973 Best Restaurants in New York, USA

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

The Bonnefont

$$ | Washington Heights Fodor's Choice

Set in a gorgeous restored fieldstone cottage in Fort Tryon Park, just minutes from The Met Cloisters (the restaurant takes its name from the medieval cloister and herb garden here), this is a welcome addition to one of upper Manhattan's most beautiful parks. It offers French à la Northern California cuisine, a curated wine list, a contemporary but character-filled space with 14-foot ceilings, crisp white tablecloths, and a leafy outdoor terrace to enjoy a leisurely weekend brunch while you listen to the cacophony of birdsong around you. Dinner highlights include the mussels in tarragon white wine broth with a crusty baguette and the grilled whole trout. In summer, grab a delicious homemade ice cream to stroll the park. Live music (or a bartender taking requests for record selections), candlelight, and excellent service add to the specialness of this little gem in the woods.

1 Margaret Corbin Dr., New York, NY, 10040, USA
212-740–2939
Known For
  • Proximity to the Met Cloisters
  • Leisurely patio brunch
  • Special setting
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and weekdays in winter

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Boqueria

$$ | Flatiron District Fodor's Choice

Named for the bustling food market in Barcelona, Boqueria was part of the city's first wave of tapas restaurants when it opened back in 2006 and its popularity has never waned, thanks to the seasonal, creative, and delicious food. There are leather banquettes lining the main room and a few seats at the bar, but if you want to make friends, opt for the communal table running down the center of the dining room. This original spot in the Flatiron District is so popular it's spawned offshoots around New York City, as well as in Nashville, DC, Boston, and Chicago.

Brancaccio's Food Shop

$ Fodor's Choice
In need of picnic supplies, lunch, or a take-home meal? Owner Joe Brancaccio has been feeding the neighborhood with his daily-changing menu of sandwiches, rotisserie chicken, and prepared pastas and vegetables since 2010, and the shop just keeps getting busier. There are also house-baked croissants (plain, chocolate, or cheese), imported Italian sodas, and hard-to-find Mexican Coca-Cola (made with cane sugar, not high-fructose corn syrup).

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Brooklyn Roasting Company

$ | DUMBO Fodor's Choice
Artfully disheveled staffers brew coffee from fair-trade and rain-forest alliance–certified beans, while local gallerists and start-up techies flirt over perfectly poured cortados and other beverages at this East River--adjacent café. The loft-style industrial space is filled with antique roasting equipment and ample seating, and also serves pastries and sandwiches.

Brown's Brewing Company

$ Fodor's Choice

The brewpub occupies a circa-1850 riverside warehouse. In warm weather, locals linger on the outdoor deck overlooking the Hudson; inside, exposed-brick walls set off local memorabilia, antiques, and old photos. A slew of beers is concocted on-site, including the smooth oatmeal stout, which won a gold medal at the World Beer Cup. The pub menu has been expanded and offers classics like burgers as well as sophisticated seafood dishes.

Bubby's Burrito Stand

$ Fodor's Choice

This popular food stand sets up in a tiny trailer on the grounds of Hardeman Orchards between late April and late September. The owner (known by her childhood nickname Bubby) serves vegetarian burritos (with or without guacamole) and quesadillas. The heated tortillas are almost bursting at the sides with black beans, salsa, lettuce, cheese, and sour cream. There are two flavorful salsas that can be added; the green tomatillo one is spicier. Soft drinks and Mexican aguas frescas can be picked out of a cooler.

194 W. Market St., Red Hook, NY, 12571, USA
Restaurant Details
No credit cards
Closed Sun. and Mon.
Reservations not accepted

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Búdin

$ | Greenpoint Fodor's Choice
Coffee aficionados head to Greenpoint for Búdin’s $10 latte—it's pricey because it's made with Danish licorice syrup, topped with licorice powder, and served on a silver tray. Come during the day for coffee by the Oslo-based roaster Tim Wendelboe, whose beans are favored by top European chefs, or after hours for wine and Nordic craft beer. The back of the shop is stocked with a rotating selection of Scandinavian-design goods .

