29 Best Restaurants in The Waterfront, San Francisco

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

Cotogna

$$$ | Financial District Fodor's Choice

The draw at this rustic-sleek trattoria is chef Michael Tusk's (also the chef of the nearby Quince and Verjus) flavorful, seasonally driven Italian cooking, headlined by pastas, beautifully grilled or spit-roasted meats, and homemade gelato. The look inside and outside is comfortably chic, with wood tables, quality stemware, and fantastic Italian wines by the bottle and glass.

490 Pacific Ave., San Francisco, CA, 94133, USA
415-775–8508
Known For
  • Raviolo with brown butter and egg in center
  • Tough to get dinner reservations
  • Produce from Fresh Run Farm in antipasti
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch Tues.--Thurs.
Reservations essential

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Hog Island Oyster Company

$$ | Embarcadero Fodor's Choice

A thriving oyster farm north of San Francisco in Tomales Bay serves up its harvest at this raw bar and restaurant in the Ferry Building, where devotees come for impeccably fresh oysters on the half shell. Other mollusk-centered options include first-rate clam chowder, grilled oysters, and steamed Manila clams; the kitchen also makes one of the city's best grilled cheese sandwiches.

1 Ferry Bldg., San Francisco, CA, 94111, USA
415-391–7117
Known For
  • Crowds slurping dozens of oysters with glasses of rosé
  • Local fish crudos and ceviches
  • Superior Bloody Mary
Restaurant Details
Reservations not accepted

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Abacá

$$$ | Fisherman's Wharf Fodor's Choice

Defeating the cliché that restaurants in hotels can't be citywide draws, chef Francis Ang's longtime Pinoy Heritage pop-up is thriving at its permanent home within the Kimpton Alton Hotel. Ang's exciting contemporary Filipino cooking has gained rave reviews from national publications and well-deserved awards. The chic space has a slight tropical edge to it and includes a small patio at the front and a bar reserved for those who can't score a reservation.

2700 Jones St., San Francisco, CA, 94133, USA
415-486–0788
Known For
  • Lola's pork lumpia
  • Innovative desserts and terrific morning pastries
  • Cocktails that are as exciting as the food
Restaurant Details
No lunch weekdays

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Recommended Fodor's Video

BIX

$$$ | Financial District Fodor's Choice
With its Jazz Age vibe, live music, discreet alley location behind the Transamerica Pyramid, and spectacular bar and bi-level dining room, BIX would be worth a visit for the impressive setting alone. However, it's also one of the city's finest restaurants for special occasions that don't require a tasting menu; continental and upscale American fare get fresh modern takes, often with a few haute elements.
56 Gold St., San Francisco, CA, 94133, USA
415-433–6300
Known For
  • Classic cocktails
  • Potato pillows with caviar
  • Excellent service
Restaurant Details
No lunch.

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Boulevard

$$$$ | Embarcadero Fodor's Choice

Celebrated local chef Nancy Oakes' high-profile, high-priced eatery in the historic 1889 Audiffred Building has been attracting well-dressed locals and flush out-of-towners since 1993. A striking belle époque interior (originally designed by Pat Kuleto and later touched up by Ken Fulk, both star local architects) is the setting for sophisticated American food with a French accent and a distinct local California produce twist.  The main dining room has a three-course set menu with several options in each course, while most of that menu is available à la carte in the bar area.

1 Mission St., San Francisco, CA, 94105, USA
415-543–6084
Known For
  • Any pork chop preparation
  • Polished service
  • Dungeness crab and grapefruit salad when in season
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. No lunch
Reservations essential

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Prospect

$$$ | Embarcadero Fodor's Choice

This contemporary-minded younger sibling of Boulevard, one of the city's most beloved dining institutions, deserves to be known for its own virtues. The always-tempting food menu rotates frequently based on the seasons and is a nice mix of elevated snacks for the happy hour guests, and more refined small plates, entrées, and pastas for the full three-course dinner experience crowd. Cocktails are a particular strength at the lively bar.

