from $2,999.

How does Google find my restaurant in Miami searches?

Google pulls restaurant results from two places: your Google Business Profile (free to claim and optimize) and your website's on-page SEO. Your site needs structured data markup for the restaurant, consistent name, address, and phone number details, neighborhood-specific page copy, and fast loading times. FineWright builds all of this into every site from day one.

How long does it take to build a restaurant website in Miami?

FineWright delivers single-page builds in about one week and multi-page sites in about two weeks. The timeline depends on how quickly content, menu details, and photos are ready on your end. A clear brief at the start keeps the build on schedule.

Keep reading: explore how this page fits into our broader restaurant website design in Miami coverage, see the full range of options in our small business website guide, or review every plan and price on the FineWright pricing page. If you are comparing this page to other options, our Miami restaurant website design guide covers the full picture of what to expect from any studio you consider.

Get your Miami restaurant online the right way

FineWright builds custom, hand-coded restaurant sites from $599. Concept-first, bilingual-ready, fast on mobile, and built to rank in Miami neighborhood searches. No templates, no surprise fees.