Start from the night
Most bad search sessions start with a vague keyword (“Italian”) and hope the algorithm reads your mind about budget, intimacy, and Tuesday vs Saturday. Better sessions start from intent: Who are you feeding? How far will you travel? Is this a first date, a family reunion, or a solo treat?
Combine cuisine with meal shape
Cuisine alone is noisy—every city has ten “Italian” outcomes from red-sauce to regional tasting menus. Add meal type, price band, or party size early. Home dining especially benefits from small-party filters because capacity is real, not a reservation software illusion.
Date flexibility as a strategy
If you can move ±2 days, widen the date window before you widen geography. Hosts often cluster events on weekends; midweek can surface quieter tables and warmer attention.
Let geography chips do the driving
Typing neighbourhood names is error-prone; city and locality chips reduce mismatches between what you think “near me” means and what the map knows. Start broad, then tighten if results overwhelm.
Save mental energy for the shortlist
Once you have six plausible cards, read descriptions instead of adding more filters. The best signal is often a paragraph about pacing, beverages, and house rules—not a keyword match.
When search fails
Switch to followed hosts, browse tags, or ask a friend for a link. Discovery tools improve over time; word of mouth still discovers the edges.
Stay in the loop
platform notes explain how product choices show up in UX; community pieces explain what to do once you land on a listing you like.