200 Best Restaurants in New York City, New York

Background Illustration for Restaurants

Ready to take a bite out of New York? Hope you've come hungry. In a city where creativity is expressed in innumerable ways, the food scene takes center stage, with literally thousands of chances to taste what Gotham is all about. Whether lining up at street stands, gobbling down legendary deli and diner grub, or chasing a coveted reservation at the latest celebrity-chef venue, New Yorkers are a demanding yet appreciative audience.

Every neighborhood offers temptations high, low, and in between, meaning there's truly something for every taste, whim, and budget. No matter how you approach dining out here, it's hard to go wrong. Planning a day of shopping among the glittering flagship boutiques along 5th and Madison Avenues? Stop into one of the Upper East Side's storied restaurants for a repast among the "ladies who lunch." Clubbing in the Meatpacking District? Tuck into a meal at eateries as trendy as their patrons. Craving authentic ethnic? From food trucks to hidden joints, there are almost more choices than there are appetites. Recent years have also seen entire food categories, from ramen to meatballs to mac 'n' cheese, riffed upon and fetishized, and at many restaurants you find an almost religious reverence for seasonal, locally sourced cuisine.

And don't forget—New York is still home to more celebrity chefs than any other city. Your chances of running into your favorite cookbook author, Food Network celeb, or paparazzi-friendly chef are high, adding even more star wattage to a restaurant scene with an already through-the-roof glamour quotient. Newfound economic realities, however, have revived appreciation for value, meaning you can tap into wallet-friendly choices at every level of the food chain. Rest assured, this city does its part to satisfy your appetite. Ready, set, eat.

Bittersweet

$ | Fort Greene
Tight on space but long on taste, this slim café is named for its two primary menu categories: coffee and desserts. Baristas know most customers both by sight and by their La Colombe coffee beverage of choice. Pair yours with pastries from the best of the local bakeries or opt for something savory like a salad or a sandwich on Balthazar bread.

Black Seed Bagels

$ | NoLIta

New York is known for bagels, which tend to be doughy and delicious, but the Montreal-style bagels served here have a denser, sweeter dough, with “toppings” (sesame, poppy seed, salt, everything) that are more generous than on Big Apple versions. The all-day menu includes sandwiches with cream cheese, smoked salmon, whitefish salad, or baked eggs, with additional lunch choices like a BLT, roast beef with horseradish cream cheese, and a tuna melt.

Breads Bakery

$ | Union Square

Drop in for the famously decadent babka (a yeast bread with layers of chocolate or cinnamon), rugelach (flaky, crescent-shape cookies), or any of the other baked goods, but stay for a coffee and a light meal. The front counter is for breads, cakes, and cookies; the back counter turns out sandwiches, quiches, and salads.

Recommended Fodor's Video

Bridge Coffee Shop

$ | DUMBO
This homespun Latin American diner is the antidote to DUMBO's stilettoed galleristas and hipper-than-thou start-up scene. Neighborhood denizens, Latino expats, and the occasional off-duty mail carrier convene for hearty plates of pernil (roast pork), maduros (sweet plantains), and exceptional medianoche sandwiches.
73 Bridge St., Brooklyn, NY, 11201, USA
718-797--0825
Known For
  • Latin American favorites
  • Casual, no-frills atmosphere
  • Affordable prices

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Brooklyn Bridge Park Food Stands

$ | DUMBO
Several of Manhattan's and Brooklyn's top restaurants—including the Ace Hotel's No. 7 Sub and the Brooklyn Ice Cream Factory—have outposts along the waterfront just north of Pier 1 in Brooklyn Bridge Park. Across the street, a dine-in branch of Danny Meyer's global juggernaut Shake Shack has an entrance on Old Fulton Street.
Water St., Brooklyn, NY, 11201, USA
Known For
  • Ice cream
  • Burgers
  • Casual outdoor dining

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Brooklyn Commune

$
House-baked pastries and breakfast are served every day of the week at this sunshine-filled eatery. Delicious sandwiches and a variety of tasty vegetarian and vegan options make up the rest of the menu offerings. Dinner isn't served, but weekend brunch is very popular.

Brooklyn Farmacy

$ | Carroll Gardens

Half the fun of this 1920s-style soda fountain is the setting, with swirl-top stools and vintage apothecary drawers and penny-tile floors from the long-closed Longos Pharmacy. The other is a dream menu for sweet tooths. Nostalgia comes in classic Brooklyn egg creams and sparkling sodas, and novelty lands in supersize sundaes like Mr. Potato Head (with potato chips), Breakfast in Bed (with candied bacon) and Affugazi Affogato (with espresso).

