32 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.

ACRU

$$$$ | Greenwich Village Fodor's Choice

After a few years in the kitchen at highly acclaimed Korean restaurant Atomix, chef Daniel Garwood fuses culinary nostalgia from his native Australia with inspiration and ingredients from Korea and Scandinavia at this narrow, charming, 47-seat restaurant. Garwood cooks up an à la carte menu and a reasonably priced tasting menu that is both elevated and accessible at the same time. Ambrose Chiang, another Aussie and formerly at Momofuku Ko, has curated a short, but excellent wine list from small winemakers around the globe.

79 MacDougtal St., New York, NY, 10012, USA
646-861–3154
Known For
  • Affordable tasting menu
  • Cheeky dishes
  • Excellent cocktails
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. No lunch

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Blue Hill at Stone Barns

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

This outpost of Dan Barber's famed Blue Hill restaurant in Manhattan occupies a barn on the grounds of Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture. The seasonal menu features the center's own produce and meats as well as the bounty of other local farms. The space is beautiful and elegant in its restraint, with high picture windows and the barn rafters. Banquettes are dressed in brown and set off against cream walls. There are no set or print menus here; diners have their choice of a Grazing, Pecking, and Rooting menu for $280 a person, or a Farmer's Feast menu at $148 per person. Both feature several courses that are based on the day's harvest, and also offer delectable wine pairings for an additional cost.

630 Bedford Rd., Pocantico Hills, NY, 10591, USA
914-366–9600
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
Closed Mon. and Tues. No lunch
Reservations essential

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Luthun

$$$$ | East Village Fodor's Choice

Arguably the best restaurant in Manhattan without a Michelin star, Luthun has 29 seats—including nine at the bar overlooking the kitchen—and offers a 10-course tasting menu that reflects the chefs' heritage and work experience. The two toques in charge have collectively worked at august eateries The Fat Duck in England, El Bulli in Spain, and The French Laundry in Napa and it shows in the refined but eclectic flavor-popping fare they produce here. The wine list focuses on small producers in places like La Rioja in Spain, Slovenia, and Virginia. 

432 E. 13th St., New York, NY, 1009, USA
646-454–9484
Known For
  • Theater-like counter seats overlooking kitchen
  • Friendly, professional staff
  • Worldly elevated dishes
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.–Tues. No lunch

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Recommended Fodor's Video

Market 57

$$ | Meatpacking District Fodor's Choice

This innovative food hall opened in spring 2023 to great fanfare. Run by the James Beard Foundation and set on historic Pier 57, the market boasts a lineup of 15 food stalls from James Beard Award–winning chefs. Some standouts include Bessou, a modern take on Japanese home cooking; Mijo, a taqueria by chef Fany Gerson—the taco Arabe (spiced pork with a spicy chipotle sauce) is one of the best tacos in the city; Sahadi's, Middle Eastern fare from a legendary Brooklyn grocer; and Zaab Zaab, an outpost of the celebrated Thai spot in Queens. 

25 11th Ave., New York, NY, 10011, USA
Known For
  • Good to Go by JBF, a food incubator for female and BIPOC chefs
  • A diverse array of edible offerings
  • Run by the James Beard Foundation

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Quarter Moon Café

$ Fodor's Choice

At this decidedly upscale spot at the edge of the village, cobalt-blue vases sit on blond-wood tables, sharply contrasting the deep-russet walls and tin-ceilinged bar area. Large photographs of Cuban scenes are hung between book racks, where a handpicked collection of art books await your browsing—that is, if you can pull yourself away from the seared tofu with pumpkin-seed mole, curry-crusted calamari, or truffle-and-soy risotto. Wednesday is sushi night. Reservations are essential on weekends and for sushi night.

53 Main St., Delhi, NY, USA
607-746–8886
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
Closed Tues. and early Jan.–mid-Feb.

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Smorgasburg

$$ | Williamsburg Fodor's Choice

Smorgasburg, the acclaimed open-air food market, is the portmanteau of smorgasbord and Williamsburg. Here, at its founding location at Marsha P. Johnson State Park, vetted food vendors serve delicious treats to foodies (and provide photogenic content for food influencers), from arepas to yakitori. Even with the Smorgasburg branded concept dispersing crowds of foodies across other locations across New York, Jersey City, LA, Miami, Toronto, and Sao Paolo, the original Williamsburg location still draws close to 30,000 people each Saturday in the summer, so get there before noon if you don't want to spend most of your time there in queues. The original Smorgasburg is open from April through October, but check the website for details of the other locations in Brooklyn Manhattan.

668 The Gig Shack

$$$

This little bit funky, little bit chic but totally Montauk café serves up fare that fuses local ingredients with international flair. With dishes like mussels with Thai curry, biriyani, fish "Montacos," and house-smoked Hawaiian babyback ribs, this place provides a little culinary adventure right on Main Street Montauk. Tasty home-baked desserts include key lime pie. There is live music most nights.

