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Booking page settings

The Settings tab is where the practical side of your booking page lives: the web address guests type in, your own domain name if you have one, your opening hours, social links, the fields on the booking form, the languages your page speaks, and the buttons that take the page live or pull it back down. Everything else in the editor decides how the page looks; Settings decides how it works and where people find it.

The Settings tab is the fourth tab across the top of the editor, next to Branding, Pages and Advanced. Scroll down it and you will find each group in its own card, top to bottom: your URL Slug, Custom Domain, Opening Hours, Review URL, Social Links, Booking Form Fields, Languages and localization, and finally the publish controls.

Most of these save together through the save bar at the bottom of the screen (see Saving your changes below). The two exceptions are Languages and localization, which has its own Save Changes button, and publishing, which is a separate, deliberate action.

The Settings tab of the Booking Page editor showing the URL Slug, Custom Domain and Opening Hours cards
The Settings tab. Each group of settings sits in its own card down the page.

Your URL Slug is the last, memorable part of your booking page’s web address — the bit that identifies your restaurant. In the field you will see a fixed /book/ prefix, and you type the rest.

The slug has a few simple rules, enforced as you type:

  • Use only lowercase letters, numbers and hyphens — no spaces, capitals or accents.
  • It must be at least 3 characters and no more than 50.
  1. In the Settings tab, find the Page Settings card at the top.
  2. In the URL Slug field (after the /book/ prefix), type a short version of your restaurant name.
  3. If anything is not allowed, a red message appears under the field — fix it before saving.
  4. Save from the bar at the bottom.

The complete, shareable link is always the Public URL shown in the publish card once your page is live — copy it from there rather than typing it out by hand, so you get the exact address every time.

By default your page lives at the address built from your slug. On plans that include a custom domain, you can instead point your own domain name — such as book.your-restaurant.com — straight at your booking page, so guests never leave your brand.

There are two kinds of domain you can use:

  • A subdomain, such as book.your-restaurant.com — recommended, and the easiest to set up.
  • An apex domain (the bare name), such as your-restaurant.com — this needs a DNS provider that supports CNAME flattening or ALIAS records, such as Cloudflare, DNSimple or Route 53.

Connecting a domain is a two-place job: you enter the domain here, and you add one small record at whoever manages your domain’s DNS (your domain registrar or DNS provider). The Setup Guide button in the card walks you through the exact record to add.

  1. In the Custom Domain card, click Setup Guide to open the step-by-step instructions and see the exact record you need.
  2. In the Domain Name field, type your domain without https:// — for example book.your-restaurant.com.
  3. At your DNS provider, add a CNAME record using the values from the Setup Guide:
    • TypeCNAME
    • Name — your subdomain (for example book), or @ for an apex domain
    • Value — the exact target address shown in the Value row of the Setup Guide (for example eighty-six.tech)
  4. Come back here and Save from the bottom bar.
  5. Wait for the domain to verify. DNS changes can take up to 24 to 48 hours to take effect; the security certificate is set up automatically once your domain points to us correctly.
The Custom Domain card with the Domain Name field and the Setup Guide button, and the setup guide dialog showing the CNAME record
The Custom Domain card. The Setup Guide button shows the exact CNAME record to add at your DNS provider.

Once a domain is entered, the card shows it with a status badge so you always know where it stands:

  • Active — the domain is verified and working.
  • Pending DNS verification — we are waiting for your DNS record to be seen. This is normal for the first day or two.
  • Configuration error — something is wrong with the record; open the Setup Guide and double-check it against what your provider shows.
  • Not configured — the domain is saved but no DNS record has been added yet.

To remove a domain, click the trash icon next to it. To swap it for a different one, type the new domain in the Change domain field and save.

When your domain does not already start with www., an extra checkbox appears: Also support www subdomain. Tick it if you want visitors who type the www. version to land on your booking page too.

The Opening Hours card is where you set the hours guests see on your Contact page. It is a simple week: one row per day, Monday to Sunday.

