Wonder announced new Grubhub integrations with Eater, Beli, Amazon Alexa+ and Bilt, expanding how diners discover restaurants, access rewards and place orders.

The company said the partnerships are designed to meet consumers where they already spend time while creating new demand opportunities for the more than 415,000 restaurants on Grubhub’s marketplace.

“Grubhub’s latest integrations tap directly into the everyday platforms where diners are already discovering, planning, and ordering their next meal,” said McCall Gridley, head of Grubhub’s growth partnerships at Wonder, in a statement. “By integrating with leading financial, lifestyle, and media platforms, we’re making it easier than ever for customers to discover, decide, and order—while unlocking new demand and high-intent traffic for our merchant partners.”

Through Beli, diners can move from discovering and ranking restaurants to placing a Grubhub order directly from a restaurant’s page within the app.

With Eater, consumers can browse dining options and order from restaurants directly within the Eater app and website, with Grubhub links now available on restaurant pages on select Eater Maps.

Diners can now order from select restaurants through Grubhub directly from Eater's app and website.

Consumers can now order from select restaurants through Grubhub directly from Eater’s app and website.

Grubhub has also expanded its reach through Amazon Alexa+, allowing users to browse restaurants, build orders and complete checkout using voice commands. The feature is available on Echo Show 8 devices and larger.

In addition, Grubhub partnered with Bilt Rewards to give members the option to redeem $10 in Bilt Cash each month for a $10 Grubhub credit, worth up to $120 annually. The company said the benefit is intended to encourage repeat orders while providing added value for diners.

Wonder acquired Grubhub in 2024 for $650 million, adding the delivery marketplace to a portfolio that includes Wonder’s chef-prepared meals and Blue Apron meal kits.

When the acquisition was announced, Wonder founder and CEO Marc Lore said the deal was part of the company’s broader strategy to bring multiple mealtime options into a single platform.

“Bringing Wonder and Grubhub together is the next step in our vision to create the super app for meal time, re-envisioning the future of food delivery,” Lore said in a statement at the time.

The latest integrations reflect a broader industry trend as restaurant and delivery brands look for new ways to reach consumers across the platforms they already use to discover, plan and order meals.