782 Main St., Montauk, NY, 11954, USA
631-668-2727
Restaurant Details
Closed mid-Oct.–Mar. and weekdays Labor Day–mid-Oct. and Mar.–Memorial Day

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75 Main

$$$

Celebrity mom Dina Lohan (mother of Lindsay) was spotted celebrating Memorial Day here; so was actor and funny guy Jonah Hill, and on any given day you can see supermodels, sports stars, and an assortment of other A-listers hanging out here. With internationally acclaimed chef Walter Hinds at the helm, the menu offers well-prepared classic dishes like Caesar salad, penne primavera, and grilled salmon. The evening specials bring more of an international flair, perhaps moules frites in red curry and Tuscan pot roast. There's a weekend brunch as well as a menu for kids. The bar gets busy after 11 on Friday and Saturday nights thanks to a DJ and a crowd that likes to dance. Reservations are recommended.

75 Main St., Southampton, NY, 11968, USA
631-283–7575
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
Reservations essential

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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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Cate's Italian Garden

$

Excellent gourmet pizza, seafood specialties, pasta dishes, a full wine list, and homemade desserts make it hard to decide what to order at this pleasant spot. Dine alfresco in the warmth, and by lantern light in the chill.

Crabtree's Kittle House

$$$$

Gardens surround this elegant colonial-style restaurant, 8 miles south of Katonah. Crabtree's is known for such creative dishes as grilled foie gras with toasted brioche, candied orange, and Bordeaux syrup. Portobello mushrooms, served as a main course, are roasted and given the Wellington treatment—encased in puff pastry and served with wild mushroom sauce.

11 Kittle Rd., Chappaqua, NY, 10514, USA
914-666–8044
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted

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Fedora

$$$ | West Village

Subterranean Fedora was an ancient, little-patronized restaurant until 2011, when the old Italian owner left the building and restaurateur Gabe Stulman took over, revamping the place to attract a younger, hip crowd. The kitchen now churns out French Canadian–accented fare like garlic-cream-topped duck breast and scallops paired with bone marrow. Creative cocktails give the space a buzzy, almost clubby vibe. Fedora (the restaurant) will never be the same, and that might be a good thing.

239 W. 4th St., New York, NY, 10014, USA
646-449–9336
Known For
  • French-Canadian dishes
  • Potent cocktails
  • Narrow space
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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The Frisky Oyster

$$$$

This modern restaurant is a little piece of Manhattan in Greenport. North Fork sophisticates come for the small, lively bar and contemporary fare, such as Oysters Friskafella with garlic-scented spinach and chipotle. Diners can splurge on the $48, 45-day dry-aged rib-eye steak frites. It's also a popular spot for unique cocktails made with premium liquor. The restaurant does not accommodate children younger than 6.

27 Front St., Greenport, NY, 11944, USA
631-477–4265
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted

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Hampton Coffee Company

$

The smell of coffee roasting is enough to entice you inside, but there's more: homemade nachos and salsa; breakfast to go or eat in the bright dining area, and a good range of lunch choices. Beer-battered fish and chips are a favorite, and the Mexican entrees like chicken enchiladas à la Mexicana and huevos rancheros with chorizo, avocado, and queso blanco will get your heart going. There are many low-fat, vegetarian, and gluten-free options too, including salads, sandwiches, wraps, and entrees. Bring home a pound of the fresh-roasted, estate-grown coffee.

Hav & Mar

$$$ | Chelsea

Helmed by celeb-chef Marcus Samuelsson, Hav & Mar means "ocean" in Swedish and "honey" in Amharic, the majority language in Ethiopia, reflecting the chef's personal background. The food, artwork, and experience at this 125-seat spot is meant to evoke Black cuisine in New York City. The spacious interior, with Black-mermaid-bedecked walls and Noguchi-style chandeliers, creates a fun atmosphere to tuck into  flavorful seafood dishes like a zesty banana-leaf wrapped snapper with crispy coconut rice or the signature fried chicken served with a soft-boiled egg. 

245 11th Ave., New York, NY, 10001, USA
212-328–8041
Known For
  • Seafood-leaning menu with Ethiopian and Swedish twists
  • An excellent cocktail program
  • Whimsical design elements
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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The Landing

$$$ | Ocean Beach

From the outside it doesn't look like much—a few tables on an outdoor porch across from the ferry terminal with a nice bay view—but inside, it's all beachy chic, with turquoise and sand-colored glass tile accents and Fire Island–themed artwork. The food is contemporary and eclectic. Duck lettuce wraps with cranberry aioli have a barbecue zing with an Asian flair, and the sushi gets high marks. The chef really gets creative with the daily specials, like Thai curry mussels and conch fritters—and that's just the appetizers. A hand-crafted cocktail is a perfect accompaniment, like Skinny Acai Lemonade with fresh-queezed lemon or blueberry mojito with perfectly muddled mint. Breakfast includes signature french toast with caramelized walnuts and fruit and a frittata with eggwhites, goat cheese, and tomato.

