129 Best Restaurants in San Francisco, California

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

Original Joe's

$$$

Clubby, vibrant, and radiating old-school charm, this San Francisco mainstay has been serving classic Italian American fare since the 1930s. Folks flock to this third incarnation---run deftly by the third generation of the founder’s family---for classic cocktails and large portions of favorites like prime rib and chicken parmigiana. Expect high decibel levels, high energy, and a wait.

601 Union St., San Francisco, CA, 94133, USA
415-775–4877
Known For
  • Classic Cal-Ital food
  • House-made ravioli
  • Excellent bar
Restaurant Details
No lunch Mon.–Thurs.

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Outerlands

$$ | Sunset
As infamous for its lines as it is famous for its brunch, this cozy, wood-paneled restaurant serves food that is thoroughly Northern California, from the granola with goat's milk yogurt to the avocado toast drizzled with Meyer lemon vinaigrette. The cast-iron grilled cheese sandwich is legendary, and dinner also offers plenty of charm: just make sure you have some time on your hands and layers to ward off the Sunset chill while you wait.
4001 Judah St., San Francisco, CA, 94122, USA
415-661–6140
Known For
  • High-quality ingredients
  • Dutch pancakes
  • House-made bread
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. No lunch Mon., Wed., and Thurs.

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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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Recommended Fodor's Video

Palm House

$$

In what's described as "Cal-Tropic" flair, Palm House serves atmospheric and colorful vibes. The drinks are smoky and competently worldly, and the menu is a vacation in and of itself.

Parada 22

$ | Haight

A small, colorful space, Parada 22 serves up heaping plates of home-style Puerto Rican cuisine—think plantains, seafood, and slow-roasted pork. There's also plenty of vegetarian fare on offer. The brick-walled interior is accented by old framed photographs, potted plants, and strings of Christmas lights.

1805 Haight St., San Francisco, CA, 94117, USA
415-750–1111
Known For
  • Delicious yuca fries
  • Marinated meats and vegetables
  • Lunch specials

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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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Pier 23 Cafe

$$ | Embarcadero

Cold beer, Fernet on tap, semi-frequent live music and a prime waterfront setting keep this venerable Embarcadero standby humming on weekdays and weekends. Although you'd expect to sit elbow to elbow with fishermen, you're more likely to share the space with tourists and nearby office workers drawn by the no-frills cocktails, shrimp melts and cheeseburgers from the kitchen (skip the fried food here), and of course the prime vantage point for gazing across the bay.

The Embarcadero, San Francisco, CA, 94111, USA
415-362–5125
Known For
  • Clam and fish chowder
  • Live music
  • Key West–like vibe on the bay
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. No dinner

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Pizzetta 211

$ | Richmond

This shoebox-size spot puts together thin-crust pies topped with the kinds of ingredients that are worth the constant wait. Almost half the menu changes on a biweekly basis, while dependable favorites include the tomato, basil, and mozzarella pizza; the Sardinian cheese, pine nut, and rosemary pie; and the San Marzano tomato sauce, wild arugula, and mascarpone pizza.

211 23rd Ave., San Francisco, CA, 94121, USA
415-379–9880
Known For
  • Creative topping combinations
  • Good house-made desserts
  • Short, changing menu
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues.
Reservations not accepted

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Plow

$$ | Potrero Hill

Weekend or weekday, the brunch lines are as constant as the excellent scrambles, biscuits, and fluffy lemon-ricotta pancakes. The atmosphere is also winning—bright and pastoral, with rustic wood floors and huge windows—and the Little Plowers menu dishes out smaller-portioned pancakes, French toast, and grilled cheese for younger brunch-loving guests.

1299 18th St., San Francisco, CA, 94107, USA
Known For
  • Plow potatoes
  • Soft scrambled eggs with peak seasonal produce
  • Happiest place in San Francisco at 10 am
Restaurant Details
No dinner
Reservations not accepted

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Poesia Café

$ | Castro

An offshoot of the restaurant Poesia next door, the name means "poetry" in Italian, and the pastries, desserts, and savory sandwiches at this café live up to the name. You can't go wrong with anything on the house-made cornetti or focaccia, or for that matter any of the wide variety of Italian pastries. The artful interior makes good use of tile and color, and the service is warm and personal.

