Available (green)
Free right now — no one is seated and no reservation is due imminently. Ready for a walk-in or an arriving booking.
The live floor map is your command centre during a shift. It is the Dashboard — the first screen you land on after signing in — and it shows your restaurant’s floor map with every table coloured by what is happening on it right now. From this one screen your team can see who is seated, who is due, seat arriving guests, take a walk-in booking, and move, merge or set tables aside as the night unfolds. Keep it open on a tablet at the host stand and it becomes the single source of truth for the room.
The map is a real-time picture of today. Each table reads its status from today’s bookings and from the current time, and the whole board refreshes on its own roughly every 30 seconds — so a booking taken on your public page, or a change a colleague makes on another device, appears here within moments. A live clock ticks in the header, and you can force an immediate update at any time from the actions menu (Refresh).
Because it is tied to today, the live map is different from the map you build in the editor. The editor is where you design the room and place tables; the live map is where you work it. Rearranging, merging or depositing tables here changes your active map for the day.
Every table wears a colour that tells you, at a glance, what to do next. The exact colours follow your restaurant’s branding, but the defaults are:
Available (green)
Free right now — no one is seated and no reservation is due imminently. Ready for a walk-in or an arriving booking.
Reserved (amber)
A booking is due here soon. Tables with an imminent arrival gently pulse so you can spot them coming.
Occupied (red)
A party is seated here right now. This is where your active covers are.
Maintenance (grey)
Out of service — not bookable and not countable. Use it for a broken or reserved-for-repair table.
A small legend in the bottom-left corner of the map keeps a running count of how many tables are Available, Reserved, Occupied and (if any) in Maintenance.

Before you work the room, get comfortable moving around it.
Ctrl and scroll. On a
touchscreen, pinch. The middle button shows the current zoom level; click it to fit the whole
floor back into view.Esc) to exit.Tables on the live map can be dragged around — which is exactly what you want when you are setting up, but a nuisance when you only mean to tap a table during a busy service. The lock toggle in the top-left corner solves this. A green, gently pulsing padlock means the map is unlocked and tables can be moved; click it and it turns red and locked, so taps only ever select a table and never move it by accident. Your choice is remembered on that device.
Everything you do to a single table starts the same way: click the table. A ring of round action buttons fans out around it, and — on a desktop — the panel on the right switches to show that table’s details. Click the same table again to hide the ring, or click any empty part of the floor to deselect.
The buttons in the ring change with the table’s status, so you only ever see the moves that make sense right now:
| Button | What it does | Shows when |
|---|---|---|
| Sit | Seats the table (see below) | The table is free or reserved |
| Free | Ends the current visit and frees the table | The table is occupied |
| Book | Opens the Quick Booking form for this table | The table is free or reserved |
| Select / Deselect | Picks the table for merging with others | Any working table |
| Split | Breaks this table out of its merged group | The table is merged |
| No Show | Marks the current booking as a no-show | A confirmed or seated booking is on the table |
| Deposit | Moves the table off the floor into the deposit | The table is free |
| Block | Closes this table for part of the day | Any working table |
| Info | Opens the full table details | Any table |

Seating is the heartbeat of the live map, and Sit is smart about it.
Either way the table turns red (Occupied) and joins your live covers. When the party leaves, click the table again and choose Free: the visit is completed and the table returns to green (Available), ready for the next guests.
Two guests arrive without a reservation on a quiet Tuesday.
2 to 4.When a guest phones ahead or asks to reserve a specific table for later, use Book (the same form is also reachable from a table’s details panel).
The new booking appears on the map straight away — the table turns amber as a reservation, then seats normally when the guests arrive.
The panel on the right of the map has two faces, and it flips between them automatically.
With no table selected, click Bookings in the header to open Today’s Bookings — every reservation for the day, grouped into Seated, Upcoming and Completed, with a running count of bookings and guests along the bottom. Click any booking in the list to jump straight to its table on the map.
With a table selected, the same panel shows that table’s context: its capacity and status, the Current Booking and Next Booking, and a Daily Availability timeline that lays out every time slot for the day and marks each one Open, booked, seated or past. From here you can Seat a waiting party, mark a visit Complete, or Book the table. A Back arrow (top-left of the panel) returns you to the day’s booking list.

Open the Bookings panel and you will find a Time Preview slider. Drag it to any moment in the day and the whole map re-colours to show how the floor will look then — which tables are reserved for the 8 pm sitting, say, or which are still free at 1 pm. A Preview badge and a dot on the Bookings button remind you that you are looking ahead, not at now. Click Now to snap back to the present.
Sometimes a table shouldn’t be on the floor at all right now — a two-top you have pushed against the wall, a section you have closed for the evening. Rather than delete it, move it to the deposit: a holding area that keeps the table (and its settings) safe and off the map until you need it again.
A table in the deposit is invisible to guests and to availability — it simply isn’t part of the room until you place it back. You cannot drop a table onto a greyed-out (unavailable) area of the floor; if you try, the map tells you the spot isn’t available.
Rain arrives and you want to pull four terrace tables out of service for the night.
A party of six but only four-tops free? Combine tables into one bookable unit. Merged tables are joined by a dashed amber line, share a single booking, and pool their seats — so seating one seats the whole group, and freeing one frees them all.
There are two ways to merge.
Drag one table onto another. As you drag a table close to a neighbour, the neighbour glows amber to show it will merge. Release, and the two snap side by side and join. Drag a third table toward the pair to grow the group.
Select, then combine. Click a table and choose Select; click another and choose Select again. A bar slides up from the bottom of the map showing how many tables are selected, their numbers, and the combined seat range. Click Combine to merge them, or Cancel to start over.

To split a group back apart, click any merged table and choose Split — or simply drag one table well away from its partners, which breaks the merge automatically. Note that Free ends the group’s visit but keeps the tables merged; use Split when you actually want them separate again.
Two more buttons in the ring handle the awkward moments of a service:
Ctrl+Z and Ctrl+Shift+Z) walk back and forward through your table changes.