300 Spear St., San Francisco, CA, 94105, USA
415-247–7770
Known For
  • Caviar with house-made French onion dip
  • Sleek dining room and bar
  • Terrific fries and house-baked Hokkaido milk bread
Restaurant Details
Closed weekends. No lunch

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Quince

$$$$ | Financial District Fodor's Choice

To enjoy Michael Tusk's three-Michelin-starred haute California cuisine with a slight Italian influence at dinner, you'll have to splurge on a comprehensive 10-course gastronomy menu, but you'll be rewarded with seasonal items (much of which comes from Fresh Run Farm in Bolinas) reaching the highest fine-dining heights. The elite wine list is among the country's greatest, and seamless service is both refined and welcoming. After an extensive renovation, the still ultra-posh dining room reopened in 2024 with a more contemporary-leaning and sunlight-filled aesthetic (no more white tablecloths), along with an intimate bar and salon, plus the addition of a leisurely Thursday and Friday lunch.

470 Pacific Ave., San Francisco, CA, 94133, USA
415-775–8500
Known For
  • Spaghetti cooked in beet juice and topped with caviar
  • Outstanding cocktails and an amaro cart
  • Exquisite meats cooked in the hearth
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch Tues., Wed., and Sat.
Reservations essential

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Sam's Grill

$$$ | Financial District Fodor's Choice

Of the "big three" historic San Francisco restaurant classics (along with John's Grill and Tadich Grill) that date back to the 1800s, it's the intrepid Sam's Grill that serves the most consistently enjoyable food of the trio. The menu might not be exciting in a modern way—and it shouldn't be—but what arrives at the table is fresh and always enjoyable, focusing on superb mesquite-grilled fish and top-tier produce that probably weren't emphasized as much when it opened in 1867. The timeless atmosphere with a section of private booths with curtains and plenty of ice cold martinis being consumed is a trip to the past. At lunch time, Sam's often feels like the power center of San Francisco (the former mayor Willie Brown eats at a particular table here at least once a week).

374 Bush St., San Francisco, CA, 94104, USA
415-421--0594
Known For
  • The place that invented celery Victor with anchovies
  • Any sand dabs or sole dish
  • Cocktails being poured at noon on a weekday
Restaurant Details
Closed weekends

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Scoma's

$$$ | Fisherman's Wharf Fodor's Choice

Ask locals where to eat at Fisherman's Wharf and you'll usually get a blank look, but the real answer is this San Francisco classic that is undoubtedly the leader among its peers (or piers?). The Pier 47 spot was a coffee shop when brothers Al and Jay Scoma bought it in 1965 (the homey coffeehouse vibe still lingers around the retro-renovated space with worn walls covered with historic photos of the local sports teams), and the restaurant continues to be a great stop for excellent fresh fish and seafood preparations.

1965 Al Scoma Way, San Francisco, CA, 94133, USA
415-771–4383
Known For
  • Oysters à la Scoma
  • One of the city's best cioppinos
  • Surprisingly great cocktails and wine

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The Wild

$$$$ | Embarcadero Fodor's Choice

After a short but strong run as the Wagyu-beef-centric restaurant Gozu, executive chef/founder Marc Zimmerman changed course in 2024 and unveiled a mostly different concept with The Wild. The main similarity between the two is the sleek U-shaped dining counter around the open kitchen and its featured hearth with binchotan charcoal. Many dishes are cooked over those coals with the most precise, laser-like grilling care. The Wild is all about bringing together creativity and nature, where superb local ingredients are gently integrated into exciting but not overly elaborate compositions. Even though there isn't a physical bar, the cocktails, wine, and spirits here are a standout.

201 Spear St., San Francisco, CA, 94105, USA
415-523--9745
Known For
  • Sea urchin noodles
  • Suave setting with dramatic lighting
  • Any of the delicate, captivating preparations of fish from the Pacific
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch.

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Akikos

$$$$ | Financial District

The title of "best omakase" has many worthwhile contenders in the city, but many would name this sleek destination in downtown's "East Cut" area as the most captivating sushi-centric tasting menu. It's undoubtedly a splurge and can feel a little Vegas-flashy, yet the raw and gently torched fish nigiri preparations are nothing short of remarkable. Service, glassware, ceramics and the ultra-polished, wood-heavy design centered on an abstract triangle-shaped sushi bar are of the highest level of contemporary luxury.

430 Folsom St., San Francisco, CA, 94105, USA
415-397–3218
Known For
  • Shokupan (milk bread) topped with tuna and caviar
  • Superb sake and cocktail selection
  • Pristine aged and cured fish
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch Sat.