513 Henry St., Brooklyn, NY, 11231, USA
718-522–6260
Known For
  • Classic Brooklyn desserts
  • Huge sundaes
  • A vintage feel, courtesy of history and a reality TV show transformation
Restaurant Details
Reservations not accepted

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Brooklyn Kolache

$ | Greenwich Village

If the Czech Republic and Texas had an edible baby and that baby were born in Brooklyn, it would taste a lot like the bite-sized sweet and savory cakes served at this diminutive shop. Kolaches were brought to Texas by Czech immigrants and have been a staple of Lone Star State cuisine ever since. Grab a few, plus a coffee, and enjoy them in nearby Washington Square Park or Father Demo Square. 

185 Bleecker St., New York, NY, 10012, USA
646-559–2989
Known For
  • Delicious kolaches
  • Good coffee
  • Inexpensive

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Brooklyn Kolache Co

$
Sure, doughnuts are all the rage, but for something a little different, head to this cozy bakery-café near Pratt Institute for the renowned Czech (via Texas; the owner is from Austin) kolaches, pillowy pastries filled with sweet and savory ingredients like lemon curd, strawberry and sweet cheese, or sausage and cheese. There can be more than 20 varieties to choose from at any one time. Enjoy one (or several) with a fresh raspberry-lime rickey in the café's sunny back garden, or get a few to go.

burger joint New York

$ | Midtown West

This one-of-a-kind, college-style burger bar, clad in wood paneling and looking like a rec room straight out of Happy Days, is tucked away in the lobby of the Thompson Central Park luxury hotel. Look for a neon burger marking entry into this delicious hideaway, up some stairs and behind a curtain. Inside you can find semi-surly, all-business cooks dispensing fresh shakes, crispy fries, and paper-wrapped cheeseburgers. These burgers are straightforward, cheap, and delicious—just be ready to order once you're at the counter, or they'll send you back to the start of the line. (There are two more locations, one inside Moynihan Train Hall, the other in Brooklyn's Industry City.)

119 W. 56th St., New York, NY, 10019, USA
212-708–7414
Known For
  • Not-so-secret spot for good-value burgers
  • Come at off-hours to beat the long lines
  • Tasty beef and plant-based burgers

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C. Di Palo Wine Bar

$ | Little Italy

Di Palo's has been an integral part of Little Italy since Savino Di Palo opened a small shop making fresh mozzarella and ricotta in 1910. That store grew into Di Palo's Fine Foods on Grand Street, which sells all manner of gourmet Italian products, and now Savino's great grandchildren have opened this spacious, though rather nondescript wine bar, serving those excellent products paired with lovingly selected Italian wines.

151 Mott St., New York, NY, 10013, USA
212-226–1033
Known For
  • Excellent wine
  • Well-composed plates of cheeses, cured meats, and olives
  • Nontouristy vibe
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.–Wed. No lunch

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Café de Colombia Bakery

$ | Jackson Heights

With daily almuerzo (lunch) specials on the menu, as well as an assortment of fresh pastries, cakes, and savory baked goods, this classic panaderia has a homey vibe with festive, brightly lit decor on the ceilings and Spanish guitar playing in the background. Try the buñuelos (cheese fritters), freshly squeezed juices, or the decadent flan with a cup of Colombian coffee.

Café Frederick

$ | Harlem
If you want to kick back in a comfortable environment with lots of natural light, try this laid-back neighborhood hangout. Its beans are sourced from the Brooklyn Roasting Company (one of the city's finest coffee emporiums), and, in addition to quality java, its menu features paninis, savory crepes, and other casual fare, as well as several wines by the glass and beers in the bottle.

Café Grumpy

$ | Greenpoint
Made famous by the HBO television show Girls—the character Ray works here—this indie coffee shop roasts its beans in the roastery next door and sends them to its other cafés around the city. Café Grumpy serves all the usual drip coffee and espresso drinks plus pastries, with gluten-free options. This location, opened in 2005, was the first.
193 Meserole Ave., Brooklyn, NY, 11222, USA
718-349–7623
Known For
  • Artisanal coffee
  • Appearing on HBO's Girls
  • Freelancer-friendly

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Café Madeleine

$
In addition to excellent coffee, tea, and even kombucha (on tap), this bustling café near the Q train serves local farm-fresh and homemade fare from eggs and biscuits to veggie and poke bowls. Sandwiches come piled high with organic ingredients such as fresh avocado, leafy greens, and the "world's best" pastrami. You'll want to try all 10 grilled cheeses, be it classic cheddar, fig and apple, or another delectable variation. Though a tad cramped, the café's more than 30 tables are spread out in two rooms.

