Tag |
Description |
Name
(name) |
The name of the restaurant. |
Address
(address) |
The physical address of the restaurant. For example,
1600 Amphitheatre Pkwy
Moutainview, CA |
Telephone
(telephone) |
A telephone number for the restaurant. You can tag more than one telephone number. |
Opening Hours
(openingHours) |
The hours that the restaurant is open.
Highlight the entire block of opening hours information as a single tag. If the block starts with a text label, don't include the label. For example:
Retail Hours (don't highlight the label)
Mon-Fri 7:00am - 9:00pm
Sat 8:00am - 6:00pm
Sun Closed
|
Cuisine
(servesCuisine) |
The type of cuisine served at the restaurant. For example, Ethiopian or Mexican. You can tag more than one type of cuisine. |
Image
(image) |
An image of the restaurant. For example, you can tag an image of the restaurant's interior. You can tag more than one image. |
URL
(url) |
The URL of the restaurant's web site. |
Reservation URL
(acceptsReservations) |
The URL of the restaurant's online menu. |
Menu URL
(menu) |
A URL of a menu for the restaurant. You can tag more than one menu URL. |
Average Rating (aggregateRating) |
The overall rating of the restaurant, specified by the following tags (see Tagging ratings for more information):
Tag |
Description |
Rating
(ratingValue and
bestRating) |
Words, numbers, or an image that describes the rating. The rating must specify the best possible rating and the actual rating.
If a single piece of data specifes both the best possible rating and the actual rating, you can use a single Rating tag. For example, tag 65% to indicate a score of 65 out of 100; tag 8 out of 10 to indicate a score of 8 out of 10.
If the data is in different locations on a page, specify the following tags:
Score (ratingValue) - The actual rating.
Best Possible (bestRating) - The highest value in the rating system. For example, if the rating scale is between one and five stars, specify 5 as the best rating.
|
Votes
(ratingCount) |
The total number of ratings. |
|
Review
(review) |
A review of the restaurant. You can tag more than one review. Use the following tags for each review:
Tag |
Description |
Reviewer
(author) |
The person or organization that wrote the review. |
Review text
(reviewBody) |
The text or content of the review. Note: This is not supported in Books data type. |
Review Rating
(aggregateRating) |
The rating that other people have given to the review (see Tagging ratings for more information). You'll need three pieces of information for a rating: the actual rating, the best possible rating, and the total number of ratings.
Some pages display the actual rating and the best possible rating in a single piece of text or image. Other pages display the two values in separate locations.
If a single piece of data specifes or implies both the best possible rating and the actual rating, use the following tags:
Rating (bestRating and ratingValue) - The rating of the review. For example, tag 65% to indicate a score of 65 out of 100; tag 8 out of 10 to indicate a score of 8 out of 10.
Votes ( ratingCount) - The total number of ratings.
If the data is in different locations on a page, use the following tags:
Score (ratingValue) - The actual rating. For example, tag 8 if the page lists 8 as the rating without listing the best possible rating nearby.
Best Possible (bestRating) - The highest value in the rating system. For example, tag 10 if the page specifies the best possible rating in the footer.
Votes ( ratingCount) - The total number of ratings.
|
Review Date
(datePublished) |
The date on which the review was published. For details on how to tag dates, see Tagging Dates.
Here are some examples of dates you can tag:
- A single date. For example, you can tag any of the following:
- June 4, 2012
- 4 June 2012
- 6/4/12 - Your tags can include other delimiters and four-digit years as well, such as 6-4-2012. When numerical dates are ambiguous, Google assumes that the first number is the month. For example, 6/4/12 is intrepreted as June 4, 2012, while 13/4/12 would be interpreted as April 13, 2012.
You can tag multiple dates on a page. For example, if you tag June 4, 2012 and June 6, 2012, the event will be intepreted as occuring twice: once on June 4th and once on June 6th.
- A range of days. For example, June 4-7 2012
Note that delimiter between the beginning and ending days needs to be a dash (-).
- Dates with times. For example, you can tag any of the following:
- June 4, 2012 3pm - a time followed by am or pm. Google uses normal business hours to interpet times not followed by am or pm. For example, 11 would be interpreted as 11am and 2 would be interpreted as 2pm.
- June 4, 2012 15:00 - military time
- June 4, 2012 3pm EST or June 4, 2012 3pm -5:00 - Times with a time zone or with a UTC/GMT offset.
- June 4, 2012 2-3pm or June 4-5, 2012 2-3pm - Time ranges with or without a date range.
- Dates in separate pieces.You can use the advanced tagging option to tag the following separate pieces of text as a single date:
- Day: Tuesday, June 4 Year: 2013
- June 4 | Time: 7:30pm-9:30pm and 2012
Google does not recognize date ranges that have been split into multiple tags. For example, the following tags are not valid date tags:
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