Is my food photo good enough
Answer a few practical questions and optionally read image dimensions to decide whether a dish photo is publishable or should be reshot, resized, or rebuilt.
Why this matters
Good enough depends on where the photo will sell. A handheld taco needs filling visibility; a bowl needs ingredient separation; pasta needs sauce shine; fried chicken needs texture; soup needs depth; beverages need condensation or a clean glass line.
Restaurants using DoorDash, Uber Eats, Grubhub, iFood, Rappi, Deliveroo, Glovo, Google Business Profile, and owned ordering pages should judge the same image at thumbnail size before publishing.
Check the real source file
Use the original photo or real dish name, not a compressed screenshot.
Fix the visible blocker
Resolve crop, file weight, lighting, copy, or composition before upload.
Publish a consistent set
Keep angle, background, brightness, and naming consistent across the menu.
FAQ
Does this tool upload my image?
No. The checker runs in your browser. If you choose to generate finished menu imagery, the call to action sends you to the FoodPhoto studio.
Can I use the result for delivery apps?
Yes, use it as a practical preflight before uploading. Always preview the final crop inside the delivery platform because account rules can vary.
What should I do after the check?
Fix size, crop, light, background, or copy issues, then prepare a consistent final asset for your menu, website, ads, and local search.
Is a high score a guarantee of more orders?
No. It is a photo-readiness signal, not a sales guarantee. Menu pricing, reviews, availability, and delivery radius still matter.
Related free tools
Delivery app photo size checker · Food photo alt text generator · Menu image compressor · Plate portion ratio checker · AI dish name photo idea generator · FoodPhoto studio · pricing