# NFC Table Stands & Counter Displays — Tap-to-Review URL: https://proudtek.com/products/rfid-labels/nfc-table-stand/ Source URL: https://proudtek.com/products/rfid-labels/nfc-table-stand/ Generated: 2026-03-16T01:42:30.697Z Kind: product Publisher: Proud Tek Co., Limited Author: Proud Tek Co., Limited Credentials: ISO 9001:2015, ISO 14001:2015, RoHS Compliant, CE Marking, REACH Compliant Image: https://proudtek.com/landing-images/nfc-table-stand.jpg Image Alt: NFC table stand on a restaurant table for tap-to-order and Google reviews ## Description NFC table stands and counter displays put a tap-to-act NTAG213 / NTAG216 chip at the customer point-of-interaction — restaurant tables, hotel reception... ## Procurement Snapshot - Best fit: Best for asset tagging, packaging, authentication, access control, and smart-label projects. - Customization: Confirm artwork, encoding, material, chip, and finish requirements before quoting. - Quote checklist: Confirm mounting surface, adhesive or on-metal requirements, and expected reading distance. Share target chip or protocol, quantity, format or size, print or encoding requirements, and the intended application. ## FAQ - Q: How many reviews can I expect from NFC table stands? A: Restaurants using NFC review stands typically see 5-15% of diners tap and leave a Google review, compared to 1-3% for email-based review requests. A busy restaurant serving 200 covers per day might generate 10-30 new reviews per day. The key is a clear, visible call-to-action on the stand and staff who mention it during the meal. - Q: Can one stand link to multiple destinations? A: The NFC tag stores a single URL, but that URL can point to a multi-link landing page (like Linktree or your own custom page) that offers buttons for menu, review, social media, Wi-Fi and more. This gives customers a choice of actions from a single tap. - Q: Are the stands durable enough for daily restaurant use? A: Yes. Our acrylic stands are made from 3-5 mm cast acrylic that resists scratching, staining and breakage. They can be wiped clean with standard restaurant sanitiser. The NFC tag is protected inside the stand body. Wood stands are sealed with a food-safe finish. Both formats are designed for years of daily use in hospitality environments. - Q: Which NFC tap behaviours work natively on iOS and Android at a restaurant table — and what should the encoded URL look like? A: Since iOS 14 Apple Core NFC auto-launches Safari when an NDEF URI record encodes an https:// URL, and both iOS (background NFC) and Android (CTS-compliant NFC on Android 10+) open the URL without any app install. The NDEF record on our table stands is always an https:// URI RTD (not a plain-text or Smart Poster record) because Android's default NFC handler will only auto-open URI RTDs that begin with http:// or https://. For per-table analytics we encode yourdomain.com/t// and use Universal Links / Android App Links to deep-link into the operator's ordering or reviews app where installed, falling back to the web menu where not. - Q: How does the NFC review-prompt pattern interact with Google's review-gating policies and the Google Business Profile review URL format? A: Google's review-gating policy (Google Business Profile Terms, section 4) prohibits filtering out negative reviewers via intermediate forms; the NFC tap must land the user on the unfiltered Google review form. We encode the Google-recommended https://g.page/r//review short link or the https://search.google.com/local/writereview?placeid= canonical URL so every tap is counted toward the venue's review volume and star rating. Multi-location operators typically hold one Google Business Profile per venue, so each stand carries the location-specific review URL, and per-table suffixes are added at the operator's web layer rather than on Google's URL itself. ## Machine Routes - JSON: https://proudtek.com/machine/products/rfid-labels/nfc-table-stand.json - Text: https://proudtek.com/machine/products/rfid-labels/nfc-table-stand.txt