8 Best Restaurants in The Bay Area, California

Background Illustration for Restaurants

The Bay Area is home to popular, innovative restaurants such as Chez Panisse in Berkeley and Commis in Oakland—for which reservations must be made well in advance. Expect an emphasis on locally grown produce, hormone-free meats, and California wines. Many Marin cafés don't serve dinner, and dinner service ends on the early side. (No 10 pm reservations in that neck of the woods.)

Adega

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

Previously San Jose’s only Michelin-starred restaurant (it had one prior to closing in 2023, only to then reopen in the same space a year later) and the most ambitious destination for Portuguese-influenced cuisine in the Bay Area is this fantastic tasting menu-only spot. At around seven courses with a few extra bites, each dinner weave together meat and seafood plates, where a delicate squid salad comes with a warm cilantro sauce, before leading to a slow-roasted suckling pig belly with sweet potato puree and collard green puree. Each plate is meticulously composed and presented. Adega also has two terrific casual offshoots in San Jose for pastries (Pastelaria Adega) and casual Portuguese cuisine (Petiscos Adega).

1614 Alum Rock Ave., San Jose, CA, 95116, USA
408-926–9075
Known For
  • High-level fine dining in a city that isn't known for it
  • Enormous selection of Portuguese wines
  • Intimate, refined setting with several unique artistic touches
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. No lunch
Reservations essential

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The Marshall Store

$$ Fodor's Choice

It's oyster bliss at this very friendly daytime restaurant along Tomales Bay. There are a few indoor seats, but the in-demand spots are on the outside deck, where heaters keep guests somewhat warm even on the chilliest days. It's the restaurant wing of the Tomales Bay Oyster Company, so every table has one or more kind of oyster preparation (grilled, smoked, or raw). House-smoked fish and meats as plates or sandwiches round out the menu since it's probably best not to only eat oysters for lunch.

19225 Hwy. 1, Point Reyes Station, CA, 94940, USA
415-246–9306
Known For
  • Pristine Pacific Preston Point oysters
  • Buffalo milk soft-serve for dessert
  • Local rock cod tacos
Restaurant Details
No dinner
No reservations

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Sushi Ran

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

Sushi aficionados swear that this tiny, stylish restaurant is the Bay Area's finest option for raw fish, but don't overlook the excellent cooked dishes that are an impeccable mix of California seasons, Japanese ingredients and French techniques. Book in advance or expect a wait, which you can soften by sipping one of the bar's many by-the-glass sakes from the encyclopedic list. Yoshi Tome's restaurant is a Bay Area institution and it's easy to see why.

107 Caledonia St., Sausalito, CA, 94965, USA
415-332–3620
Known For
  • Glorious pristine sushi and sashimi preparations
  • Miso-glazed black cod
  • Outstanding sake and wine program
Restaurant Details
No lunch Mon.–Thurs.
Reservations essential

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Recommended Fodor's Video

The Village Pub

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

This Woodside institution actually is a Michelin-starred fine-dining destination; the only similarity with an actual pub is that the bar has its own casual menu (the main dining room is a three-course prix-fixe experience with multiple choices per each course) and is frequently a gathering place for well-heeled regulars. The suave dining room with red velvet chairs and booths is a beautiful backdrop for intricate dishes that often feature produce from the nearby organic SMIP Ranch. It's the flagship restaurant for a local group that includes the acclaimed Spruce in San Francisco.

The Bungalow Kitchen

$$$$

Tiburon's dining scene is mostly low-key and casual—except for celebrity chef Michael Mina and partner Brent Bolthouse's hip restaurant right next to the ferry dock. It's certainly a scene and a place to dress up, yet it's also a compelling destination for terrific eats that don't adhere to many rules or cuisines other than high-quality ingredients. There's phyllo-crusted petrale sole and King crab bucatini, and then there's also Mina's signature lobster potpie and a popular burger with onion jam. It's a restaurant that's hard not to love and have fun at.

5 Main St., Tiburon, CA, 94920, USA
415-366–4088
Known For
  • Michael Mina's famous tuna tartare preparation
  • Festive, prix-fixe weekend brunch with outstanding Bloody Marys
  • Secret (and excellent) sushi bar within restaurant that isn't actually a secret
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No lunch weekdays

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Flea Street

$$$

Restaurants in Berkeley and San Francisco tend to get most of the credit for launching the local ingredient–focused farm-to-table California cuisine movement in the 1970s and 1980s. However, chef Jesse Cool played an enormous role in that as well when she opened this venerable restaurant in 1980. It’s a formal restaurant that also manages to be relaxed, where the menu changes frequently and always mentions many acclaimed Bay Area farms, ranches, and gardens. Pasta, gnocchi and risotto (when they're on the menu) are a big strength for the restaurant, but the most excitement tends to come in the first course section, which includes vegetable preparations and a few compelling local seafood creations. Make sure to save room for the always satisfying, unfussy desserts. 

3607 Alameda de las Pulgas, Menlo Park, CA, USA
650-854–1226
Known For
  • Beet and Harley Farm goat cheese stack
  • Grass-fed slow-braised short ribs
  • Strong local-centric wine list
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch

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Horn Barbecue

$ | Downtown

It's hard to keep track of how many awards pitmaster Matt Horn has won at this point. After roving around the Bay Area for years as a pop-up with his smoker "Lucille," Horn set up shop permanently in West Oakland, then was forced to move to Downtown Oakland because of a fire in 2023. Wherever he goes, long lines of fans follow. And for good reason—this is undoubtedly some of the greatest Texas-inspired barbecue on the West Coast. Of course, brisket is the signature here, but almost everyone tries multiple kinds of meats and sides. Make sure to come early and preferably on a weekday.

464 8th St., Oakland, CA, 94607, USA
510-225–6101
Known For
  • Tender, irresistible smoked meats and sausages
  • Best-in-class banana pudding
  • Must-order pit beans on the side
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues.

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Selby's

$$$$

It’s a trip back in time at this elegant retro sibling to the Village Pub. Dishes are grand and elaborate, often with luxurious flourishes, yet deeply rooted in the seasonal focus that is the hallmark of California cuisine. It’s a delicious tie between the sensational black label truffle burger at the bar and the honey-lacquered duck breast in the dining room for what is considered the signature dish here. The main dining room serves a three-course menu with several choices in each category; the bar menu is à la carte. The handsome mid-century modern design is worth a trip alone with impeccable details like perfectly smooth white tablecloths, miniature lamps on tables, a roaring fireplace, and a dramatic arched bar backdrop in the lounge.