41 Best Restaurants in Guatemala

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We've compiled the best of the best in Guatemala - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Restaurante Maracuyá

$ Fodor's Choice

This secret garden with lake vistas is a veritable oasis, complete with butterflies and flowering vines. But don't forget the food: there is a huge menu ranging from smoothie bowls bursting with fresh fruit or waffles in the morning to pad Thai, salad, traditional Guatemalan food, or pizza at sunset, plus fresh cocktails.

Achiote

$$ Fodor's Choice

A broad menu features comida típica as well as familiar plates, so you can order a tasty hamburger (with optional whiskey sauce) or pollo al achiote, chicken spiced with the red pre-Colombian herb. The atmosphere is tasteful and relaxing, so you won't even miss the lake, which is a couple of blocks away.

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Altuna

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

Waiters in white jackets and ties move briskly around the pleasant covered courtyard that serves as the main dining room, once the home of Guatemala City's German Club. Founded in 1948, the restaurant is still serving classic Spanish and Basque dishes such as paella, calamares en su tinta (shrimp in their own ink), and for dessert wonderful torrejas (crusty bread soaked in whole milk, evaporated milk, and condensed milk with a touch of anise). A branch in the New City maintains the old style and impeccable service of the original city-center restaurant.

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Angeline

$$$$ Fodor's Choice
One of Antigua’s most innovative dining spots holds court in a late 19th century home. The menu, which changes seasonally, may include appetizers of black bean soup or a carpaccio of mahimahi and beets. Main courses might include quail with Serrano ham and couscous or lamb chops with a plantain and cheese puree. A dessert selection of soufflés and puddings round out the meal. If you have a group of four to eight people, another option is the pricey, but immensely satisfying nine-course tasting menu, which also changes based on seasonal ingredients—everyone at the table must order it and reservations are a must.

Jake's

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

If you only have one meal in Guatemala City, head to Jake Denburg's place. A New Jersey–bred painter-turned-restaurateur, Jake uses his creative talents on food, producing dishes ranging from osso buco to crab cakes with avocado-and-wasabi cream sauce. A longtime favorite is the vaquero chino (Chinese cowboy), a tenderloin steak served with a sweet soy, espresso, and star anise sauce. For dessert, the pudín de chocolate and cheesecake with crème brûlée are divine. The restaurant is in a beautiful converted farmhouse with hardwood ceilings, tile floors, an outdoor patio, and a sophisticated lounge. The wine list is quite possibly the best in Central America.

Las Orquideas

$ Fodor's Choice

If you've never eaten in an Italian grandfather's kitchen overlooking a beautiful lake here's your chance. This unfussy outdoor spot has a nice selection of pasta cooked to order in the open kitchen. They bake up homemade bread for the bruschetta, and the pizza is a treat with a glass of wine or a frosty Gallo. It's worth the drive after Tikal. 

Lakeshore Rd., El Remate, Guatemala
5819--7232
Known For
  • Italo-Maya pasta: a homemade tagliatelle with your choice of sauce
  • Homey atmosphere
  • Great pizza

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Maple & Tocino

$ Fodor's Choice

This cozy eatery has tasty brunch all day, with items like: shakshuka eggs, Flores skillet with egg, avocado, beans, and mushrooms, or chicken and waffles. Don't miss the famous milkshake: three scoops of vanilla ice cream, flavor of your choice (we suggest maple syrup and bacon), topped off with a delectable doughnut.

Panza Verde Restaurant

$$$$ Fodor's Choice
The elegant restaurant at this European boutique-style Mesón Panza Verde is an experience unto itself. Guests can choose to dine in the main dining area, with its antiques and mahogany furnishings, or in the colonial arcade, which surrounds the perimeter of the garden. The menu features such delicacies as magret de canard, a seared duck breast in chocolate and plum sauce, or Asian pork ribs flavored in an anise-ginger sauce. For a special, romantic evening, reserve the single-table La Cúpola room.

