In New York, diners don’t browse — they filter by neighborhood, cuisine, and what’s open right now. When a diner in the West Village searches "restaurants near me tonight," your GBP categories, hours, and dietary attributes determine whether you show up before they ever see your reviews. This guide covers the four settings that matter most.
A "Thai restaurant" in Flushing — where there is a large Thai community — means something very different to a diner than a "Thai restaurant" in Midtown. New York diners know this, and they search accordingly. When someone types "restaurants open near me tonight" on Google Maps, they immediately use filters: neighborhood, cuisine, open now, dietary options. The results reflect what each restaurant has entered in their Google Business Profile. New York City has over 20,000 inspected restaurants according to the NYC Department of Health. Incomplete hours, a broad category, and missing attributes push your listing behind competitors who filled those fields in.
This guide covers four GBP settings that directly affect filter-based visibility: multi-period hours, your primary cuisine category, dietary and atmosphere attributes, and a neighborhood-specific description that names where you are.
New York diners don’t think of the city as one restaurant market. They think in neighborhoods. A group going to a show in Midtown will search near Times Square. A couple in Williamsburg will stay in Williamsburg. A solo diner in the Financial District after work filters for what’s open after 9 PM. Each of these is a different search with a different set of results — and whether your GBP appears in any of them depends on these three signals:
Neighborhood signal
Business description names your area
Your description should open with the neighborhood, not just the cuisine. "Italian restaurant in the West Village" will outperform "Italian restaurant in New York City" for neighborhood-level searches.
Hours signal
Multi-period hours show late service
If you serve lunch, afternoon, and dinner, each period should be listed separately. A restaurant showing "closes at 10 PM" may be open until 1 AM for late dining but isn’t showing up in "open now" searches after 10.
Diet filter signal
Dietary attributes match filter options
Google Maps offers filter buttons for vegetarian, vegan, halal, and kosher. Each filter removes restaurants that haven’t set the corresponding attribute. If you serve vegan options but haven’t marked that attribute, those searchers never see you.
NYC has 25,000+ restaurants. Each of these settings takes under 10 minutes to fix and directly affects filter-based searches.
Many NYC restaurants run a lunch service and a separate dinner service with a break in between, then open again for late-night. A single continuous hour block misrepresents this — diners who arrive during your kitchen gap leave frustrated, and Google may stop trusting your listing if reviews start mentioning incorrect hours.
Wrong way
Right way
New York diners search by cuisine, not just by "restaurant." When someone searches for French restaurant West Village or dim sum Flushing, Google matches results to the primary category first. If your primary is "Restaurant," you compete against every listing in the area regardless of what you actually serve — and you lose to every competitor who has set a specific cuisine category. Use GMB Everywhere to see the exact primary category your top-ranked competitors use.
Fix
New York has one of the most diverse dietary filter user bases in the country. Halal, kosher, vegan, and gluten-free options are not niche preferences — they are standard search filters for large portions of the city. The same approach used for restaurants targeting plant-based diners applies directly in New York, where competition for diet-specific searches is just as intense. Use GMB Everywhere to see which attributes top-rated NYC restaurants in your category have enabled.
Attributes to turn on
Only enable what applies
Only turn on attributes that genuinely reflect your menu. Then use GMB Everywhere to run a Basic Audit on top-ranked competitors in your neighborhood and compare which dietary attributes they have active.
New York diners are neighborhood-loyal. A diner in Hell's Kitchen is not searching broadly — they are looking for something walking distance from where they are. If your GBP description doesn't name your neighborhood, your cuisine, and one detail about the experience, it reads identically to every other restaurant on the block.
Fix — rewrite your first sentence
Example
A modern French bistro in the West Village, open for lunch Tuesday through Friday and dinner nightly. We serve a rotating seasonal menu with natural wines in a 40-seat dining room.
Lead with neighborhood, cuisine, and hours. End with one specific detail — seat count, signature style, or what sets the experience apart.
The fastest way to close the gap is to look at what the restaurants ranking above you have set up. Use GMB Everywhere to run a Basic Audit on any competitor and see their full GBP setup — categories, dietary attributes, service options, and review data in one click. The same audit process applies in other competitive restaurant markets — see a Chicago example.
Search your cuisine type and neighborhood — for example, French restaurant West Village or halal restaurant Astoria.
Click any top-ranked restaurant and run Basic Audit to see their full categories, dietary attributes, service options, and review data.
Compare their setup against yours. Add whatever they have that your profile is missing.
Typical weak profile
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Open any business on Google Maps - primary and secondary categories display automatically beside the profile
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Search for any term on Google Maps - click the Local Scan button to compare all GBPs
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Open any business on Google Maps - click the 'AI' button beside the GBP to use AI features
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Open any business on Google Maps - click the 'Find more' button beside categories
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Open any business on Google Maps - click the 'Basic Audit' button beside the GBP
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Open any business on Google Maps - click the 'Review Audit' button beside the GBP
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Open any business on Google Maps - click the 'Teleport' button beside the GBP
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Open any business on Google Maps - click the 'Post Audit' button beside the GBP
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