17 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.

Arsicault

$ | Civic Center Fodor's Choice

This green and white, high-ceilinged space offers what some claim are the best croissants—not only outside France, but in the world. You simply can't go wrong with anything on the menu. Try for the almond croissant or anything with berries, and enjoy it in-store or to go. The original location thrives in the Inner Richmond ( 397 Arguello Blvd.).

87 McAllister St., San Francisco, CA, 94102, USA
415-926–5155
Known For
  • Enthusiastic following
  • Exquisite croissants
  • Specials run out quickly

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Arsicault

$ | Richmond Fodor's Choice

The search for the best, flakiest croissant in San Francisco ends at this tiny French bakery off Clement Street. Other popular items include an assortment of scones, cookies, and kouign-amann (a Breton pastry); coffee and tea complete your treat. Lines may be long but move fast and are well worth the wait.

397 Arguello Blvd., San Francisco, CA, 94118, USA
Known For
  • Best croissants in the city
  • Long lines
  • Unassuming, takeout-only storefront

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Devil's Teeth Baking Company

$ | Sunset Fodor's Choice

Folks line up on weekends for the amazing breakfast sandwiches here: fluffy eggs, thick bacon, pepper jack, avocado, and lemon-garlic aioli on a melt-in-your-mouth buttermilk biscuit. Made-to-order beignets are another favorite. Lunch options include chicken curry salad sandwiches, BLTs, and a seasonal soup of the day. Browse the bakery's selection of used books from local favorite Green Apple while you wait, and if you can't get a spot among the limited sidewalk seating, the beach is close by. A second location in the Outer Richmond ( 3619 Balboa St.) has the same crowd and delectable menu, but parking is much easier here.

Recommended Fodor's Video

The Mill

$ | Western Addition Fodor's Choice

“Four-dollar toast” might not sound like a lot these days, but it's a phrase used around San Francisco referring to gentrification—and it was inspired by this sun-drenched, Wi-Fi-less café. At this project between one of the city’s leading bakers, Josey Baker, and the Mission’s Four Barrel Coffee, toasts---starting at $7 these days---slathered with jam or spreads are the specialty, though pastries and whole loaves are tempting as well.

Tartine Bakery

$ Fodor's Choice

Chad Robertson is America’s first modern cult baker, and this tiny Mission District outpost (along with the larger Tartine Manufactory on the eastern side of the neighborhood) is where you'll find his famed loaves of tangy country bread and beloved pastries like croissants and morning buns. You'll also find near-constant lines out the door; they're longest in the morning when locals (and plenty of tourists) need a pastry punch to start the day, and later in the afternoon when the famed loaves emerge freshly baked.

Arizmendi Bakery

$ | Sunset

A Bay Area worker-owned cooperative, this bakery lures passersby with liberal slogans and baked goodies displayed in its large storefront window. The menu changes daily, offering different types of bread, sweet treats like scones, and pizza. Plop down $28 for a whole thin-crust pizza and enjoy it in the sidewalk parklet for a perfect beginning (or end) to a Golden Gate Park excursion.

1331 9th Ave, San Francisco, CA, 94122, USA
415-566–3117
Known For
  • One amazing pizza per day, always vegetarian
  • Enthusiastic local following
  • Tough parking
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No dinner

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b Patisserie

$ | Pacific Heights

Your search for the perfect kouign-amann (a traditional glazed, butter-enriched Breton pastry made of croissant dough) ends in this buzzy café from baking wizard Belinda Leong.

2821 California St., San Francisco, CA, 94115, USA
415-440–1700
Known For
  • Impeccable kouign-amann
  • Chocolate banana almond croissant
  • Dedication to seasonal offerings
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. No dinner

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Bob's Donuts

$

This legendary 24-hour doughnut shop has been a neighborhood anchor since the 1960s. The homemade doughnuts, whether an apple fritter or classic raised maple, are always excellent, at 10 am or 10 pm. If you're particularly ambitious and hungry, give "Bob's Challenge" a go; if you eat one truly giant doughnut in three minutes, you get a T-shirt and induction in Bob's Hall of Fame.  After more than 70 years, Bob's is scheduled to move across the street to 1720 Polk Street at the end of 2025. 

1621 Polk St., CA, 94109, USA
415-776–3141
Known For
  • Cake crumb doughnut
  • Bob's Challenge for devoted doughnut lovers
  • Timeless, low-key atmosphere

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Breadbelly

$ | Richmond

Creative, Asian-inspired takes on homey pastries made with elevated ingredients such as bee pollen and Maldon sea salt (with prices to match) draw enthusiastic crowds to this small storefront. The Kaya Toast—bright green coconut-pandan jam on the café's signature milk bread—is a must try. Several sandwiches round out the limited menu, including an egg salad with kabocha squash tempura, yuzu shichimi togarashi (Japanese seven spice), and cucumber pickle on light-as-a-cloud pandesal (a Filipino roll). Creativity extends to the short drink menu, which includes egg coffee and a substantial black sesame cappuccino. A few outdoor tables are available, but otherwise it's takeout only.

