This menu QR code is no longer active.
The code on the table tent, coaster, or window decal you just scanned was created on GlyphIQ for a kitchen or bar that has since retired it. Whoever printed it chose to retire the code rather than leave you staring at a stale PDF. Nothing is wrong on your end — you don't need to do anything else.
Why this happened
Menus turn over fast. Seasonal specials, new dishes, ingredient swaps for allergens, and prix-fixe rotations all force kitchens to reprint or re-link. When a restaurant closes a code, GlyphIQ surfaces this page instead of routing diners to a stale PDF or someone else's takeover.
QR codes in restaurants and bars
Every modern restaurant runs a small inventory of printed QR codes — table tents linked to the seasonal menu, server cards for the wine list or cocktail program, takeout receipts pointing at the order portal, door decals carrying hours, brunch-only inserts for weekend service. The hostess station alone usually has three or four printed codes floating around. Most platforms stop responding the moment a subscription lapses, which strands every diner who scans a printed insert weeks later. GlyphIQ keeps codes recognized after their working life so the printed coaster you ran a thousand of in the spring still routes to a clear explanation rather than a 404 or someone else's takeover ad. Owners can update destinations as their menu rotates without reprinting; when a code retires, scanning lands here.
For restaurant operators
If you run a kitchen, bar, or front-of-house and want printed menu codes that survive ingredient changes, supplier swaps, and seasonal refreshes, GlyphIQ is built for that workflow. One printed table tent can stay live across every seasonal rotation; retire it when you're truly done and diners land on a page like this one instead of nothing.