Terrazzo

$$ Fodor's Choice

This terrace is so lovely and the Italian food so rich that the lake will seem swapped for the Mediterranean in a delicious sleight of hand. The best plates are the bowls of homemade pasta slick with olive oil and dense with shrimp, bacon, tomatoes, squash, basil, or whatever tops your dish of choice. Burgers, steak, and interesting pizzas are also on the menu. The avocado salad is a little wedding cake of vegetables; beautiful. Plus, if you've been jonesing for that clementine San Pelligrino, Il Terrazo's got you covered.

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Calle la Union, Flores, Guatemala
7867--5479
Known For
  • Must-try avocado salad
  • Killer sunset views
  • Homemade pasta
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.

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Welten

$$$ Fodor's Choice

You'll feel like a guest in a private home when you arrive at this restaurant. Take your pick of tables, which are on a patio with cascading orchid plants, by a small pool, festooned with candles and flower petals, in the rear garden, or in one of the elegantly appointed dining rooms. The menu includes homemade pasta dishes, such as anolini served with a creamy pepper-and-cognac sauce, as well as fish and meat dishes served with a variety of sauces. All the vegetables are organic, and the bread is baked right on the premises.

Amanecer Juice Bar

$$
As you’d surmise from the name, this is the place to stop for a quick morning or afternoon pick-me-up of homemade juice made from every fruit or fruit mix imaginable. The enormous blackboard behind the counter shows you what’s on the day's menu, which usually includes a selection of veggie wraps and coffee cakes. The decor is pretty basic—you sit on stump stools at your plastic table—but the aqua and white color scheme really cheers things up.
6 av. Sur 8, Antigua, 03001, Guatemala
7832--8886
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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Angie Angie

$$
A place so nice they named it twice is a bit Italian, a bit Spanish, and a bit Argentinian. There are 10 varieties of pizza on the menu—the Argentine, topped with spinach, mushrooms, and sausage, is everybody’s favorite—all prepared in a clay oven. Not in the mood for pizza? Opt for the Spanish-style tapas (appetizers), which includes shrimp, sausages, and meatballs with various dipping sauces. A fire pit in the back garden warms things up on Antigua's numerous cool nights and live music---flamenco or trova (a Latin American folk/protest musical style)---keeps the place hopping weekend evenings.
1 av. Sur 11A, Antigua, 03001, Guatemala
7832--3352

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Arrin Cuan

$$

Ask locals to recommend a place to eat in the Old City, and chances are they'll send you to this spirited Guatemalan favorite. The decor couldn't be simpler—stone floor, small fountain, colorful fabrics, and vases of flowers on the tables. The flavorful cuisine, typical of the Cobán region, includes kaq'ik (a spicy turkey stew), gallo en chicha (chicken in a slightly sweet sauce), and sopa de tortuga (turtle soup). More adventurous types will want to sample the roasted tepezcuintle, a type of rodent.

Everyday at lunch and on Friday and Saturday night live marimba music fills the restaurant.

There's a branch in the New City, which dishes up the same regional cuisine from Alta Verapaz.

The Bagel Barn

$$

The name is apt. Anything and everything in the bagel realm makes up the bulk of the menu in this place just around the corner from the Parque Central. You'll find an equally wide variety of smoothie flavors here as well as decaf coffee (a real rarity in this country). Stop by at 5:30 pm for the nightly screenings of late-run Hollywood films on DVD; there's a huge selection of those, too. Movie time occasionally varies but will always be announced that day on a board in the doorway.

Bistrot Cinq

$$$

Guatemalan colonial meets French country bistro at this eatery two blocks east of Parque Central. Trout amandine, pied de cochon, and steak frites with béarnaise sauce make up some of the French-themed highlights on the menu, along with an ample wine list that features mostly Chilean and Argentine vintages. You'll find a whimsical hog theme throughout, with pewter, ceramic, and wood pigs used to decorate the room with its dark wood and worn, exposed stucco walls. Lighting is low and romantic, with small spotlights and chandeliers made from frosted-white glass bottles. Jazz and blues provide the background music.

4 Calle Oriente 7, Antigua, 03001, Guatemala
7832–5510
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
No lunch Mon.–Thurs.