Café Pedlar

$ | Cobble Hill
The folks behind Frankie's 457 and Prime Meats in Carroll Gardens operate this bustling café whose limited seating only heightens its cachet. The expert staffers pull espresso drinks and pour-overs made with the latest and greatest roasts from nearby Stumptown. If you want to try something different, look for the output of "guest roasters" like Mad Cap from Grand Rapids, Michigan, or Anchored Coffee of Dartmouth, Nova Scotia. At the pastry counter you can pick up cookies, croissants, quiches, or the toothsome soft pretzels.
210 Court St., Brooklyn, NY, 11201, USA
718-855–7129
Known For
  • Expert baristas
  • Guest roasters
  • Pastries

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Café Tibet

$
This brightly painted Tibetan restaurant perched above the subway tracks next to the Cortelyou Road station draws a crowd. The budget- and vegetarian-friendly menu is strong on homemade traditional Himalayan dishes like momos (dumplings), curries, tsam-thuk (barley soup), baklap (patties of minced beef, garlic, and onion), and butter tea, which is salty and usually an acquired taste. Order the thali platter for a complete meal with daal (lentil soup), mustard greens, salad, and papadum flatbread. With only seven tables, there’s often a wait.
1510 Cortelyou Rd., Brooklyn, NY, 11226, USA
718-941–2725
Known For
  • Homemade Tibetan dishes
  • Vegetarian options
  • Compact, friendly space

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Caffè Panna

$ | Gramercy

An updated ice-cream parlor that combines the best of American and Italian coffee and ice cream seems like a revelation: what took so long to come up with this idea? This is dessert adultified, but the kids will be happy, too.

77 Irving Pl., New York, NY, 10003, USA
917-475–1162
Known For
  • Supercreative flavors and collaborations with local restaurants
  • Decadent but not over-the-top
  • Part of the Danny Meyer restaurant family
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues.

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Caffe Roma

$ | Little Italy

New York’s oldest Italian caffè, open since 1891, pulls espresso and serves homemade gelato, cannoli, and Sicilian pignoli cookies, in a quaint space with pressed-tin ceilings, tiled floors, and heart-shape chairs.

385 Broome St., New York, NY, 10013, USA
212-226–8413
Known For
  • Homemade gelato
  • Pressed-tin ceilings
  • Cookies with soft pine nuts
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. and Wed.

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Carnitas Ramirez

$ | East Village

After the incredible success of their taqueria in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, Giovanni Cervantes and Tania Apolinar's second act is this pork-centric taco spot that has been a huge hit since the day it opened in June 2024. If you like eating other parts of the pig, you'll be in porcine heaven here as lard-laden tortillas are stuffed with brain, belly, skin, ear, snout, stomach, butt, tongue, tail, uterus, and cheek. It's a choose-your-own pig offal adventure and it's delicious.

210 E. 3rd St., New York, NY, 10009, USA
Known For
  • An awful lot of offal
  • Quick service
  • Longish lines at prime time

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Cauldron Chicken

$ | Greenwich Village

This fast-casual spot serves up possibly the best chicken on the planet. Servers hand you plastic gloves with your food because the chicken is so fall-off-the-bone tender and juicy that using anything but your hands to eat it is an exercise in futility. The secret is that they marinate the whole chicken in in a secret mixture of Chinese spices for hours and then braise the bird for an eternity. There are long list of sides, including scallion pancakes, pan-fried dumplings, and onion rings. 

190 Bleecker St., New York, NY, 10012, USA
646-869–8888
Known For
  • Fall-off-the-bone chicken
  • Very affordable combo deals
  • Sometimes long lines to get in

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The Chocolate Room

$ | Park Slope
Chocolate from Belgium and France fills the molten, moist, frosty, frothy, and gooey desserts made at this cozy, sit-down dessert café founded by a Park Slope couple in 2005. The main event is dessert—warm chocolate chip almond cake, flourless chocolate cake with raspberry framboise, a black chocolate stout float, or any of the seasonal or weekend-only specials. You can also buy house-made bonbons and artisanal bars from Brooklyn chocolatiers.

