Restaurant & Food Logo Templates
Explore restaurant, cafe and food business logo templates designed for real projects. Editable vector logo files (AI/EPS/SVG) built for restaurants, cafes, and food businesses—quick edits, clean layers, and exports that stay sharp at any size.
Restaurant, cafe and food business logo templates for fast, consistent branding
A strong logo is basically a shortcut to trust. With restaurant, cafe and food business branding, the goal is usually the same: look credible in a second and stay recognizable everywhere you show up. These logo templates are a practical shortcut—editable vectors you can tailor to your name, palette, and message.
Expect a mix of restaurant logo, food logo, and cafe logo directions, with plenty of forks, plates, and badges motifs. The reason those elements keep showing up is simple: they communicate the category fast, even when the logo is tiny.
Search intent varies, but people usually type things like “restaurant logo”, “food logo”, or “cafe logo”. For niche projects you’ll also see terms like “chef hat”, “kitchen”, “pizza”, and “burger”. This page is built around those real-world needs, so you can land on a direction quickly and refine from there.
Common styles you’ll see in this category
- Minimal monoline: clean, modern, and easy to scale.
- Icon + wordmark: a flexible everyday setup for websites and social.
- Geometric marks: tidy shapes that feel contemporary and tech-friendly.
- Badge/emblem: great for packaging, merch, and ‘established’ vibes.
- Symbol-only marks: handy for app icons and small avatars.
- Lettermark variants: useful when the brand name is long.
What you’ll typically get
Most downloads include an editable vector source plus ready-to-use exports. That means you can handle quick social media needs today, and still have a clean master file when you revisit the brand later.
- Fast starting points for client work, pitches, and internal branding decks.
- Layered assets that make it easier to swap colors, adjust spacing, and update typography.
- Editable vector logo files you can scale without pixelation (AI/EPS/SVG).
- Styles that work for restaurants, cafes, and food businesses—from minimal marks to icon-driven logos.
- Templates that pair nicely with Icons and Product Mockups when you’re building a full brand kit.
- Options that read clearly at small sizes (favicons, app icons, social avatars).
Where these templates shine
- Website header, app icon, and social avatar—where a restaurant logo needs to read at a glance.
- Ads and banners where typography + icon need to stay clean, even when resized.
- Print-ready exports for vendors (stickers, menus, signage) with vector sharpness.
- Packaging, labels, or merch where you want a recognizable mark (great for burger brands).
- Templates for client presentations and moodboards—fast visuals, less busywork.
- Business cards, email signatures, and slide decks for chef hat projects.
Editing checklist before you export
- Confirm licensing/usage needs for client projects before you export deliverables.
- Check spacing between key shapes (icons + type). Small fixes make it feel ‘designed’.
- Export an SVG for the web and a PDF/EPS for print or vendor handoff.
- Test it in one color. If it works in mono, it will usually work in color.
- Open the source file once before committing—messy layers show up immediately.
Vector files (AI, EPS, SVG) are the sweet spot: easy edits, reliable exports, and sharp edges at any size.
Typography is usually the fastest way to change the personality of a restaurant, cafe and food business logo. Try starting with friendly scripts and clean sans pairings, then adjust letter spacing and icon-to-text alignment. If you need something web-safe quickly, Google Fonts is a reliable place to test pairings before you commit.
Color is your fastest ‘brand signal’. For restaurant, cafe and food business work, start with warm tones (reds/oranges) or clean café neutrals. Keep a one-color version around for stamps, embroidery, and small print runs. If your logo will live on the web, exporting a clean SVG helps it stay sharp—this W3C SVG spec is the nerdy reference, but it’s handy when you’re troubleshooting exports.
Turn one logo into a full identity
A logo rarely lives alone. After you choose one, it’s worth grabbing matching assets from Icons and User Interfaces so everything feels cohesive. When you need realistic previews for clients or listings, Product Mockups is the fastest win.
Explore more on Codester
If you’re comparing directions, these related categories are good jumping-off points:
- All Logo Templates
- Graphics marketplace
- User Interfaces
- Product Mockups
- Icons
- Textures & Patterns
- eCommerce
- Marketing
- Miscellaneous
- Animal
- Letter
Learn more
Handy references while you work:
Start with a template, then make it yours—color, type, spacing, done.
















