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Café Arqueológico Yaxhá

$

Combining a cultural and educational experience with good food, this restaurant is the creation of German architect Dieter Richter, who has worked on projects at Yaxhá and Naranjo. You can browse a collection of books, photos, maps, and other information about the Mayan world while you enjoy a hamburguesa or a Mayan dish such as Pollo Xni Pec (chicken in a chili sauce served with rice and yucca). You can also book tours to Yaxhá and elsewhere.

Av. 15 de Septiembre, Flores, Guatemala
502-5830–2060
Known For
  • Unique Mayan dishes
  • Laid-back boho atmosphere
  • Friendly, helpful staff
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted

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Café Barista

$$

This hot spot on the northwest corner of Parque Central hustles and bustles with all the commotion of a big-city café. Coffees, teas, chai, and hot chocolate are on tap, along with a good variety of panini and salads. It can be difficult to find a table during the day, especially on weekends. If you're here with someone else, have one person in your party grab a table the minute one opens up, while another orders at the counter. Things thin out a bit after 8 pm.

Café Condesa

$$

Breakfast starts at 7 am, and specials such as toast topped with strawberries, papaya, or mango, and omelets made with fresh vegetables will give you plenty of sightseeing fuel. (Breakfast is served all day if you like.) After such a big breakfast, don't count on eating much for the rest of the day. For lunch, try the quiche or the Brie plate; the homemade pies and pastries are also notable. You can eat in the café's airy dining room or grab a cappuccino and a sweet roll at Café Condesa Express next door. Either way, the location right on the Parque Central can't be beat.

Café Flor

$$

The friendly proprietors serve a menu that includes Thai curries, Chinese noodles, and Indian vegetable dishes. Be careful—some of the dishes, especially the curries, are quite spicy. Asian food aficionados will find the food not at all like the real thing, but Antigua is, after all, about as far from the source as you can get. There's live piano music nightly. The restaurant is popular with the many students studying Spanish in Antigua.

4 av. Sur 1, Antigua, 03001, Guatemala
7832–5274
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted

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Café Opera

$$$

You half expect Enrico Caruso to emerge from the shadows when you walk into this trattoria a couple of blocks from La Merced church. It's generally a bit cluttered and crowded, and it fills up quickly. You'll find overflow seating on the back patio, but sitting out there isn't nearly as atmospheric. For an Italian restaurant, the selection of pastas is small, but the café's signature plates are its various tenderloin dishes—we like the beef prepared with Gorgonzola cheese, nuts, and rosemary. There's also a wide selection of paninis and gelato.

4 av. Sur 1, Antigua, 03001, Guatemala
7832–0727
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted

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Capitán Tortuga

$$

The large, cartoonlike Capitán Turtle sign may fool you into thinking this restaurant is just for kids, but the grilled meats, pizza, tacos and burritos, and other options make this a solid choice for a meal with a view. The pinchos (grilled kebabs) are cooked on an open barbecue, sending enticing aromas throughout the restaurant. There's a nice patio out back, which offers tremendous sunset views of the lake.

Calle 30 de Junio and Callejón San Pedrito, Flores, Guatemala
7867--5089
Known For
  • Stunning lake views
  • Fresh whitefish
  • Friendly service

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Casa Chapina

$$$

For an around-Guatemala tour of the country's cuisine, we like this down-home New City restaurant with its bright yellow walls and colorful textiles hung from the ceiling. The emphasis is on meat, including typical national dishes such as pollo loroco (chicken-and-vegetables), pepián (chicken fricassee in pumpkin and sesame sauce), and kaq'ik (a turkey stew from Alta Verapaz). Be sure to accompany whatever you order with the restaurant's warm homemade tortillas.

Cool Beans

$

You'll feel appropriately cool chilling in a hammock or shooting the breeze with another wanderer in this leafy garden café, sipping lemonade or an iced latte. If you're bored by the national beers, Gallo in Guatemala or Belikin in Belize, this café serves real IPAs and a selection of imported craft beers. You can eat breakfast for under Q40, and light meals are served the rest of the day. There's free Wi-Fi.