Choice Market

$
If you're planning a picnic at the Pratt Institute Sculpture Park or looking for a low-key meal, this take-out counter and café will do you right. Prepared salads, sandwiches, and excellent pastries are pricier than your average corner deli, but then again, most bodegas don't have farro salad, salmon burgers, or pear brûlée cheesecake on the menu. Service can be slow.

Cinco de Mayo

$
Colorful textiles adorn the windows of this tiny taquería that serves a sizable, affordable menu of authentic dishes. The “super” tacos (choice of meat with lettuce, cheese, sour cream, pico de gallo, and guacamole), mole entrées, quesadillas, and hearty chicken, goat, and pozole (hominy) soups go well with the refreshing tamarind juice or horchata (a rice-milk drink with cinnamon)—both house-made. With fewer than 10 tables it can get crowded on weekends. Sidewalk seating is available in warm weather.
1202 Cortelyou Rd., Brooklyn, NY, 11218, USA
718-693–1022
Known For
  • Authentic Mexican dishes
  • Homemade juices
  • Affordable neighborhood favorite

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Coffee Mob

$
Attentive baristas expertly prepare luscious lattes and single-origin cold-brewed coffee in this stylistically minimal corner coffee shop. Owner Buck Berk personally travels to farms around the world to find Coffee Mob's beans, which are roasted at Brooklyn's Pulley Collective. Enjoy your coffee with pastries or a bagel and feel revived with both caffeine and the shop's abundant natural light.
1514 Newkirk Ave., Brooklyn, NY, 11226, USA
Known For
  • Single-origin coffee
  • Attentive baristas
  • Natural light in shop

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Colson Patisserie

$ | Park Slope
Expertly baked pastries like croissants, tarts, turnovers, macaroons, and financiers are the darling showpieces at this Belgian-inspired bakery, though the soups, salads, and sandwiches are also delicious. There are tiny self-service tables and, in good weather, sidewalk seats. It closes at 7.
374 9th St., Brooklyn, NY, 11215, USA
718-965--6400
Known For
  • Being Bill De Blasio's favorite coffee spot
  • Tight seating at peak weekend hours

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Court Street Pastry Shop

$ | Cobble Hill
A celebrated remnant of Cobble Hill's Italian-American past, this family-owned bakery delivers classics to savor: cannoli, pies, spumoni, custard ices, exquisitely layered Neapolitan-style sfogliatelle,and rainbow cookies by the pound. The vintage sign alone may be reason to visit, but even better is the intoxicatingly delicious interior, where you can discover everything from seasonal pastries to sugar-free cookies.
298 Court St., Brooklyn, NY, 11201, USA
718-875–4820
Known For
  • Italian pastries
  • Cookies by the pound
  • Neighborhood classic
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.

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Damascus Bread & Pastry Shop

$ | Brooklyn Heights
Named for the founder's childhood home in Syria, this family-run bakery and market has been a mainstay of the neighborhood's Middle Eastern community since 1930. Specialties include freshly baked pita, vegetable and meat pies, and baklava. For a quick take-away lunch, order a falafel sandwich, some hummus and pita, or a lighter-than-air spinach pie.

David's Brisket House Deli

$
This storefront deli doesn't look like much, but several things make it a standout. One is the pastrami, available as a sandwich or with eggs for breakfast; another is the fact that you can order a "small" sandwich—definitely enough for average appetites—rather than the typical oversize versions that you get at places like Katz's. And then there's the fact that this local institution really represents the neighborhood's diversity: it was originally owned by Jewish immigrants from Yemen and Russia but was then passed on to a Muslim partner, whose family now runs it. (Note that the shop is closed Friday from noon to 2 for prayer service.)
533 Nostrand Ave., Brooklyn, NY, 11216, USA
718-789–1155
Known For
  • Generously sized Jewish deli sandwiches
  • Smoked brisket and pastrami with cult-following status
  • Pastrami and brisket combo
Restaurant Details
Closed midday Fri.

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Defonte's

$ | Red Hook
The outrageously good heroes at Defonte's Sandwich Shop, overstuffed with cured meats, mozzarella, chicken parm, or fried eggplant, have made this storefront a Brooklyn institution. And after almost a century in business, they've certainly had time to perfect their recipes. The shop is delightfully old-school, with framed newspaper clippings and head shots of Sinatra and other celebrities on the walls. Seating is limited.
379 Columbia St., Brooklyn, NY, 11231, USA
718-625--8052
Known For
  • Old-school atmosphere
  • Awesome sandwiches
  • Just a few seats
Restaurant Details
No dinner, closed Sun.

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