6 Best Restaurants in San Jose, Costa Rica

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Costa Rica's capital beckons with the country's most varied and cosmopolitan restaurant scene. Italian, Spanish, Asian, French, Middle Eastern, Peruvian—they're all here, along with upscale Costa Rican cuisine.

Wherever you eat in San José, be it a small soda or a sophisticated restaurant, dress is casual. Meals tend to be taken earlier than in other Latin American countries; few restaurants serve past 9 or 10 pm. Local cafés usually open for breakfast at 7 am and remain open until 7 or 8 in the evening. Restaurants serving international cuisine are usually open from 11 am to 9 pm. Some cafés that serve mainly San José office workers limit evening hours and close entirely on Sunday. Restaurants that do open on Sunday do a brisk business: it's the traditional family day out (and the maid's day off). Watch your things, no matter where you dine. Even at the best restaurants, thieves occasionally target purses slung over chair arms or placed under chairs.

Restaurante Silvestre

$$$$ | Barrio Amón Fodor's Choice
Chef Santiago Fernandez is at the helm of this ambitious and wildly successful exploration of upscale contemporary Costa Rican cuisine. The regularly changing menus use local and organic ingredients (along with fish and meat procured through responsible means) to take diners on a journey into some of the most creative (and delicious) food Costa Rica has to offer. Many dishes also incorporate a whimiscal look into an aspect of Costa Rican history and culture, such as appetizers served under a colorful devil's mask, representing Masquerade Day, a traditional Costa Rican take on Halloween. Downstairs, the darkly alluring bar, Cothnejo Fishy, offers small bites and a fun cocktail menu.
Avda. 11, C. 3A, San José, 10101, Costa Rica
2221–2465
Known For
  • Gorgeous setting in a renovated mansion with a plant-filled indoor terrace
  • Prix-fixe menus of sustainable fine dining, including wine pairings
  • Hip downstairs bar
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. No lunch
Reservations required

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Alma de Café

$

Duck into the Teatro Nacional's sumptuous café, off the theater lobby, to sit at a marble table and sip a hazelnut mocha beneath frescoed ceilings. The frescoes are part of an allegory celebrating the 1897 opening of the theater. Coffee runs from $5 to $7, depending on how much alcohol or ice cream is added. Sandwiches and cakes are $6 to $9.

C.3, Avda. 2, San José, 10101, Costa Rica
2010–1110
Known For
  • Coffee (with option to add ice cream and alcohol)
  • Cake and sandwiches
  • Artistic surroundings
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. May–Nov.

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La Criollita

$

Kick off your day with a breakfast platter here: the americano (U.S.-style) or the tico (Costa Rican), with eggs, fried plantains, and natilla (sour cream). Snag one of the precious tables in the back garden, an unexpected refuge from noise and traffic, in the morning or late afternoon. The lunchtime decibel level increases markedly with government workers arriving from nearby office buildings. (This is the one time of day we recommend avoiding the place.) If you stop by for dinner, make it an early one. The place closes at 7.

Recommended Fodor's Video

Nuestra Tierra

$$$

The generous homemade meals at this ranch-style restaurant are delicious, and the incredibly friendly waitstaff, who epitomize Costa Rican hospitality and dress in folkloric clothing, prepare your coffee filtered through the traditional cloth chorreador. The place keeps late hours, just in case those late-night gallo pinto (Costa Rican–style rice and beans) pangs hit. Some disparage the restaurant as "too touristy"; perhaps it is, but it's also fun. The place is partly open and sits on a street with a lot of traffic, which is its one drawback. 

Sikwa

$$$ | Barrio Escalante

The indigenous cultures of Costa Rica don't get too much attention from tourists, but this small, intimate restaurant in Barrio Escalante aims to change that by incorporating recipes derived from the history and culture of the eight surviving indigenous ethnic groups. Sikwa has deliciously (and respectfully) bridged the gap between the country's past and present as each meal tells a different story, which the chef and servers will happily share with you. An otherwise straightforward drink menu includes some funky highlights like a gin and tonic with cacao nibs.

Avda. 1, C. 33, San José, Costa Rica
7093–1662
Known For
  • Unique dining experience blending history and storytelling
  • Traditional indigenous dishes like peach palm soup and escarole tomato sauce with white corn and pork
  • Small space best for smaller groups
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch

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Soda Tapia

$ | Sabana Este

Don't expect anything fancy at this extremely popular restaurant, but food here is cheap and filling. The ubiquitous gallo pinto for breakfast and casados (meat, fish, or poultry, accompanied by rice, cabbage salad, and dessert) for lunch are on the menu, along with a variety of sandwiches and burgers. You can dine outdoors, but you'll have to contend with the traffic noise and the sight of the guard flagging cars in and out of the tiny parking lot.