We build apps that deliver instant UI clarity, smooth taps, and a fast, seamless checkout flow. Your product will be worth returning to.
Too many steps to place
a simple order.
Streamlined core flows
to minimize taps.
Category structure confuses new users.
Reorganized navigation for faster orientation.
Checkout drops
due to friction or clutter.
Simplified UI with autofill
and saved preferences.
Reorders take more effort than first orders.
Introduced repeat logic, shortcuts, and user history.
Effort scales with states, branching logic, and UX depth —
not how many tabs show up in Figma.
Big thanks to the Toimi team! Everything was done thoughtfully, tastefully, and right on schedule. Loved how design and development were handled together — quick approvals, quick launch. Super easy to work with.
We came in with a task tailored to our business — and everything was adapted to fit, no templates. What we appreciated most is that they didn't just think about how to build it, but why. You can feel the care in their approach.
We ordered a webinar interface design and a couple of fintech-related things from Toimi — everything was on point. What stood out was that they didn't just deliver, but also suggested ways to simplify. We took notes.
We plan to continue working
with Toimi!
Didn’t find what you were looking for? Drop us a line at info@toimi.pro.
The cost depends on the scope — a white-label ordering app for a single Baytown restaurant differs significantly from a multi-vendor delivery platform serving the broader Greater Houston metro. Key variables include the number of user roles (customer, driver, restaurant admin), real-time GPS tracking complexity, payment gateway requirements, and whether the platform needs to handle multiple restaurant locations across Harris and Chambers counties. We define scope and budget after a discovery session covering your business model, target geography, and launch timeline.
A focused delivery app — customer ordering, driver tracking, and restaurant management — typically takes 4 to 6 months for an MVP. This covers the customer app (iOS and Android), the driver app, the restaurant admin panel, and the backend. For Baytown restaurant groups or multi-vendor platforms targeting the Greater Houston delivery market, the timeline extends based on the number of restaurant partners and the complexity of the dispatch and routing logic.
Three business models see the clearest return. First, independent restaurants and craft food brands in Baytown’s ACE District that want to own their customer relationship and avoid the commission fees charged by third-party platforms like DoorDash and Uber Eats — which typically run 15 to 30 percent per order. Second, ghost kitchen and multi-brand operators who need a unified ordering platform managing multiple concepts from a single Baytown location. Third, local entrepreneurs building a Baytown-focused delivery marketplace to serve the city’s growing dining scene and compete with regional platforms that treat Baytown as a secondary market.
A complete delivery app for the Baytown market requires four interconnected components: a customer app covering menu browsing, customization, real-time order tracking, and saved addresses for Baytown neighborhoods; a driver app with route optimization, order acceptance, and delivery confirmation; a restaurant management dashboard for menu updates, order management, and operating hours; and a backend admin panel for analytics, promotions, and user management.
Real-time tracking is built on a websocket architecture that updates driver location continuously without excessive battery drain — a balance that matters for drivers completing multiple deliveries across Baytown's spread-out geography. We integrate with mapping APIs that account for local routing conditions, including the industrial traffic patterns around the Houston Ship Channel and the Cedar Crossing logistics corridor. Customers see live driver location and accurate ETAs; restaurants see order status in real time; drivers receive optimized routing between pickup and drop-off.
Yes — POS integration is a standard part of our delivery app scope for Baytown restaurant clients. We integrate with major POS systems including Square, Toast, and Clover so incoming delivery orders appear directly in your existing order management flow without requiring staff to manage a separate tablet or manually transfer orders. For Baytown restaurants with high order volumes during peak periods — lunch services serving the industrial workforce and evening dining in the ACE District — eliminating manual order entry is a direct operational improvement.
Customer payments are processed through Stripe or a comparable gateway — covering credit and debit cards, Apple Pay, and Google Pay. For platforms with multiple restaurants, split payment logic distributes funds automatically between the platform, the restaurant, and the driver according to your defined commission structure. Driver payouts are managed through automated transfer schedules — daily, weekly, or on-demand depending on your model. For Baytown delivery platforms operating with contractor drivers, the payout system also generates the earnings records drivers need for tax purposes.
Delivery apps require active maintenance — OS updates, mapping API changes, payment gateway SDK updates, and the inevitable edge cases that only surface at scale all require regular development attention. For Baytown businesses where the app is the primary revenue channel, we offer a post-launch retainer covering compatibility updates, bug fixes, performance monitoring, and a monthly development allowance for feature improvements based on real user feedback. Significant new features — subscription models, loyalty programs, or corporate ordering accounts — are scoped as separate projects while the retainer keeps the core platform stable.