Presidio Social Club

$$

American comfort classics meet seasonal California cooking in this restaurant in an old barracks building at the eastern edge of the Presidio. The restaurant has a blend of the nostalgic past and the trendy present (deviled eggs with smoked salmon and furikake; grilled beef liver and onions; homemade cheesecake), as well as a lively bar and ample patio seating that allows diners to soak up the Presidio's outdoor beauty.

563 Ruger St., San Francisco, CA, 94129, USA
415-885–1888
Known For
  • East–West chicken soup
  • Popular brunch
  • Barrel-aged cocktails
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. No lunch Wed.

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Prubechu

$$

San Francisco's only Guam-inspired restaurant is always an outdoor party with a South Pacific–evoking, picnic table–filled patio in an old parking lot. The extensive, contemporary Guam-Californian menu can be a little overwhelming but is always satisfying. Most tables start with a few lighter bites like Chamorro sweet rolls or empanadas before continuing towards the barbecue items and coconut braised beef tinaktak, accompanied by a number of homemade sauces.

2224 Mission St., San Francisco, CA, 94110, USA
415-853–0671
Known For
  • Dry-spiced fried chicken wings
  • "fiesta table" shared tasting menu
  • Interesting natural wines
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. No dinner Sun.

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R&G Lounge

$$ | Chinatown

Salt-and-pepper Dungeness crab is a delicious draw at this bright, three-level Cantonese eatery that always has a packed crowd for its crustacean specialties—crab portions can easily be split for three—and dim sum. A menu with photographs will help you sort through other Hong Kong specialties, including Peking duck and shrimp-stuffed bean curd. Much of the seafood is fresh from the tank.

631 Kearny St., San Francisco, CA, 94117, USA
415-982–7877
Known For
  • Three treasures with shrimp and black bean sauce
  • Stir-fry "special beef"
  • High-energy crowd of all ages

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The Ramp Restaurant

$$

This waterfront, outdoor gathering place brings diners from all over town for sunny day brunches and a beachy-bohemian Key West vibe. This is San Francisco's definitive destination for leisurely daytime eating and drinking—always slinging beers, burgers, and fish tacos to guests fighting hangovers or just relaxing after a busy day of work.

855 Terry A Francois Blvd., San Francisco, CA, 94158, USA
415-621–2378
Known For
  • Gorgeous views
  • Clam chowder in a bread bowl
  • Famous Bloody Mary
Restaurant Details
No reservations.

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Red Window

$$

This colorful Spanish-style tapas/pintxos bar deserves a spot especially if you need a quick bite with an appetite-stimulating vermouth-based aperitif before heading off to dinner. The food is delicious, with delightful ambience, and it's a not-to-miss for anyone who could use a night off from Italian. Try the fun pintxos bites like jamon croquetas and sobrasada bocadillo, a paprika-spiced soft salumi (sobresada) slathered on a roll and wedged with nutty Manchego cheese.

500 Columbus Ave., San Francisco, CA, 94133, USA
415-757–0600
Known For
  • Excellent low-ABV cocktails made tableside
  • Patatas bravas piled into thin slices and then fried
  • Fun, welcoming atmosphere
Restaurant Details
No lunch weekdays

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Red's Java House

$ | Embarcadero

For a real cup of joe without any sense of pretension, join the savvy construction workers, Giants fans, and young suits at the Embarcadero's seven-decade-old waterfront classic, where the coffee typically follows a double cheeseburger on sourdough and a cold beer, and the gorgeous view of the East Bay is priceless.

