Menus ask a lot from a small amount of space. Dish names, descriptions, prices, categories, and visual hierarchy all have to live together on a limited surface. That is why line spacing matters more than many menu owners expect.

A line-height calculator helps make the menu easier to read without sacrificing too much room. Instead of guessing whether the descriptions should sit tighter or looser, you can start from the actual text size and compare more useful spacing options.

This is especially helpful for cafe menus, restaurant inserts, seasonal specials, and compact counter cards where readability and space pressure are constantly pulling against each other.

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Features

Support Faster Menu Scanning

Use spacing that keeps dish names and descriptions easier to read at a glance.

Balance Density and Clarity

Compare tighter and looser spacing before the menu gets crowded or stretched awkwardly.

Apply the Value to the Menu Layout

Use the result in the menu template once the spacing feels right for the real printed format.

How It Works

1
Enter the menu text size

Start with the font size used for dish descriptions, item lists, or supporting text.

2
Review the spacing options

Compare line-height values that suit a compact but readable layout.

3
Choose the best fit for the menu

Pick the value that keeps the text easier to scan without wasting too much room.

4
Apply it to the menu file

Use the spacing in the printed menu, insert, or specials layout.

Why Menus Need Better Line-Height Decisions

A menu is not just a block of text. It is a visual ordering tool that helps people find what they want quickly. If the spacing is too cramped, the whole page feels harder to scan. If it is too loose, the layout starts losing room for the actual items and prices.

A calculator helps make that tradeoff less arbitrary. It gives you a clearer starting point based on the text size instead of forcing you to guess the right rhythm by eye every time the menu is updated.

For restaurant owners and menu designers, that is a practical advantage. Better spacing improves readability without turning every menu revision into a larger design problem.

Frequently Asked Questions

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