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🌙 Arabic & Middle Eastern

Arabic & Middle Eastern Restaurant Menu Design Guide (2025)

📅 April 2025 ⏱ 11 min read ✍️ menuFest Team

Arabic and Middle Eastern cuisine is experiencing a global moment. With over 400 million Arabic speakers worldwide and booming restaurant scenes in the UAE, Saudi Arabia, the UK, and the USA, Middle Eastern food has moved firmly into the mainstream. From Lebanese mezze bars in London's Edgware Road to high-end Emirati fine dining in Dubai's DIFC, from Egyptian street food in Dearborn, Michigan to Persian restaurants in Houston's Westheimer corridor — this cuisine category is one of the fastest growing in the world.

Yet menu design for Arabic and Middle Eastern restaurants presents unique challenges that generic menu design tools and agencies rarely handle well: bilingual Arabic-English layouts, right-to-left text direction, script font pairing, halal certification display, and a rich visual heritage of geometric patterns and arabesque decoration that must be handled with care rather than cliché.

This is the definitive guide to getting it right.

Arabic Speakers
400M+
Worldwide
UAE Restaurants
15,000+
Dubai & Abu Dhabi
UK Middle Eastern
Growing
London, Birmingham, Manchester
Standard Format
A4
210 × 297 mm in the region

The Diversity of Middle Eastern Cuisine: Not One Cuisine But Many

Before designing a menu, it is critical to understand that "Arabic" or "Middle Eastern" cuisine is not a monolith. It encompasses dozens of distinct regional food cultures, each with their own dishes, ingredients, presentation customs and diner expectations. Your menu design should reflect your specific cuisine category, not a generic Middle Eastern aesthetic.

Design Principle

Each of these cuisine categories has a different visual culture, different diner expectations and different menu structures. A Lebanese mezze restaurant menu should look and feel fundamentally different from a Gulf fine dining menu or a Moroccan tagine house. Resist the temptation to apply generic "Middle Eastern" decoration to all of them.

Bilingual Menu Design: Arabic + English

For restaurants serving Arabic-speaking communities — whether in the Gulf states, the UK or the USA — bilingual menus are not optional. They are expected. Getting bilingual layout right requires understanding several technical and cultural considerations that trip up most general-purpose design teams.

Right-to-Left (RTL) Text Direction

Arabic is written right-to-left. This is not merely a typographic detail — it fundamentally changes how a page is composed and read. In a bilingual Arabic-English menu:

A Bilingual Menu Entry in Practice

Sample Bilingual Menu Layout
Mezze مقبلات
Hummus
Creamy chickpea purée, olive oil, paprika
28
حمص
كريمة الحمص، زيت زيتون، بابريكا
Fattoush
Fresh vegetables, crispy pita, sumac dressing
32
فتوش
خضروات طازجة، خبز مقرمش، صلصة السماق

Font Pairing for Arabic and Latin Scripts

One of the most technically demanding aspects of Arabic menu design is selecting typefaces that pair harmoniously across scripts. Arabic and Latin letterforms have different visual rhythms, x-heights and stroke weights. A pairing that looks balanced on screen may feel jarring in print. Here are the recommended approaches:

Cairo — Google Fonts
مطعم — قائمة الطعام
Clean, geometric, modern. Excellent for contemporary Middle Eastern restaurants. Free on Google Fonts.
Amiri — Google Fonts
مطعم — قائمة الطعام
Classical, elegant naskh style. Ideal for traditional and fine dining contexts. Free on Google Fonts.
Noto Sans Arabic
مطعم — قائمة الطعام
Neutral, highly legible, extensive weight range. Best for body text in bilingual menus requiring consistent sizing across scripts.
Scheherazade New
مطعم — قائمة الطعام
Ornate, traditional. Best for decorative headings only — too complex for body text but beautiful as a display font.
Typography Rule

For the Latin (English) side of your menu, pair your Arabic font with a visually harmonious Latin typeface. Cairo pairs naturally with geometric sans-serifs like DM Sans or Inter. Amiri pairs well with classic serifs like Garamond or EB Garamond. Avoid mixing a modern geometric Arabic font with a traditional serif Latin font — the tonal mismatch will feel awkward.

