Travel season is upon us, as we in the Northern Hemisphere welcome summer and its promise of being a tourist. And what better way to experience a culture than to dive into its cuisine? I'm sure many of us will be looking for places to eat during our vacations.
That's why today we're bringing you the things people advise you to look out for when picking where to eat. One netizen recently asked: "What are red flags at a restaurant?" And people made many observations, from disaffected-looking staff to dirty premises and formerly alive fruit flies on the windowsills.
What things make you want to leave a restaurant immediately? Let us know in the comments, and don't forget to upvote your favorite submissions below!
Bored Panda reached out to Professional Chef Eugene Wong to know more about red flags in restaurants. Today, Eugene is an online content creator, sharing his expertise and cooking tips with people on TikTok. But for more than 20 years, he was a professional chef, including in Michelin restaurants. Read his recommendations on what to pay attention to when deciding whether a restaurant is worth it below!
More info: The Euge Food | Instagram | TikTok | YouTube | X | Facebook

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As a person who's worked in professional kitchens for more than 20 years, Eugene Wong has tips for people about what they should worry about when deciding where to eat. He says that the top red flags are often cleanliness and the staff's behavior and appearance.
"Look if the restaurant is busy [and] check if you can catch a glimpse of the kitchen to see if it's clean and if the chefs are maintaining proper hygiene, i.e., clean aprons, clean floors, and clean work stations," Eugene tells Bored Panda.
When it comes to the staff, he advises diners to pay attention to their moods. "Observe if the hostesses and servers seem generally happy and nice versus stressed out. This can be a good indicator of the overall work environment and management."
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A sign on the front door threatening health inspectors.

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When me and my friends are picking a place to eat, the top priority is usually the menu. One, because most of us don't eat meat, and two, we want to know if the restaurant has what we like! Menus can reveal some red flags about restaurants, too. Usually, the rule "less is more" can be applied here.
"When a menu has too many items, it's a red flag for me," Eugene tells us. "Except for Chinese places," he adds. "Restaurants, in my opinion, should specialize in a type of dish or cuisine and have other dishes that complement [this]. A large, unfocused menu can indicate that the restaurant might be trying to do too much, often at the expense of quality."
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Have you ever found yourself in a pretty sketchy place and weren't sure whether the restaurant's food safety standards were up to par? Without having to outright ask your server about it, you can do some subtle checks. "Check the bathrooms," Eugene recommends. "If they are dirty, chances are the rest of the place is, too. Cleanliness in the bathrooms usually reflects the cleanliness standards maintained throughout the restaurant."
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Dirty floors, tables, or menus. First red flags, and back out the door you should go.
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Eugene also points out that it's important to consider the restaurant's price range. "Gauge all of the above based on the menu prices. I'm generally more forgiving if the menu prices are cheap because I know if the food is cheap, they are trying to save money in other areas," he explains.
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Plastic menus that have residue of food splatter on them and smell. Yuck.
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If you walk into a fish restaurant that smells of fish, walk out.
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Ask where your oysters come from. If the server doesn't know, you don’t want them. This tactic works for most seafood.
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A distinct 'musty' odor. Usually from carpeting that hasn't been cleaned in a while.
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When you ask about your food allergy and they can't answer because they don't know what is in their food.
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When a menu has blurry, poorly taken photos of the dishes, it's either a really bad restaurant or you're about to have the best meal of your life. No in-between.
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Gordon Ramsay and Robert Irvine playing rock paper scissors in the parking lot.#20
Really long menu, and yet the food comes really fast.
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All the staff standing around just staring off into space because corporate told them it looks unprofessional to just relaxWhen people are constantly kept uptight and not given a chance to relax they f**k up and mess things up. If your greeter already looks so low-key frustrated that they look like they want to explode into an anxiety attack at every second I can only imagine the mistakes the chef in the back is making being kept under the same pressure.

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When you go in and most of the guests have dirty plates on their tables and are looking around for a server. Add in empty tables still piled with plates and you know they are incredibly short staffed. Time to bail out.
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Massive towers of food and/or those extreme bloody mary's with an entire burger stuck to the glass designed for people to post on Instagram. The quality is never going to be good, and it probably means the restaurant relies on people coming for the spectacle rather than the quality.
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Does a restaurant sound like it could be two or more restaurants? For example, if they're serving sushi and pizza at the same place, they can't do either well.
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Dirty bathroom. The cleanliness of the bathroom mirrors the cleanliness of the kitchen.#26
When you step up to the greeters podium and see a roach run across it.#27
Incoherent menu. Cuisines that don't often have ingredients in common, which means some ingredients may sit longer.
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Dead flies on the interior window sills.#29
I was once somewhere with a friend, and she ordered a meatloaf. They said they were out of it. No big deal. She orders something else, and 5 minutes later, they come back and said "Hey, we found some meatloaf, do you want that instead?"We excused ourselves and left.
I get it, maybe there was just some miscommunication or something, but they way she said "We found *some* meatloaf".... it scared us both.
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Service/worker compensation charge snuck onto the bill that you have to opt out of.
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The restaurant doesn't seem to exist.Don't assume that because it is on a delivery service website that it is a real restaurant. Lots of ghost kitchen restaurants. That food may be coming from an illegal kitchen.
Recently had to inform my friend that her favorite sushi place isn't real. Ooof.
Order directly from the restaurant when you can.

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As a foreigner myself, it’s ethnic restaurants that have zero ethnic people eating there.It’s a huge green flag to me when I go to an Indian, Chinese, middle eastern, etc restaurant and the clientele are all of that particular region, and a red flag when they are not like Lapis aka the worst Afghan restaurant I went to in Washington DC.

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There's a soap dispenser attached to the wall that is perpetually empty, so they put a regular disposable soap dispenser on the counter.I'm sure there's good reasons, but it screams lazy to me.

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If you're looking at the menu outside, and an employee/manager comes out to usher you into the restaurant.I've only had that happen once, but it was clear pretty quickly why they were so desperate for my business.

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If all anyone can talk about is the view, then you might as well go to a diner because the food will be bad (awful for what you'll pay). I've never worked nor eaten anywhere with a 'stunning view' that didn't serve lukewarm garbage at a highway robbery price.
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No one eating there when it’s time to eat.#37
A big one for me is if there is only one demographic there, only old folks being the kiss of death for a eatery.If I see blue collar and white collar types in the same place I know it is probably pretty good quality.

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