Bunna Cafe

$$ | Bushwick Fodor's Choice

The best way to sample the diverse flavors of Ethiopian cuisine is by dining at this restaurant that transports you to Addis Ababa through its decor, music, and above all, it's selection of traditional dishes. All dishes are plant-based, including chickpea-based shiro, lentil wot, and a mushroom version of tibs (typically a stir-fry with meat and veg). It's all served with injera, a sourdough flatbread used to scoop up the various stews, with your hands. The drink menu includes traditional t'ej (honey wine), cocktails, and wine and beer from Ethiopia. The namesake bunna—Ethiopian coffee brewed with cardamom and cloves—is worth a try, too. 

1084 Flushing Ave., Brooklyn, NY, 11237, USA
347-295–2227
Known For
  • Shareable plates
  • Traditional Ethiopian coffee ceremony and teas
  • Live music events featuring Ethiopian artists
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues.

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Bustan

$$$ | Upper West Side Fodor's Choice

With a colorful, modern interior and an oasis of a patio out back, this Upper West Side gem is the pan-Mediterranean restaurant vision of owner Tuvia Feldman and executive chef Eli Buli. Bustan, which means \"garden\" or \"orchard\" in Hebrew and Arabic, churns out dishes that draw inspiration from three continents. Make sure to start with the mezes \"for the table\" and lather your house-made taboon (a flatbread) with warm hummus and spicy feta spreads. Main courses range from lamb kebabs to branzino a la plancha (grilled on a metal plate) served with za'atar labneh (seasoned Greek yogurt) to Moroccan-style vegetable couscous. Save room for the \"nemesis\" dessert, a baked chocolate mousse with salted caramel pearls and vanilla ice cream.

Cafe Luxembourg

$$$ | Upper West Side Fodor's Choice

The old soul of the Lincoln Center neighborhood seems to inhabit the tiled and mirrored walls of this lively, cramped French bistro, where West End Avenue regulars are greeted with kisses, and musicians and audience members pack the room after a concert. The bar's always hopping, and the menu includes classics like steak tartare, moules frites (mussels and fries), and lobster roll. There's also a popular weekend brunch. 

200 W. 71st St., New York, NY, 10023-4323, USA
212-877–0986
Known For
  • Quintessential UWS bistro
  • After-concert scene
  • Excellent service
Restaurant Details
Reservations essential

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Cafe Mogador

$$ | East Village Fodor's Choice

This East Village dining institution, which has been serving standout Moroccan cuisine in a date-friendly, candlelit atmosphere since 1983, still draws crowds for dinner, lunch, and brunch. Start with an order of creamy hummus to share, then dig into one of the classic couscous dishes, tajine stews, or tasty kebabs.

Cafe Regular

$ | Park Slope Fodor's Choice
A charming European atmosphere and a focus on top-quality products like La Colombe coffee, Jacques Torres hot chocolate, and Dona chai (hand-brewed in Brooklyn) make the two tiny locations in Park Slope feel like a special-occasion getaway. Snacks are few but the relatively new red banquettes make it comfy to linger longer. The petite spot at 318a 11th Street is best visited solo.
158a Berkeley Pl., Brooklyn, NY, 11217, USA
718-783--0673
Known For
  • Cold brew
  • Running out of pastries
  • Its interior wall mural
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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Café Sabarsky

$$ | Upper East Side Fodor's Choice

In the Neue Galerie, this stately coffeehouse—open for breakfast, lunch, and dinner—offers a Viennese café experience, with Eastern European-style furnishings and banquettes outfitted with fabric from 1912, daily newspapers, and cases with cakes and strudels. The menu of hearty sandwiches, goulash, sausage dishes, and traditional fare is under the direction of German-born executive chef Christopher Engel, who worked at Wallsé and Aureole, earning a Michelin star. Prix-fixe dinners are sometimes followed by a cabaret performance but note that a ticket costs $300. Museumgoers linger over coffee—it's sometimes tough to find a seat (it's easier in the more understated outpost of the café in the basement.) Breakfast is best for getting seated at Sabarsky; often with no line.