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Angler

$$$ | Embarcadero

Immaculately fresh seafood and a wood-burning hearth are the centerpieces of this bustling yet luxurious sibling to Saison. The menu descriptions might be brief, but it's really all about the ingredients and impeccable technique—whether it's a grilled hand-dived scallop or the signature thinly sliced potato with a decadent sauce of Taleggio cheese—fulfilling their full potential on the plate with a few smart embellishments.

132 The Embarcadero, San Francisco, CA, 94105, USA
415-872–9442
Known For
  • Taxidermy-filled back room with Bay Bridge views
  • Soft-serve sundae with outstanding salted caramel
  • Instagram-favorite radicchio salad
Restaurant Details
No lunch Sun. and Mon.

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Bar Sprezzatura

$$$ | Financial District

Guests can almost smell the Adriatic salt water–kissed air while digging into cicchetti (similar to open-faced crostini bites with various toppings) and other clever Venetian-inspired dishes at this gorgeous restaurant next to the Embarcadero Center. As delightful as the food is, the glamorous design and intricate cocktails are just as noteworthy. Mixologist Carlo Splendorini is one of the leading modern figures of the city's cocktail industry, and his drinks at this dolce vita–filled bar-restaurant are the perfect partner to the tall floor-to-ceiling windows that overlook a grand European capital-style plaza outside complete with a fountain.

300 Clay St., San Francisco, CA, 94111, USA
628-466–0230
Known For
  • Multiple variations of the Negroni cocktail
  • Unique seasonal pastas
  • Fish crudo
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. No lunch Sat.

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Bon Délire

$$$ | Embarcadero

With a strong joie de vivre in a spectacularly chic setting, mini croque monsieurs, and juicy steak frites, there's a distinct French Riviera vibe nowadays along the Embarcadero with Bon Délire's arrival in 2024. A dramatic horseshoe-shaped bar anchors the intimate waterfront space (though you can't actually see the water inside) that ultimately toes the line between a bistro, a café, and a cocktail bar with great French cuisine bites. Quietly and surprisingly, the desserts are the best part of the menu.

Pier 3, San Francisco, CA, 94111, USA
415-969--0655
Known For
  • Warm madeleines with chocolate sauce
  • Pain bagnat (tuna sandwich) at lunch
  • Always starting a visit with a martini or champagne
Restaurant Details
No dinner Sun.

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Café Sebastian

$$ | Financial District

As part of the revamped Transamerica Pyramid complex (in a separate building across the redwood park from the actual pyramid), this daytime fast-casual café/sleek restaurant in the evening quickly emerged as a FiDi favorite after its 2024 opening. The food is courtesy of chef Brad Kilgore, a major Miami culinary figure who is thriving with his San Francisco debut. Breakfast and lunch are a mix of the familiar and more unique yet casual plates (like a marvelous tortellini en brodo with apple), while dinner shows more of an ambitious side to the compact menu.

Coqueta

$$$ | Embarcadero

With its Bay Bridge views and stellar Spanish tapas, the late chef Michael Chiarello's San Francisco restaurant is a big hit that’s equal parts rustic and chic, a lively destination for both small bites and larger meals. Toothpicked pintxos (small snacks) like quail egg with sausage are a tasty way to start, but the real draws are the inventive cocktails, luscious paella, and dazzling selection of cured meats.

The Embarcadero, near Broadway, San Francisco, CA, 94111, USA
415-704–8866
Known For
  • Smoked salmon montadito (a small sandwich)
  • Sangria from a porrón (a pitcher that people also drink from)
  • Churros with chocolate
Restaurant Details
Reservations essential

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Gary Danko

$$$$ | Fisherman's Wharf

This classic for prix-fixe dining has earned legions of fans since 1999 for its refined and creative seasonal California cooking, displayed in dishes like glazed oysters with Osetra caviar and roasted quail with pork and scallion stuffing. The posh-contemporary banquette-lined rooms, with stunning floral arrangements, are as memorable as the food and impeccable service. The cost of a meal is pegged to the number of courses, from three to five, with several choices in each course. The wine list is immense.

