Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Ginzii is a POS and smart kitchen system for newly opened restaurants in Thailand. Its positioning is not just to record sales, but to help owners understand their “real profit.” The page emphasizes that it can be used free forever, requires no credit card, and can be basically set up in about 15 minutes, making it suitable for small food and beverage businesses opening a restaurant for the first time and lacking systematic management experience.
Its core features cover the full restaurant workflow: the front-of-house POS supports dine-in, takeaway, and delivery; a real-time table map shows which tables are available, occupied, or awaiting payment; KDS automatically sends orders to the kitchen, can split them by stations such as fried items, soups, and drinks, and can alert staff about overdue dishes. Cost management is where it stands out: Recipe Costing calculates item costs based on recipes and suggests selling prices, while Waste Tracking quickly records losses such as discarded items, expired ingredients, and returned dishes, then generates weekly reports. Inventory is automatically deducted based on recipes and triggers alerts when stock is close to running out. For integrations, the text lists Epson, Star, Xprinter, iPad, Android Tablet; payments include PromptPay, LINE Pay, TrueMoney Wallet, and credit cards; delivery platforms include GrabFood, LINE MAN, Foodpanda, and Robinhood; accounting integrations include PEAK, FlowAccount, and e-Tax, though it notes that some are still on the roadmap.
The page clearly states “free forever, no conditions, no credit card required,” and says KDS, recipe costing, and waste tracking are available in all plans. However, the captured content does not show specific plan prices, limits on number of stores, devices, order volume, or advanced features. For support, Ginzii offers Thai-language LINE support and is building a “Restaurants Using Ginzii” LINE community, covering Q&A, supplier networking, case studies, and free monthly online workshops.
Its strengths are its strong vertical focus on restaurants, making it especially useful for new stores that want to move quickly from menu templates and cost calculation to launch operations. The smart kitchen, inventory, and waste features provide practical value for controlling gross profit. The drawbacks are the lack of enterprise-level information such as permission management, data security, API availability, and deployment options, while the actual availability of integrations needs to be confirmed one by one. It is better suited to local small and midsize restaurants, cafés, noodle shops, and newly launched food and beverage entrepreneurs in Thailand.
Access from China is unknown. Even if it can be accessed, its payments, delivery, tax, and customer support are clearly oriented toward the Thai market. Chinese restaurant merchants that need local cashier systems, WeChat Pay/Alipay, invoicing, and the Meituan ecosystem may be better off evaluating local options such as Keruyun, Meituan POS, and 2Dfire.
⚠ 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 ginzii.com official site.
ginzii.com is an Thailand SaaS provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach ginzii.com directly.