Calle Dao Bryant Park

$$ | Midtown West Fodor's Choice

Few might expect a restaurant this original, well priced, and tasty to be tucked between Bryant Park and Herald Square. But the truth is, Calle Dao is a find in this busy neighborhood. Its colorful decor and creative menus are inspired by Havana's once-thriving Chinatown, so expect a flavorful fusion of Cuban and Chinese dishes such as ropa vieja (shredded beef) noodles, crispy duck baos (steamed buns), and fantastic salads, authentic sides, and delicious stir-fries. Daily happy hours can't be beat (weekdays noon--7 pm; weekends 11 am--7 pm) for both libations and bar bites.

Casa Mono

$$ | Gramercy Fodor's Choice

Most of the delectable items on the menu at this Iberian, small-plates, corner restaurant are made for sharing, but of particular note are all things seared à la plancha (on a metal plate), including blistered peppers and garlic-kissed mushrooms. The atmosphere is always bustling but the best seats are those at the Casa Mono counter overlooking the chef's open kitchen. The perennially cramped and crowded space sends patrons to Bar Jamón, the wine-and-ham-bar annex next door, where you can pick at plates of jamón serrano while awaiting the main feature.

52 Irving Pl., New York, NY, 10003-3447, USA
212-253–2773
Known For
  • High-quality, authentic Spanish tapas
  • Hard to get a table so reserve in advance
  • Small Bar Jamón annex around the corner

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Cecchi's

$$$ | West Village Fodor's Choice

After three decades of working as a maître d' at some of the city's most upscale eateries, Michael Cecchi-Azzolina has a place of his own. His dimly lit, 120-seat eponymous restaurant exudes a sleek, classic New York vibe with green leather booths and Art Deco lighting fixtures. The kitchen produces excellent American comfort food, including a superlative two-patty burger; mushrooms stuffed with black truffles, breadcrumbs, and grana padano cheese; and sautéed calf's liver with mashed potatoes and bacon. Service, as you'd expect from a restaurant owned by a maître d', is friendly but professional. 

105 W. 13th St., New York, NY, 10011, USA
212-931–6335
Known For
  • "New York Happy Meal": a martini and fries for $25 5–6 pm every day
  • Great cocktail menu
  • Cozy, sophisticated vibe
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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The Central Park Boathouse

$$$ | Upper East Side Fodor's Choice

There are plenty of pushcarts dispensing hot dogs and sodas, but to soak up Central Park's magic in an elegant setting, head for the Boathouse overlooking the gondola lake. New Yorkers breathed a sigh of relief when this landmark treasure reopened after a year-long closure in early 2024 with a new operator, a newly renovated outdoor bar, structural improvements to connect the upper and lower outdoor dining patios, a fresh menu, and expanded nearby restrooms. Enjoy light, counter-service fare on the patio or in the adjacent inner dining area of the Express Cafe; savor a glass of wine and a cheese plate on the alfresco Dockside bar; or splurge on seafood, pastas, and fillet of beef in the more formal interior bar-restaurant. In warmer months, the deck and more formal restaurant can get crowded, so aim for a late lunch or early-evening cocktail. In colder months, there is no dinner service in the restaurant and the Dockside is closed. The boathouse is accessible on foot or via a shuttle bus that makes several stops along 5th Avenue.

Chama Mama

$$ | Chelsea Fodor's Choice

The food of the Republic of Georgia is one of the best and underrepresented cuisines of the world. Most of the excellent Georgian restaurants in New York are lodged deep into Brooklyn, but Chama Mama is a superb Manhattan option if you want to avoid a long subway ride. Start with khachapuri, the ubiquitous baked cheese bread (the boat-shape version from the region of Adjara has become the international face of Georgian cuisine) and then move to shkmeruli, a tender Cornish game hen cooked in a garlicky cream sauce. The khinkhali, broth-filled dumplings, are also excellent. There's now a second location on the Upper West Side (Amsterdam Avenue and West 78th Street).