800 N. Point St., San Francisco, CA, 94109, USA
415-749–2060
Known For
  • Spectacular table-side cheese cart
  • Soufflé for dessert
  • Reservations are hard to get
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. and Wed. No lunch
Reservations essential

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Holbrook House

$$$ | Financial District

Everything feels like a Roaring '20s party at the FiDi's go-to glamorous restaurant-bar for power lunches and celebratory happy hours (there are switches at each table to summon champagne and martini carts), except it actually only opened in a different '20s decade (2023). The food could coast in mediocrity because of the elegant, eye-catching environs; but thankfully it doesn't, thanks to sharp dishes like a fantastic petrale sole with hazelnut brown butter that will win over any skeptic of that oft-ignored flaky fish. The adjacent glass-ceiling atrium, known as the Conservatory at One Sansome, is utterly spectacular and often used for extra seating.

1 Sansome St., San Francisco, CA, 94104, USA
415-515--6444
Known For
  • Oysters and caviar
  • HH breakfast sandwich
  • Cocktail menu split between modern and classics
Restaurant Details
Closed weekends

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Kokkari Estiatorio

$$$$ | Financial District

Satisfy your craving for outstanding Greek taverna food—albeit at luxe steak-house prices—from a dizzying selection of mezethes such as stuffed grape leaves to main courses that showcase Athenian standards like moussaka, lemon-oregano chicken, and grilled lamb chops. There’s a lively after-work scene in this chic farmhouse setting with wood-beamed ceilings, a roaring wood oven, and candlelight. Service is doting for its many well-heeled regulars (but tends to be less so for other guests).

200 Jackson St., San Francisco, CA, 94111, USA
415-981–0983
Known For
  • Grilled octopus
  • Whole-fish entrées
  • Semolina custard wrapped in phyllo
Restaurant Details
No lunch weekends

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La Mar Cocina Peruana

$$$$ | Embarcadero

Right on the water's edge, this perpetually popular destination courtesy of global mega-chef Gastón Acurio imports the signature flavors of his home country, Peru, to San Francisco. Fresh seafood is a big draw here, including a long list of ceviches and the can't-miss causas (whipped potatoes topped with a choice of Dungeness crab, chicken, or vegetable salads). Even though Acurio has many restaurants around the world, this one always feels extra special since it was his first to open in the U.S. back in 2008.

San Francisco, CA, 94111, USA
415-397–8880
Known For
  • Pisco cocktails
  • Beautiful back patio
  • Empanadas and tiradito (a dish with raw fish)

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Lunette

$$ | Embarcadero

Two long years elapsed between the closure of acclaimed chef Nite Yun's Oakland restaurant, Nyum Bai, and (to the relief of many Bay Area diners) the 2024 opening of its successor across the bay in the Ferry Building, Lunette. Like most Ferry Building venues, it's a fast-casual operation but thankfully more of a relaxed experience given that it's a little tucked away from the main (hectic) passageways. Cambodian cuisine-inspired noodle soups and rice plates are the main features of a small but tempting menu that invites repeat visits to try everything.

1 Ferry Bldg., San Francisco, CA, 94111, USA
Known For
  • "K.T.P.P." pork and shrimp noodle soup
  • "KFC" Khmer fried chicken wings
  • Salt + pepper beef rice plate
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon.

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One Market

$$$ | Embarcadero

A three-decade-old favorite for business lunches and special dinners, this white-tablecloth spot caters to suits brokering deals and well-dressed romantic dates, who carve their way through upscale dishes accented by local produce and often intricate sauces. Its menu skews seasonal and meaty, and its largish front bar is popular for Financial District/pre-commute happy hour. At lunch, New York-style deli sandwiches and smoked salmon-topped latkes (originally a COVID-19 pandemic pivot that proved so popular it couldn't subsequently leave) take center stage.

1 Market St., San Francisco, CA, 94105, USA
415-777–5577
Known For
  • Tasty fried chicken
  • Tonya Pitts's standout wine program
  • Butterscotch pudding
Restaurant Details
Closed weekends

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Pabu Izakaya

$$$ | Financial District

This energetic Japanese dining venue (part of Michael Mina's high-powered group) is a sleek, wonderful place that hosts both date nights and business deals at its tables and cocktail bar. The substantial menu can be overwhelming, so it's best to just graze around the sushi rolls, charcoal grill items, and a few small and large plates like seafood chawanmushi (egg custard) and spicy cod roe spaghetti.

101 California St., San Francisco, CA, 94111, USA
415-535–0184
Known For
  • "happy spoon" oyster with salmon roe and sea urchin
  • Stellar sake and cocktail program
  • Ken's roll with spicy tuna and shrimp tempura
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. No lunch Mon. and Sat.

