You run the place.
You watch your customers walk out.

From zero to open queue in 60 seconds.

  1. Enter your phone number.
  2. Enter the OTP.
  3. Tap “Start my queue”.
  4. Print the QR (or just stick up your phone).

You’ll have a queue before your next customer asks how long.

  • Your customers install InTimeQ once (Android or iOS) — and every future visit to any InTimeQ place is one scan.
  • You can add walk-ins who don’t have a phone.
  • No hardware, no card, no lock-in.

The questions every vendor asks. Answered.

This is not for me — isn’t InTimeQ for big hospitals?
No. A three-chair barber, a tea stall, and a 400-bed hospital run on the same tool. The tea stall does not care about your KPI dashboard. The hospital does not mind that a tea stall uses the same thing. Both run a queue from the same phone.
I don’t have a computer.
You do not need one. InTimeQ runs on your phone. The same phone you are reading this on.
My customers won’t install an app.
They install it once, the same way they installed Paytm or Google Pay. From then on, every InTimeQ-enabled place — yours and everyone else’s — is a single-scan experience. The first-install friction happens once; the payoff is every queue they join after that.
What about walk-in customers who don’t scan?
You add them in two taps. Name and phone. Their token appears next to the scanners’.
Will I get stuck if you disappear?
Your queue is a QR and a few notifications. If we disappeared tomorrow, you would go back to shouting names — which is where you started. There is no lock-in.
I am too busy to learn a new thing.
Sixty seconds to start. If after a day it is not earning its keep, stop using it. You have not bought anything.

Ready?

One phone, one OTP, one tap. Your next customer scans your QR and you are running a queue.