  1. In the Opening Hours card, find the day you want to set.
  2. Set the opening time and the closing time using the two time boxes.
  3. For a day you are shut, switch on the Closed toggle on the right — the times disappear and the day simply shows Closed.
  4. Repeat for each day, then save.

Your booking page can invite happy guests to leave a review. By default that link points to your Google review page. The Review URL field lets you send it somewhere else instead.

Paste a full link — for example your TripAdvisor page, https://www.tripadvisor.com/... — into the Review URL (optional) field. Leave it blank to keep the automatic Google link. This is a single override, so use the one review site you care about most.

The Social Links card lets you add your social media profiles. Their icons appear in both the header and the footer of your booking page, so guests can follow you in a tap.

There is one field per platform — Facebook, Instagram, X (formerly Twitter), LinkedIn, YouTube and TikTok. Paste the full link to your profile into the platforms you use, and leave the rest blank. Each field shows an example link as a placeholder to guide you, such as https://instagram.com/yourrestaurant.

The Booking Form Fields card controls the little form your guests fill in when they reserve a table. For each field you decide two things: whether it is Visible (shown on the form at all) and whether it is Required (the guest must fill it in to book).

Field What you can change
Name Always shown and always required — you cannot switch this off, so a booking always has a name.
Phone Toggle Visible and Required. On by default, and required by default.
Email Toggle Visible and Required. Shown by default; not required by default.
Special Requests A free-text box for notes like allergies or a window seat. Toggle Visible and Required. Shown by default; not required by default.

A field’s Required switch only works while the field is Visible — a hidden field cannot be required, so switching Visible off automatically turns Required off and greys it out.

At the bottom of the same card sits a separate switch, Send confirmation email“Email the customer a confirmation after they book.” It is on by default. Leave it on so guests get a written confirmation of their reservation; switch it off only if you would rather handle confirmations yourself.

The Booking Form Fields card with Visible and Required switches for Phone, Email and Special Requests, plus the Send confirmation email toggle
The Booking Form Fields card. Name is always required; every other field has a Visible and a Required switch.

If your restaurant serves guests in more than one language, the Languages and localization card lets your menu and booking page appear in each of them. You choose a default language and the supported languages your guests can switch between.

The available languages are Italian, English, German, French, Spanish and Portuguese.

  1. In the Languages and localization card, pick your Default language — the main language of your page and the fallback used whenever a translation is missing.
  2. Open the Supported languages dropdown and tick every language you want to offer. Your default language is always supported and cannot be unticked.
  3. Click Save Changes in this card. This section saves on its own — it does not use the bottom save bar.
  4. Once you have added a language beyond your default, a Translate everything button appears. Click it and the platform translates your whole menu and page for you; you can then edit any wording by hand, and blanks are filled in automatically.

The editor does not save on its own. The moment you change something, a small bar slides up at the bottom of the screen showing how many unsaved changes you have, with two buttons:

  • Save — writes your changes. You can also press Cmd/Ctrl + S while the bar is showing.
  • Discard — throws the changes away and puts everything back to the last saved version. You are asked to confirm first.

This one bar covers your slug, custom domain, opening hours, review link, social links and booking-form fields together. Two things save separately, as noted above: Languages and localization has its own Save Changes button, and publishing is its own action.

The publish controls sit at the very bottom of the Settings tab. Your page is always in one of two states:

  • Draft — saved but not visible to guests. Every page starts here.
  • Live — published and reachable by anyone at your web address.
  1. Make your changes and Save them from the bottom bar.
  2. Scroll to the publish card. If your page is a Draft, click Publish Booking Page.
  3. Once live, the card shows your Public URL with buttons to copy the link or open it in a new tab. If you connected a custom domain, its address appears here too, with a status badge of its own.
The publish card showing the Live status, the Public URL with copy and open buttons, and a custom domain URL with a status badge
The publish card. When live, your public link and any custom domain link appear with copy and open buttons.

To take the page back down, click Unpublish in the same card. It becomes a Draft again and stops being reachable — all your settings are kept, so you can republish whenever you are ready.