Five.dk positions itself as an online ordering platform for restaurants and takeaways, with a strong focus on a βsimpleβ pickup-order experience. Customers do not need to use an app or a third-party delivery marketplace; instead, they order directly from the merchant and pick up their food in-store. The page indicates that the product is still in the Coming soon stage. At present, users can only submit their name, email address, and requirements to request a private beta invitation.
From an e-commerce infrastructure perspective, Five.dk is closer to a lightweight ordering system for the food-service vertical than a full delivery platform. Its core promises include: no app, no delivery, no middlemen, no high fees, and allowing merchants to retain control over their menu, pricing, and customer experience. On fulfillment, the copy clearly refers to pickup orders, meaning in-store collection; it does not involve delivery dispatching, rider networks, or last-mile fulfillment. In terms of product selection and supply chain, the only visible capability is that merchants can manage their own menus and pricing; there is no information about inventory, supply-chain procurement, or multi-location management.
The page only mentions βno high feesβ and does not explain whether Five.dk uses a subscription model, order commission, transaction fees, or a free beta. For merchants, the claim is appealing, but without specific pricing, payment rates, and contract terms, it is impossible to judge whether it offers a real cost advantage.
The main advantage is its highly focused positioning: helping restaurants build their own online ordering channel, reduce dependence on intermediary platforms, and retain customer relationships and brand experience. The no-app model may also reduce friction for customers when placing orders. The drawbacks are equally clear: the product has not officially launched, and details about features, payment methods, admin dashboard, POS integrations, notification methods, order confirmation flow, data export, and customer support have not been disclosed. In addition, because it does not provide delivery, it cannot cover businesses that need delivery operations.
Five.dk is better suited to restaurants, cafΓ©s, and takeaway shops with physical locations that want to handle pickup orders, especially merchants looking to reduce third-party platform fees and avoid being locked into external traffic channels. For businesses that depend on delivery, sell across regions, or require mature payment integrations, the current information is insufficient. The page does not provide information about access from China, and payment support is also undisclosed. Alternatives include GloriaFood, Square Online Ordering, Wix Restaurants, Shopify restaurant plugins, Toast, Flipdish, and others.
β This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on five.dk official site.
five.dk is an Denmark E-commerce provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Limited (proxy recommended). Click "Visit Official Site" to reach five.dk directly.