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Perbacco

$$$ | Financial District

From the idyllic vitello tonnato (slow-roasted veal with tuna sauce) to the pappardelle with short rib ragù, California Street's longtime power dining favorite's menu is a delectable paean to northern Italy. With a long marble bar and open kitchen, the brick-lined, ultra-polished space oozes big-city charm, attracting business types and Italian food aficionados alike to the FiDi well after evening rush hour ends.

230 California St., San Francisco, CA, 94111, USA
415-955–0663
Known For
  • Agnolotti del plin (a type of pasta filled with meat)
  • Crisp and friendly service
  • Tajarin pasta with pork and mushroom sugo
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch Sat.

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Prelude

$$$$ | Financial District

The 2024 opening of this standout hip-yet-refined concept, attached to the Jay Hotel, is a key figure in changing the narrative that downtown's restaurant scene is fading. Chef Celtin Hendrickson-Jones carefully ties together culinary influences from the South with California (not Southern California—think Mississippi River meets the SF Bay). The entire menu is wonderfully put together and full off signature dishes, like smoked catfish dumplings, the city's best grits, and a shockingly great orange creamsicle and ambrosia salad for dessert.

333 Battery St., San Francisco, CA, 94111, USA
415-375--8041
Known For
  • Nashville hot-style oysters
  • Gorgeous contemporary-meets–Gilded Age decor
  • PFC martini with buttermilk and pickle brine
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch

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Tadich Grill

$$$ | Financial District

Locations and owners have changed more than once since this old-timer started as a coffee stand in 1849, but the crowds keep coming. Snag one of the private booths or sit at the timeless bar and sample seafood—always the name of the game here—such as Dungeness crab Louie or local sand dabs (a type of flounder).

240 California St., San Francisco, CA, 94111, USA
415-391–1849
Known For
  • Delicious cioppino
  • One- (or three-) martini lunches
  • Hangtown fry (a type of omelet from Gold Rush days)
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. No lunch Sat.

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The Vault Garden

$$$$ | Financial District

Originally a pandemic pivot for outdoor dining, this "Garden" concept (really a tented patio on part of the spacious plaza of one of SF's tallest skyscrapers) is fortunately a permanent fixture featuring excellent seasonal California cuisine and a few elevated comfort classics that help lift this destination into the upper tier of downtown dining options. And the garden's indoor sibling, the Vault Steakhouse, is well worth a visit for excellent steaks and martinis.

555 California St., San Francisco, CA, 94104, USA
415-508–4675
Known For
  • Parker House rolls
  • Particularly charming in the holiday season
  • Great two-course express lunch option
Restaurant Details
Closed weekends

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Verjus

$$$ | Financial District

The award for San Francisco's most visually prominent menu board goes to the one that is as wide as the immaculate open kitchen at the casual-chic wine-centric sibling of Cotogna and Quince. Verjus is one of the city's best examples of either a wine bar with excellent food or a hip, energetic bistro with a strong list of minimal intervention wines—it doesn't really matter which it's framed as. Either way, it's always a festive vibe in the dimly lit, loud space, and the France-meets-California plates are consistently satisfying.

550 Washington St., San Francisco, CA, 94111, USA
415-944--4600
Known For
  • The delicate and decadent omelette Boursin
  • Lighter style wines
  • Bread served with the city's largest mound of outstanding butter
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch

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Waterbar

$$$$ | Embarcadero

Come for seafood with a view: sky-high aquariums dominate the dining room, and the bay is just beyond, but the food should be an equally notable attraction. Every fin and shell of the sea, from the oak-grilled octopus to the black cod caught in the ocean right outside of San Francisco, is sustainably sourced. Speaking of that view, no restaurant has a more prime vantage point of the Bay Bridge than this one, though the full dining-with-a-view experience is more enjoyable on the patio or in the spacious front dining room than in the rather dim rear dining area.  For a special occasion steakhouse with a view, head to Waterbar's next-door sibling, EPIC Steak.

399 The Embarcadero, San Francisco, CA, 94105, USA
415-284–9922
Known For
  • Oysters and other iced shellfish platters
  • Always feels like a celebration
  • Delightful Pat Kuleto–designed interior

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