Google Food Delivery Services: NEVER Move Again As Google Integrates Restaurants’ Delivery To Search Engine

There's already a string of things you can do through the major search engine without any further clicks, from checking out a flight status all the way to the weather or even locating your phone through a sound wherever it might be - and now, the search engine giant is adding Google food delivery services to its features.

While the company is famous for adding some fun and sweet Doodles to their main site (most recently featuring beautiful designs honoring Scotland's Loch Ness Monster, the creator of instant ramen Momofuku Ando and pioneering female journalist Nellie Bly), the California-based tech giant just got a bit more serious with the new Google food delivery services.

In what Slash Gear has described as "a win for the lazy," the Google food delivery services now allows web surfers to find their favorite restaurants with food delivery without even bothering to click any further.

While the Google food delivery services feature a new border for delivery food, it's a growing trend that restaurants add this type of service lately, with Chipotle and Taco Bell currently featuring the option, as well as Starbucks - even the infamous taxicab service app, Über, is currently trying out a delivery service to expand further into their logistics offerings.

Engadget reports that the new Google food delivery services work jointly with six specialized food delivery apps (namely Seamless, Grubhub, Eat24, Deliver.com, BeyondMenu and MyPizza.com), so the search engine asks which of these you'd prefer to use, then showing a wide range of restaurant menus to look at when you're feeling like eating one thing or the other.

"When you search for a nearby restaurant on your phone, you'll see an option to 'Place an order' in the search results," Google explained on its blog. "Just tap that, choose the delivery service and you'll be taken to their website to complete the order."

For now, the Google food delivery services only work in the United States through the abovementioned apps, but the company's looking to expand further.

More News
Real Time Analytics