Pier 30, San Francisco, CA, 94105, USA
415-777--5626
Known For
  • Throwback mid-century atmosphere inside and relaxed patio out back
  • No lettuce or tomato on the burgers
  • Hearty breakfast dishes
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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Roam Artisan Burgers

$ | Pacific Heights

All the burgers at this laid-back spot, part of a popular Bay Area mini-chain, are responsibly sourced, and the beef is 100% grass-fed. Choose a patty (beef, bison, vegetarian, elk, or turkey), then select a preset "style" or invent your own from the many creative toppings. The homemade quinoa-, brown rice-, and black bean-based vegetarian burger might be the finest of that increasingly competitive genre in San Francisco. A market salad rotates frequently as a solid option for the burger-averse. Kombucha, shakes, house-made sodas, and beer and wine are also available, as is a kids' menu.

1923 Fillmore St., San Francisco, CA, 94115, USA
415-800–7801
Known For
  • Notable vegetarian burger
  • Popular with families
  • The "fry-fecta" trio of fry styles for a side

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Rose's Café

$$

Although it's open morning until night, this cozy café is most synonymous with brunch. Sleepy-headed locals turn up for delights like the smoked ham, fried egg, and Gruyère breakfast sandwich; evening favorites lean toward roast chicken, pastas, and seasonal-rustic fare. The ingredients are top-notch, the service is friendly, and the seating is in comfortable booths and at tables and a counter. Heaters above the outdoor tables keep things toasty when the temperature dips.

2298 Union St., CA, 94123, USA
415-775–2200
Known For
  • Pizzas for morning and night
  • House-baked goods
  • Grilled salmon cozy (a unique pita-like sandwich)

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Saigon Sandwich

$ | Tenderloin

Stop by this hole in the wall for some of the best—and cheapest—take-out banh mi in the city. Favorites include thit (roast pork) and ga (roast chicken), but the doors close at 6 at the latest.

560 Larkin St., San Francisco, CA, 94102, USA
415-474–5698
Known For
  • Generous portions
  • Really low prices
  • Bare-bones storefront
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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Saluhall

$ | Tenderloin

When you're not quite sure what you want, pop into this brand-new two-story food hall by IKEA's sister company and see what the 11 food businesses are serving up. Downstairs, a beer bar, burger place, bakery/sandwich shop, and soft-serve counter are permanent installations. Upstairs you'll find two bars and five local food purveyors, which may change. Current offerings include vegan Puerto Rican food at Casa Borinquena, spicy Chinese at Momo Noodle, and Curry Up Now's Indo-Californian cuisine. Open market hall-style seating means you don't have to select just one.

San Tung

$ | Sunset

The food of China's northeastern province of Shandong is the draw at this bare-bones storefront restaurant where specialties include steamed dumplings—shrimp and leek dumplings are the most popular—and hand-pulled noodles in soup or stir-fried. Especially popular are the platters of excellent dry-fried chicken wings, a cult dish in the city.

1031 Irving St., San Francisco, CA, 94122, USA
415-242–0828
Known For
  • Sautéed string beans
  • Famous chicken wings
  • Long waits
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. and Wed.
Reservations not accepted

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Sandy's

$ | Haight

The muffeletta---that round and meaty, cheesy, deliciously oily sandwich---may be signature New Orleans, but Sandy's neighborly vibes and masterful sandos make it feel like it's been here forever. Choose the classic, with mortadella, prosciutto, salami, provolone, olive spread, and house mayo or the veggie version with mushrooms, then pick a size and fixins like herby slaw or pickled egg salad, then grab one of the few seats overlooking Haight or take it to go.

1457 Haight St., San Francisco, CA, 94117, USA
Known For
  • Genuinely friendly folks
  • Stacked sandwiches
  • Fast service
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. No dinner

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SanJalisco

$

This sun-filled, family-run restaurant has been a neighborhood favorite since 1988, and not only because it serves breakfast all day—though the hearty chilaquiles always hits the spot. On weekends, regulars opt for birria, a spicy barbecued goat stew, or menudo, a tongue-searing soup made from beef tripe, complemented by beer and sangria.

Sasa

$$$ | Japantown

Japantown has a host of sushi options at all price points, but this longtime staple on the second floor of the Japan Center stands out for its excellent rolls, nigiri, and sashimi. The omakase menu, with eight pieces of sushi and nigiri, is a fraction of the cost of its downtown peers, but close to equal in quality and diner satisfaction. The mellow, wood-paneled space is a striking contrast to the constant chatter and mall activity outside.