149 W. 14th St., New York, NY, 10011, USA
646-438–9007
Known For
  • Excellent Georgian wine list
  • View of a huge tone, a traditional Georgian bread oven
  • Leafy courtyard dining space

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Charlie Bird

$$$ | SoHo Fodor's Choice
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Perpetually packed, Italian-leaning Charlie Bird is the brainchild of sommelier Robert Bohr, who was in charge of wine at vino-mad Cru, and chef Ryan Hardy, who made a name for himself at Little Nell in Aspen and has been the private chef for Jay-Z and Beyoncé (not surprisingly, the restaurant has a hip-hop theme). The menu is divided into small and large plates, vegetables, a \"raw\" section, and pasta. The Roman cacio e pepe pasta is one of the best versions this side of the Atlantic. The wine list is an exceptional tour of old-world vintages. 

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Charlie Bird

$$$ | Greenwich Village Fodor's Choice

Perpetually packed, Italian-leaning Charlie Bird is the brainchild of sommelier Robert Bohr, who was in charge of wine at vino-mad Cru, and chef Ryan Hardy, who made a name for himself at Little Nell in Aspen and has been the private chef for Jay-Z and Beyoncé (not surprisingly, the restaurant has a hip-hop theme). The menu is divided into small and large plates, vegetables, a "raw" section, and pasta. The uni-loaded duck-egg spaghetti marries surf 'n' turf in a deeply satisfying way, while the Roman pasta dish cacio e pepe is one of the best versions this side of the Atlantic. 

5 King St., New York, NY, 10012, USA
212-235–7133
Known For
  • The preferred spot of "cool kids" everywhere
  • Hip-hop on the Hi-Fi
  • Varied menu
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No lunch Tues.--Thurs.
Reservations essential

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Chavela’s

$$ | Crown Heights Fodor's Choice
Open Chavela’s wrought-iron doors and you’ll find a boisterous Mexican restaurant with a colorfully tiled bar, where diners order margaritas and micheladas by the pitcher. Pair your drink with the Plato Don (a substantial dish of steak, chicken, or veggies, plus rice, beans, guac, tortillas, pico de gallo, and queso fresco) or the especiales del día. Weekend brunch draws a crowd, so come during the week if you can, when the lunch specials are half-price and include egg dishes.
793 Franklin Ave., Brooklyn, NY, 11238, USA
718-622–3100
Known For
  • Pitchers of quality house margaritas and sangrias on draft
  • Weekday happy hour deals on tacos and drinks
  • Prix-fixe weekend brunch special is even more popular than Friday night

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Clinton St. Baking Co.

$$ | Lower East Side Fodor's Choice

At this casual retro-diner restaurant, weekend brunch brings a line down the street for what many believe to be the best blueberry pancakes in the city, if not the whole country. Lunch and dinner options include a variety of burgers, sandwiches, and salads—and you can get those pancakes at dinner, too, without as long a wait.

Colonie

$$$ | Brooklyn Heights Fodor's Choice

The key to this restaurant's success lies in its use of ultrafresh ingredients, sourced from local purveyors and presented with style in an upscale, yet casual space that honors its neighborhood's historical roots. A selection of small plates and crostini complement popular main dishes like bison steaks, bone-in pork chops, and homemade pastas. Weekend's offer popular brunch fare including shrimp and grits and \"eggs in purgatory\" (spicy tomato pomodoro).