Colour Palettes for Arabic and Middle Eastern Restaurant Menus

The colour language of Middle Eastern restaurant design draws from a rich visual tradition — Islamic geometric art, Ottoman tile work, Persian miniature painting and Bedouin textile traditions — but must be applied with taste and restraint in a 2025 context. Here are the two primary palette approaches:

Heritage Traditional
Deep Islamic green, gold, warm cream parchment, rich maroon and near-black. Communicates cultural depth and authenticity.
Contemporary Refined
Charcoal, copper/bronze tones, muted sage, warm off-white, light sand. Sophisticated and modern — ideal for upscale concepts.

Gold is the most versatile accent colour for Arabic restaurant menus across both traditional and contemporary positioning. Used as a rule, a foil-effect detail, or as accent typography, gold communicates quality and generosity — values deeply embedded in Arabic hospitality culture (the concept of diyafa).

Decorative Elements: Geometric Patterns and Arabesque Borders

The geometric patterns of Islamic art — from the eight-pointed star (rub el hizb) to complex tessellating polygon systems — are among the most sophisticated and beautiful in human history. They are also frequently misused in restaurant design, appearing as cheap clip art borders that trivialise rather than honour the tradition.

How to Use Decorative Elements Well

What to Avoid

Menu Structure for Arabic and Middle Eastern Restaurants

The structure of a Middle Eastern menu reflects the culture's deep hospitality traditions — generosity, abundance and the communal joy of sharing food. Mezze culture in particular requires careful section design, since the mezze spread (a collection of small dishes shared among the table) is fundamentally different from a Western starter-main-dessert format.

For Gulf-style restaurants in particular, the drinks section deserves special attention. Arabic coffee (qahwa) — served in small handleless cups (finjaan) with dates — is a deeply cultural ritual and should be described with appropriate reverence, not listed as a line item. The presentation of hot drinks is part of the hospitality experience and your menu should reflect this.

Halal Labelling: Getting It Right

For the vast majority of Arabic and Middle Eastern restaurants, all food served is halal. However, how you communicate this on your menu matters — both for trust-building with Muslim diners and for transparency with all customers.

حلال

Halal Certified — حلال

The most effective approach is a prominent halal statement on the menu cover or the first inside page: "All meat served at [Restaurant Name] is halal certified." This can be supported by displaying the certification body's logo if you hold formal certification. For restaurants that hold certification from a recognised body (HMC, HFA in the UK; IFANCA in the USA), displaying that mark prominently is a strong trust signal.

Best Practices for Halal Display

Regional Note

In the UAE and Saudi Arabia, all food served in restaurants must be halal, so explicit labelling may feel redundant domestically — but it remains very important for international visitors and for restaurants operating in the UK, USA and other markets where Muslim diners need to verify this information before they can eat.

Key Markets: Where menuFest Serves Arabic Restaurant Clients

MarketKey CitiesDesign Notes
UAEDubai, Abu Dhabi, SharjahHigh design expectations; luxury-market aesthetics; A4 format standard; bilingual Arabic-English essential
Saudi ArabiaRiyadh, Jeddah, NEOMRapidly growing dining scene; Vision 2030 driving restaurant investment; formal bilingual presentation valued
KuwaitKuwait CityStrong café culture; Gulf-style mezze and grills dominant; premium print quality expected
UKLondon, Birmingham, Manchester, LeedsA4 format; large Lebanese and Turkish segments; English-primary menus with some Arabic appreciated by community diners
USADearborn MI, NYC, Houston, ChicagoUS Letter format; large Arab-American communities; halal certification display very important; English-primary with Arabic secondary

Print Format: A4 Is the Regional Standard

In the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and other GCC countries, the A4 format (210 × 297 mm) is the standard for restaurant menus, consistent with the ISO paper standard used across the Middle East and Europe. This is an important distinction from the USA, where US Letter (8.5" × 11" / 216 × 279 mm) is the norm.

For UK-based Arabic restaurants, A4 is also the standard print format, making it straightforward to source local print suppliers. menuFest delivers all files for Middle Eastern clients in A4 format at 300 DPI, CMYK colour, with 3 mm bleed — ready for any professional print supplier in the GCC, UK or beyond.

Common format variations for Middle Eastern restaurants include:

Why menuFest Is the Right Partner for Arabic Restaurant Menu Design

Designing bilingual Arabic-English menus requires specific expertise that most general-purpose design agencies simply do not have. menuFest works with clients across the USA, UK and the GCC on Arabic and Middle Eastern restaurant menus, and we bring the following to every project:

Design Your Arabic or Middle Eastern Restaurant Menu

Professional bilingual menu design — Arabic + English, A4 format, halal-aware, delivered print-ready. Serving restaurants in the UAE, Saudi Arabia, UK, USA and worldwide. Starting from $59.

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