1408 Clement St., San Francisco, CA, 94118, USA
415-349–0969
Known For
  • Bright green, Instagrammable Kaya Toast
  • Long lines
  • Interesting ingredients in every item
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. No dinner

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Dynamo Donut & Coffee

$ | Marina

The tiny kiosk on the Marina's yacht harbor is the perfect spot to grab a pick-me-up before a stroll to the Palace of Fine Arts or along the beach. The doughnuts by a former Foreign Cinema pastry chef are universally terrific, from the vanilla bean standby to chocolate star anise, and there's locally roasted coffee for an extra pre-hike jolt.

110 Yacht Rd., San Francisco, CA, 94123, USA
415-920–1978
Known For
  • Maple-bacon-apple doughnut
  • Doughnut flavors specific to each month
  • Vegan doughnut options
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues.

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Eastern Bakery

$ | Chinatown

Claiming to be Chinatown's oldest bakery, this packed space is a must-stop, with the goods to back up its rep. Try the moon cakes and egg custard tarts. Cash only.

720 Grant St., San Francisco, CA, USA
Known For
  • Addictive coffee crunch cake topped with toffee pieces
  • Moon cakes and flaky dan tat (egg tarts)
  • Chinatown's oldest bakery, opened in 1924

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Jina Bakes

$

Come to the Japan Center early to pick up Jina's innovative French-Korean pastries, savory like the kalbijjim short rib croissant or slightly sweet like the mochi-filled injeolmi croissant dusted with soybean flour. The bakery's popular cream puffs are only available Friday to Sunday, and it's strictly takeout every day.

1581 Webster St., San Francisco, CA, 94115, USA
Known For
  • Spicy kalbijjim croissant
  • Extra honeycomb toffee latte
  • Long lines
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. No dinner

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Liguria Bakery

$

The Soracco family has been baking Liguria's focaccia genovese for more than a century, and their fresh-baked Italian flatbreads (such as plain, rosemary, and tomato slathered with green onions, and on Saturday, pesto) are the city's best. Bring cash and arrive before noon: when the focaccia is gone, the bakery closes.

1700 Stockton St., San Francisco, CA, 94133, USA
Known For
  • The best focaccia in town
  • A San Francisco time capsule
  • Selling out daily
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon.

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Loquat

$ | Hayes Valley

This charming bakery, done in pinks and pressed tin, features treats by Tartine Bakery alum Kristina Costa that reflect the Jewish diaspora. With tempting cakes lining the marble counter and display cases full of tarts, cookies, babka, and other pastries, you'll be hard-pressed to get away without trying more than one. The Four Barrel coffee is excellent, and the line moves quickly, so don't be discouraged if it stretches out the door.

198 Gough St., San Francisco, CA, 94102, USA
415-994–6594
Known For
  • To-die-for cinnamon date sugar babka
  • Savory bourekas, great for picnics
  • Long lines
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. No dinner

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Neighbor Bakehouse

$ | Dogpatch

Some of the city's flakiest and most impeccably baked croissants, pastries, and other treats draw big crowds every morning. It's walk-up only, so plan on enjoying your tarts, bostocks, sourdough loaves, and coffee elsewhere if one of the few picnic tables outside are full. Many of the pastries and espresso drinks by Paper Son Coffee (a pop-up turned permanent part of the bakery experience) have a unique spice or flavor from Asian cuisines, like a bubbly coffee soda with guava foam or a char siu (BBQ pork)-filled croissant.

2343 3rd St., San Francisco, CA, 94107, USA
415-814--2544
Known For
  • Ube twice-baked croissant
  • Unique savory pastries like an everything bagel–inspired croissant
  • Long lines at early hours
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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Stella Pastry & Cafe

$

For a quarter so rich in Italian history, North Beach sadly lacks authentic Italian dolce (sweet) offerings; indeed, this lone sweets bakery is it. Stella has been around since 1942 and has since changed hands from the original owners but still sticks to offering an array of Italian-American-style biscotti, tiramisu, and cannoli with creamy, cloyingly sweet predilections. The bakery stays open delightfully late.

Victoria Pastry Company

$

In business since the early 1900s and a throwback to the North Beach of old, this bakery has display cases full of Italian pastries (although most hard-core Italian food experts would disapprove of them), traditional holiday cookies, and buttercream-based cakes.

700 Filbert St., San Francisco, CA, 94133, USA
415-781–2015
Known For
  • Saint Honore, chocolate buttercream cake on a puff pastry base (which is actually French)
  • Baking wedding cakes for generations of San Francisco families
  • Serving reliably good sweets for more than 100 years

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