Calle 15 de Septiembre, Flores, Guatemala
7867--5400
Known For
  • Craft beer
  • Tasty coffee
  • Great prices
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.

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De Mario

$$$

The menu here is one of the country's most original, combining flavors from both sides of the Atlantic: you can enjoy such Spanish traditions as paella and roast suckling pig or more local offerings like robalo with a mushroom sauce. During its 25-plus years in business, the restaurant has built a much-deserved reputation for impeccable service.

13 Calle 0-43, Guatemala City, 01010, Guatemala
502-2339--2331
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
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Doña Luisa Xicotencatl

$$

This restaurant—named after the mistress of Spanish conquistador Pedro de Alvarado—is something of a local institution; tables are scattered throughout a dozen rooms, but it's still not easy to get a seat. Early-morning specialties include fruit salad, pancakes, and very fresh bread (the bakery is right downstairs). Sandwiches and other light fare make for ample lunch and dinner options. The service can be slow, but the eclectic decor makes the wait pleasant. The bulletin board downstairs is an excellent source of information for travelers. Calling it “Doña Luisa” works too.

4 Calle Oriente 12, Antigua, 03001, Guatemala
7832–2578
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted

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El Cazador Italiano

$$$

This fun place behind the cathedral has gained cachet with Antigua's foreign population, expat and tourist alike, who have made it one of the city's liveliest restaurants. You'll find a good selection of pizzas and pastas on the menu, along with less traditional dishes such as panfried salmon and grilled beef fillet with sautéed spinach. Italian music—it might be Sinatra, it might be Pavarotti—wafts through the three dark-wood rooms (one upstairs), along with convivial chatter from the spirited bar, making it an especially good place to eat if you're here with a group.

El Sereno

$$$$

One of Antigua's original elegant restaurants is in a 16th-century house near La Merced church a few blocks north of the Parque Central. The place is huge and does a brisk event business, but offers plenty of secluded tables for intimate, candlelight dinners. Lunch is served in the downstairs courtyard; dinner expands to the upstairs terrace with stupendous mountain and city views and gorgeous end-of-day sunsets. The menu changes every few months, but always consists of a mix of Guatemalan and international fare—perhaps a three-meat pepián, or a tarragon leg of lamb with a mango shrimp salad on the side.

4 av. Norte 16, Antigua, 03001, Guatemala
7832–0501
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted

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Frida's

$$

Looking for a place where you and your friends can knock back a few margaritas? At this festive cantina, a branch of a larger establishment in Guatemala City, the whole group can fill up on Mexican fare, including taquitos, enchiladas, and burros, the diminutive siblings of the American-style burrito. Things really get going when the mariachi band shows up. Stop by for live music Saturday evenings. Fans of Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera will find a great selection of prints from these masters—the menu even bears Frida's signature portrait.

5 av. Norte 29, Antigua, 03001, Guatemala
7832–1296
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted

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Hacienda de los Sánchez

$$$$

This Zona Viva steak house is known for its quality cuts of beef, yet the atmosphere has won over more than one vegetarian. The dining room calls to mind the American West, with such touches as sturdy wooden tables and old saddles. Eat inside or in the small garden. Grilled meats, chicken, and seafood dominate the menu, and there's a decent wine list.

5 Av. 14-38, Guatemala City, 01010, Guatemala
502-2360--5040
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted

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Hacienda Real

$$$$

This adobe building, set back from the street behind a high wall, is decorated in a Western theme, with tile floors and simple wooden furniture. There's also a pleasant central patio with a fountain and tables with umbrellas. Out front, away from the dining areas, is a small play area for kids. Specialties of the house include steak, ribs, pork, salmon, and robalo, all served with a variety of savory condiments like fresh salsa, pickled carrots, and jalapeños. The attentive, exuberant servers bring endless baskets of warm tortillas, but try not to fill up—the truly incomparable caramel flan shouldn't be missed. To top off the experience, a Latin trio strolls through in the evenings and at lunchtime on Fridays. OTHER="spoke with Fidelia de D'Avila, secretary, [email protected]"/