22 Peace Plaza, San Francisco, CA, 94115, USA
628-600–6945
Known For
  • "mystery box" mini chirashi bowl
  • Uni spoon with quail egg and ikura (cured salmon roe)
  • An oasis in a busy mall
Restaurant Details
No lunch Mon.

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Sociale

$$$ | Presidio Heights

The COVID-19 pandemic's outdoor dining requirement led San Franciscans to discover the city's premier patios—like the one at this Presidio Heights stalwart. Whether you're dining on that patio or in the elegant dining room, Italian and seasonal Californian cooking mingle together on the menu. Each night's selections mix staple dishes—game hen cooked under a brick, tagliatelle Bolognese—and creations like Dungeness crab with tarragon oil and dragon fruit. The wine list showcases several excellent choices from across California and Italy, but the real strength comes from its collection of northern Italian bottles.

3665 Sacramento St., San Francisco, CA, 94118, USA
415-921–3200
Known For
  • Fantastic pastas
  • Chocolate oblivion cake
  • Barolo and Barbaresco wine choices
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. No lunch Tues. and Wed.

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Souvla

$ | Hayes Valley

Join the lines, get ready to Instagram, and enjoy the superb Cali-Greek pita sandwiches and salads at the flagship of this fast-casual (or self-described "fast-fine") concept. The menu keeps it simple with four proteins (roasted white sweet potato or a trio of spit-roasted meats), but the secret to the magic is how each protein is pre-partnered with captivating sauces and fresh garnishes, turning a simple-sounding white sweet potato sandwich into a stellar meal. If you want to try all four proteins at all five locations, then plan a trip around town to the counterpart Souvla locations in the Marina, NoPa (North of the Panhandle), the Mission, and Dogpatch.

517 Hayes St., San Francisco, CA, 94102, USA
415-400–5458
Known For
  • Lamb leg with harissa-spiked yogurt
  • Greek frozen yogurt with baklava crumbles
  • Prime location for picking up a picnic for Patricia's Green or Alamo Square Park
Restaurant Details
Reservations not accepted

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Spruce

$$$$ | Pacific Heights

This elegant restaurant caters to an older crowd who sink happily into its oversized faux-ostrich leather chairs. The tasting menu is equally refined, with ingredients often sourced from the restaurant's farm south of the city and charcuterie made in-house; celeriac velouté with brandied-chestnut mousseline and salmon with horseradish soubise reflect the contemporary Californian menu's elegant French leanings. Excellent, artistic desserts are some of the most spectacular ways to end a meal in the city. The adjacent takeaway counter serves cookies, a popular English-muffin burger, and coffee drinks.

3640 Sacramento St., San Francisco, CA, 94118, USA
415-931–5100
Known For
  • Beloved burger on an English-muffin bun
  • Giant chocolate chip cookies
  • Expensive Napa Valley and French wines
Restaurant Details
Reservations essential

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Tacko

$ | Cow Hollow

Tacos and lobster rolls aren't a standard duo, but they're the staples of the menu at this fast-casual favorite a block downhill from Union Street. The connection is Nantucket (ACK is Nantucket's airport code), as the owner grew up in New England and honors the Massachusetts summer destination in this eatery with an East Coast yacht club vibe.

3115 Fillmore St., San Francisco, CA, 94123, USA
415-796–3534
Known For
  • Fish tacos "Nick's Way" with jack cheese and both a crispy corn and a soft flour tortilla
  • California-style burrito with fries inside
  • Allagash White on draft

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Tacolicious

$ | Marina

Tacos and tequila draw a young and energetic crowd to this perennial hot spot. Tables with big groups or couples out on casual date nights are topped with chips and guacamole and laden with platters of tortillas bursting with carnitas (shredded pork) or spicy shrimp. If you don't want to speak in a raised voice, this is not the restaurant for you, unless you land one of the few outside tables.

2250 Chestnut St., San Francisco, CA, 94123, USA
Known For
  • Baja-style Pacific cod tacos
  • Chupitos (easy-drinking tequila mixed with fruit shots)
  • Festive vibe

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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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