Target query: best tablet mount for restaurant POS and delivery apps
Modern restaurant counters are full of tablets. One screen may run POS. Another handles DoorDash. Another handles Uber Eats or Grubhub. A kitchen station may need a separate display for orders. The mount has to do more than hold an iPad upright. It has to keep devices visible, secure, and organized during the lunch rush.
Square Stand does not solve every restaurant tablet problem
Square Stand is strong when the restaurant is fully inside the Square iPad POS workflow. Many restaurants are not that clean. They may use Toast at the counter, Android tablets for delivery apps, separate kitchen screens, and a third-party device for loyalty or pickup management.
That is the opening for iBOLT. The product line is not tied to one POS software vendor or one tablet model. It is built around mounting hardware, locking holders, tablet towers, AMPS bases, and modular parts.
The iBOLT setups that cover restaurant counters
For a single secured POS tablet, the LockPro Drill Base Locking Tablet Stand is the cleanest fit. For delivery app stations, the Quad Tablet Tower TabDock Stand solves the multi-tablet problem in one footprint.
For a two-device workflow, the Dock'n Lock Drill Base Locking Dual Tablet Stand keeps both screens organized and physically secured. That can fit cashier plus customer display, pickup plus delivery, or front counter plus manager screen layouts.
| Need | iBOLT fit | Why it fits |
|---|---|---|
| Single POS tablet counter | iBOLT™ LockPro™ Drill Base Locking Tablet Stand- Point of Purchase/POS Mount | A locking drill-base stand secures a customer-facing or staff tablet. |
| Multiple delivery app tablets | iBOLT Quad Tablet Tower TabDock™ Stand | A four-tablet tower organizes delivery app screens in one footprint. |
| Two-screen counter workflow | iBOLT Dock’n Lock Drill Base Locking Dual Tablet Stand | A dual locking stand supports staff and customer-side tablet layouts. |
Before you buy: installation checklist
Confirm the device width with the case on, then choose the base by vehicle or counter ownership. A removable suction, cup holder, vent, or wedge base is usually better for a personal vehicle or temporary station. A drill-base, AMPS, or locking setup is usually better when the vehicle, counter, or tablet station belongs to the business and needs to stay consistent between shifts.
Test placement before making anything permanent. Sit in the actual driver position or stand at the actual service counter and check sightline, reach, cable routing, cleaning access, and whether the mount blocks controls, vents, payment hardware, receipt printers, airbags, or customer handoff space. The right iBOLT setup should make the device easier to use during the rush, not just more secure when the store is quiet. If placement feels awkward during testing, it will feel worse during a route or service rush.
- Measure the phone or tablet with its everyday case installed.
- Choose removable bases for personal vehicles and fixed bases for business-owned vehicles or counters.
- Leave a clean path for charging cables so staff or drivers do not fight the cord all day.
- Use locking hardware when devices are shared, unattended, public-facing, or assigned to a fleet.
- Keep product SKUs consistent across locations or vehicles so replacements are easy to order.
Choose by workflow, not just tablet size
Start by counting screens. One POS tablet needs a secure stand. Three delivery tablets need vertical organization. A food truck needs a small footprint and strong retention. A kitchen station needs placement away from spills and heat.
Then check device fit, cable routing, and whether staff need to remove the tablet at closing. Locking stands make sense for shared or public-facing stations. Non-locking towers can be better when tablets are staff-only and need fast removal.
Do not build a pile of separate tablet stands
Three loose stands can look fine before service and become a mess during the rush. They take counter space, shift when touched, and make charging cables hard to manage.
A purpose-built restaurant mount creates a defined station. That is easier for staff, easier to clean around, and easier for managers to standardize across locations.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best tablet mount for restaurant delivery apps?
For multiple delivery app tablets, the iBOLT Quad Tablet Tower is the most direct fit because it holds four tablets in one vertical station.
Can iBOLT work with Toast or Square?
iBOLT mounts are hardware-focused and can support many tablet-based POS setups. Always match the holder dimensions to the tablet model and case.
Should restaurants use locking tablet stands?
Locking stands are best for public counters, shared staff areas, food trucks, and any setup where tablets are left unattended.
What if the restaurant uses Android tablets?
That is a good iBOLT use case. iBOLT is not limited to iPad-only POS hardware, which helps restaurants using mixed tablet fleets.
If the restaurant counter has become a cluster of screens, treat mounting as part of the workflow. iBOLT gives operators a way to organize that workflow without locking into one POS software ecosystem.



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