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Courier Module

Who's ready, who's free,which address is next.

The courier picks up the job on their phone, heads out, marks it delivered. You watch the whole round from one panel.

No more "is order 14 out yet, which courier took it, when will they be back". It's all on the screen.

Courier phone mockup with a delivery route map and order list

One panel for the whole round — kitchen to doorstep.

You stop phoning couriers to ask where they are; the panel already knows.

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Friday night, the phone won't stop

Three orders ready, two couriers out, and a fourth call coming in.

A pizza's been sitting on the pass for ten minutes — was it sent out or not? One courier just left for the old town; the next address is two streets from there but nobody put them together. The customer phones to ask where their order is, and you genuinely don't know. The kitchen did its part. The handoff is where it falls apart.

How it looks

Ready orders in a queue, couriers on a map, addresses grouped by route.

Assign a ready order to a free courier in one tap. Their phone shows the address and the route; you see "picked up", "on the way", "delivered" as it happens.

Three steps

From "it's ready" to "it's delivered" — and you can see every step.

  1. Ready, into the queue

    When the kitchen marks a delivery order ready, it drops into the courier queue with the address and the total to collect.

  2. Assign and head out

    Send it to a free courier in one tap. Their phone shows the address, the route and whether it's paid or cash on delivery.

  3. Delivered, and closed

    The courier marks it delivered, logs the cash if any. The order closes, the panel updates — you knew the moment it landed.

What it does

Five things the module handles so a delivery never gets lost in the shuffle.

Ready orders in one list

Every delivery the kitchen finishes shows up in one queue, with the address and what's owed. Nothing sits forgotten on the pass.

Assign to a free courier

See who's out and who's back, send the job in one tap. The courier gets it on their own phone — no extra device to buy.

Address and route on the phone

The courier taps the address and their map app opens with the route. Orders close together can be grouped into one run.

Live status, no phone calls

Picked up, on the way, delivered — the panel updates itself. When a customer calls, you have the answer before they finish the question.

Delivery confirmed, cash logged

The courier confirms delivery and records cash collected. At the end of the shift the numbers add up on their own.

30 seconds, no sound

An order goes ready, gets assigned, and the courier heads out.

Real footage, not animation. Filmed during an evening delivery run with a place we work with in Podgorica.

Where to find it

The courier module comes with the delivery-ready packages.

Not in Sadece Online Menü or Deniz. From Ada it covers one courier account; on Ata it's there too — add more courier accounts as your delivery grows.

Software only

Online Menu

15/mo

billed yearly

No courier module in this tier
See details

Deniz

199/mo

billed yearly

Not in Deniz — add it with an upgrade
See details

Ada

Recommended
399/mo

billed yearly

1 courier account + route handoff
See details

Ata

849/mo

billed yearly

1 courier account + room to add more
See details

The five we hear most

About the couriers, the phones, the cash.

Does the courier need a device I have to buy?
No. The courier uses their own phone — they sign in to the courier view and that's it. No extra hardware, no separate plan.
Does it track the courier with GPS the whole time?
It's about the order, not surveillance. You see the delivery status — picked up, on the way, delivered — and the address on the route, not a live dot following your courier around town. Privacy rules (GDPR) are respected.
Most of my deliveries are cash. Does it handle that?
Yes. Each order shows whether it's paid online or cash on delivery and how much to collect. The courier logs the cash on delivery, so the shift total adds up without a notebook.
Can one courier carry several orders at once?
Yes — group orders heading the same way into one run and the courier sees them in delivery order. Closely-spaced addresses don't go out as separate trips.
I only deliver a few orders a day. Worth it?
If delivery is a side line, the online menu plus the kitchen screen may be enough. The courier module earns its place once deliveries get busy enough that "who took what, who's back" becomes a question you ask out loud — that's Ada and up.

Let's talk

Shall we install Duxa in your restaurant?

In a 15-minute call we pick the right package together. Ask for a demo, get pricing, ask questions — no contract.