127 Atlantic Ave., Brooklyn, NY, 11201, USA
718-855–7500
Known For
  • Weekend brunch crowds
  • Homemade pastas
  • Hearty meat dishes
Restaurant Details
No lunch weekdays

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Convivium Osteria

$$$ | Park Slope Fodor's Choice
The rustic Italian farmhouse decor, Mediterranean wines, and candlelight at this renowned neighborhood restaurant will transport you to another land even before you try the food. The menu is inspired by Italy, with hints of Spain and Portugal, and organic ingredients and naturally raised, free-range meats are used in dishes like braised rabbit or pine nut–crusted rack of lamb. Pastas and baked desserts are made in-house.
68 5th Ave., Brooklyn, NY, 11217, USA
718-857--1833
Known For
  • Romantic ambience
  • Coveted wine cellar seating
  • Antipasti selection
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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Corima

$$$ | Chinatown Fodor's Choice

Chef Fidel Caballero mines his upbringing on the U.S.--Mexican border, as well as his time cooking in award-winning restaurants in Spain's Basque Country and in Shanghai by producing dishes that marry all these cultures into one unique and delicious meal. The 54-seat eatery is split in two: more casual à la carte options up front and a tasting menu (with a counter overlooking the kitchen) in the back. Expect wow-inducing dishes with multilayered flavor strata, inventive cocktails, and a nicely curated wine list with bottles from Spain and Mexico. 

3 Allen St., New York, NY, 10002, USA
915-408–0578
Known For
  • Multicourse tasting menu with inventive wine pairing
  • Cocktails with the Mexican spirit sotol
  • Chinese- and Basque-inspired Mexican fare
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No lunch

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Cornell's

$ Fodor's Choice

Locals love this place and have savored its Italian specialties since 1943. Start with the clams in wine, butter, oil, and garlic, or a hot antipasto. For a main course, consider the braciola, a longtime favorite; the tender rolls of beef are filled with sausage and baked in meat sauce. The restaurant is part of Schenectady's emerging Little Italy community on North Jay Street.

Cote

$$$$ | Flatiron District Fodor's Choice

Cote has blown up the staid New York steak-house formula by infusing the experience with Korean twists: that shrimp cocktail might look classic, for instance, but just wait 'til the hot gochujang hits your palate. The steak omakase \"tasting menu\" is unique, allowing you to compare several cuts of meat, but you can go old-school and just focus on your favorite; everything is cooked table-side—by you or your server—at a smokeless grill. If you're into fried chicken, check out their new nearby sister restaurant, COQODAQ on 22nd Street. 

16 W. 22nd St., New York, NY, 10010, USA
212-401‒7986
Known For
  • Chic but casual atmosphere
  • Incredible dry-aged beef
  • "Butcher's Feast" is a great value bit of everything, including Korean side dishes
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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Craft

$$$$ | Union Square Fodor's Choice

At the flagship of Top Chef head judge Tom Colicchio's nationwide, mini-empire of excellent restaurants, the top-notch seasonal fare is exceptionally prepared with little fuss and served in a cozy-yet-minimalist space with exposed brick details, wood floors, and bare lightbulbs. Expect a menu that hits a variety of high notes, from exuberantly fresh hamachi or braised octopus to start, stylish salads, hearty but not overpowering pastas, and perfectly cooked mains.

Crown Shy

$$$ | Financial District Fodor's Choice

Occupying a prime corner in the base of historic 70 Pine, Crown Shy draws even uptowners down to the Wall Street area for its creative menu that plays with international cuisines. Don't be surprised to find brilliantly fused flavors from Italy, Japan, Mexico, or the Middle East here, all deliciously vegetable-forward and elevating the best of the season's produce. Decor is understated modern-deco, with high ceilings and big windows, a large dining area, and a long, friendly bar. Expect to find plenty of businesspeople on weekdays, giving way to a lively mix of foodies on evenings and weekends. Dishes are priced to invite multiple small-dish tastings, along with a few standout main courses, and creatively balanced desserts.

Dallas Hot Weiners

$ | Stockade District Fodor's Choice

Hot dogs are the specialty at this narrow spot with a counter and a handful of tables. "One with everything" means a steamed dog on a steamed bun topped with slightly spicy chili sauce, a dab of mustard, and a sprinkling of chopped onions. The sauce livens up fries, too; temper it with ketchup if it's too spicy for you.