The moment you tap “Place Order” on Zomato, a massive chain of events begins instantly behind the scenes. Within seconds, the system identifies your location, finds the right restaurant, assigns a nearby delivery partner, processes your payment, and starts estimating delivery time — all before you even put your phone away. What feels simple on the surface is actually a real-time logistics system coordinating thousands of moving parts across an entire city.

Food delivery sounds like a simple logistics problem until you actually try to build it. Then it reveals itself as one of the hardest classes of distributed systems work: real-time geo-spatial computation, dynamic resource allocation, live tracking at millions of concurrent sessions, recommendation engines that personalize without being creepy, and payment flows that must never lose money even when half the network is flaking. Zomato operates across hundreds of cities, millions of daily orders, and tens of thousands of restaurant partners. Let us walk through how a system like this actually works.
What Zomato Actually Does
Most people know Zomato as an app where you order food. But from an engineering perspective, Zomato is really three distinct systems bolted together and made to feel seamless.
The first is a restaurant discovery and search platform. This is the part that helps you find what to eat, browse menus, read reviews, and decide. It behaves like a specialized search engine with local context.
The second is a transactional ordering and logistics system. This handles the actual purchase: taking your order, processing payment, routing it to the restaurant, orchestrating the delivery from pickup to dropoff.
The third is a personalization and recommendations engine. This is the layer that learns your preferences, predicts what you will want to eat on a Tuesday night versus a Sunday brunch, and surfaces restaurant and dish suggestions that feel eerily relevant.
These three systems share infrastructure but have very different performance and correctness requirements. The search system can tolerate slight staleness. The ordering system cannot afford to lose a transaction. The recommendation system can afford to be a little wrong as long as it is interesting. Understanding that these systems have different tradeoffs is the first thing a good engineer thinks about before designing anything.
Core Features at a Glance
Before going deep, it helps to enumerate what Zomato actually provides so we can map features to systems:
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