Pinterest Pin Description Formatter for Restaurants
Score your Pinterest pin description across 7 SEO and engagement factors. Your description gives Pinterest 500 characters of keyword data — use them well. built to drive local discovery and menu-search visibility.
Optimise your Pinterest pin description
Your pin description gives Pinterest’s search algorithm up to 500 characters of keyword data. Score it across 7 SEO and engagement factors.
Comma-separated. We’ll check if each keyword appears in your description and how often.
If your pin links to a blog post, product, or landing page, we’ll check for a link-directing CTA.
First ~50 characters visible before “…more”
Pinterest shows ~50 characters before the “…more” fold. The full 500 characters are indexed for search.
How this tool helps for Restaurants sites
Pinterest descriptions for for restaurants pins need keyword-rich content to rank in Pinterest search. This formatter scores across 7 SEO factors with a live fold preview, keyword analysis, and rewrite suggestions for for restaurants pin descriptions.
Restaurant SEO centres on local discovery where Google Business Profile, menu visibility, and review management drive the majority of new customer acquisition. Diners search for cuisine types, specific dishes, and dining occasions with strong local intent. Restaurants must ensure their menus are crawlable as HTML text rather than embedded in PDF files, and their hours, location, and contact information appear consistently across all platforms.
for Restaurants tips
- Publish your full menu as HTML text on your website instead of PDF format so Google can index individual dish names and cuisine keywords.
- Add Restaurant and Menu schema markup with dish names, prices, and dietary tags to qualify for rich results that display directly in search.
- Target occasion-based keywords like "romantic dinner [city]" or "birthday restaurants [area]" with dedicated landing pages for each dining occasion.
How to write Pinterest descriptions that rank in search
Your Pinterest pin description is indexed by both Pinterest’s internal search engine and Google. Every word you write creates a potential match against a user’s search query. A well-written description does three things: it includes your target keywords naturally, it provides context that helps Pinterest categorise your pin, and it tells users what to do next.
The first 50 characters are visible before the “…more” fold in the pin detail view. This is your headline — it must contain your primary keyword and be compelling enough to earn a tap. The remaining 450 characters are hidden behind the fold but fully indexed. Use this space for secondary keywords, audience qualifiers, and a call to action.
Add 2–5 relevant hashtags at the end of your description. Pinterest hashtags function as additional search entry points. Use specific, keyword-rich hashtags that match actual search queries rather than branded or generic tags. End with a clear call to action — “Save this pin for later” or “Click the link for the full recipe” tells users exactly what to do and increases your engagement metrics.
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