How to Track 404 Errors for Restaurants
A hungry customer clicks your Google Maps link to view your menu, lands on a 404 page, and heads to your competitor instead. That one broken link just cost you a lunch order.
For restaurants, 404 errors directly impact revenue. Every broken link is a missed order, a frustrated customer, and a bad review waiting to happen.
Why 404 Errors Matters for Restaurants
Online ordering is revenue. When your ordering page or menu links break, you lose sales immediately. Unlike other industries, restaurant traffic converts to orders in minutes, not days.
Third-party links fail. Food delivery aggregators, review sites, and travel apps all link to your restaurant. When you change your menu URL structure, those external links break.
Seasonal menu changes. Updating your menu seasonally creates dead ends on old item pages if you do not set up redirects.
Social media links expire. Instagram bio links, Facebook posts, and TikTok descriptions all point to your site. Those links must always work.
How to Check in GA4
In GA4, go to Reports > Life cycle > Engagement > Pages and screens. Look for paths containing “404” or “not-found.” Check the Users column to see how many customers hit each broken page.
Create a custom exploration: use Page path and screen class as dimensions and filter by Event name equals page_not_found.
The problem: GA4 tells you what broke, not what caused it.
The Easier Way
ClawAnalytics gives you full context. It tracks which marketing campaigns and menu pages lead to 404s.
Example questions ClawAnalytics answers:
- “Which social media post is driving traffic to our broken seasonal menu page?”
- “Are any delivery platform links pointing to old ordering pages?”
- “Which menu items have the most 404 errors from customer clicks?”
This helps your team fix the source, not just the broken page.
Quick Wins
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Test your order flow. Click through your entire online ordering process weekly.
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Redirect old menu URLs. When removing menu items, set up 301 redirects to similar items or your main menu.
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Monitor Google Business Profile. Check links from your business profile monthly for errors.
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Use short URLs. Create simple URLs for promotions that redirect instead of breaking later.
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Try ClawAnalytics. The dashboard highlights which 404s matter most, so you fix the revenue-impacting ones first.