620 Bay Walk, Fire Island, NY, 11770, USA
631-583–5800
Restaurant Details
Closed Oct.–mid-May (varies depending on the weather)

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MacDuff's

$$$

An intimate and elegant dining experience awaits you at this eight-table restaurant in an 1873 town house with red-clothed tables, upholstered Queen Anne chairs, and brass chandeliers and sconces. The menu leans French in preparation, but Continental in substance: the twin tenderloin fillets with port, Stilton cheese, and green-peppercorn sauce is the signature dish, or you might try veal scaloppine in a blackberry cream sauce. Desserts include lavender crème brûlée and homemade orange ice cream served in a bittersweet chocolate shell. The extensive wine and liquor selection includes 40 single-malt Scotches.

317 Pine St., Jamestown, NY, 14701, USA
716-664–9414
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
Closed Sun. No lunch

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Market Street Brewing Co.

$$

Five beers—two lagers, and a red, pale, and dark ale—are brewed on-site throughout the year. Each season brings one or two specialty brews. The kitchen incorporates Thai, Southwestern, Mexican, Caribbean, and Italian influences, among others, in dishes such as pork osso buco, Jamaican jerk chicken, a salmon fillet glazed with the brewery's D'Artagnan ale, coconut-battered shrimp appetizer. Sandwiches and burgers are also available. Beer suggestions accompany entrée descriptions.

63 W Market St., Corning, NY, 14830, USA
607-936--2337
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
Closed Sun.--Mon. in winter

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The Mary Lane

$$$ | West Village

From the team that brought the West Village the Little Owl comes this all-day spot, offering a menu that combines culinary elements of Japan, California, and the Mediterranean. Think hamachi crudo with Tokyo turnips and charred avocado, braised chicken cacciatore ravioli, and roasted tilefish served with forbidden rice. The bar program has a similar philosophy, shaking up classic and signature cocktails using liquor and other ingredients from Japan and the Mediterranean. 

99 Bank St., New York, NY, 10014, USA
212-579–9099
Known For
  • Great corner location
  • Harmony of disparate ingredients
  • Nice bar program
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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Old Library Restaurant

$$

In a National Historic Landmark building, what was the town library, built in 1910 with funds from Andrew Carnegie, was converted to a restaurant in 1983. It retains most of its original architecture—parquet flooring, stained-glass windows, inlaid ceilings. Dining is in hushed, bookshelf-lined, front "library" rooms or a mezzanine overlooking a central atrium. The menu is diverse, with Italian, French, and American dishes. Six-cheese ravioli is served with pesto cream and sautéed spinach; sautéed antelope medallions come with peppercorn sauce; a surf-and-turn combo joins New York strip steak and jumbo scampi. Sunday brunch is served.

120 S. Union St., Olean, NY, 14760, USA
716-373–9804
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
No lunch

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Ports Cafe

$$

Overlooking the water about 3 mi south of Geneva, this casual eatery serves eclectic fare. The chef prepares fresh-cut fish and steak specials daily, in addition to a regular menu that moves from Indian to Mexican in dishes like tandoori chicken in an almond-onion curry and house-smoked spareribs with honey corn bread. Finger Lakes wines accompany your meal, and the staff is trained in wine pairing. Nachos, calamari, and other small plates are always available. Reservations are essential in summer, especially around sunset.

​4432 West Lake Rd., Geneva, NY, 14456, USA
315-789--2020
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
Closed Sun.--Mon.

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Red Dot Bar & Grill

$$

A trendy spot in the heart of the gallery district, this sleek restaurant offers a varied menu, from hamburgers and quesadillas to soft-shell crabs. The dining room has a large picture window overlooking the garden. The bar is open until 2 am most nights.

321 Warren St., Hudson, NY, 12534, USA
518-828–3657
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
Closed Tues. No dinner Tues., Thurs., and Sat.

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The Red Onion

$$$
The menu changes daily at the Red Onion, meaning that chef Kevin Katz is always looking for creative ways to use fresh, local ingredients. Recurring favorites include out-of-the-ordinary Faroe Island salmon with a citrus beurre blanc and seafood risotto with Mexican jumbo shrimp. Appetizers may range from traditional guacamole to black truffle pierogies—all made on the premises, of course. The place is known for its generous cocktails, but there's also a smart wine list. The dining room is in an atmospheric old farmhouse, and there's a porch perfect for drinks in summer.

Riverview

$$

This popular village restaurant offers great views of the Hudson River to accompany its "modern Continental" fare. Handblown sconces lend a golden glow to the dining room. The wood-oven pizzas are praiseworthy, as are the grilled rib-eye steaks, fusilli Bolognese, and fresh fish. Reservations are essential for the highly coveted terrace tables.

45 Fair St., Cold Spring, NY, 10516, USA
845-265–4778
Restaurant Details
No credit cards
Closed Mon.

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Sapore Restaurant, Coffee & Wine Bar

$

With its Italian–Latin American fusion menu focusing on simple dishes made with local, fresh, and organic ingredients, and an Old-World-meets-urban-café decor—exposed-brick walls, local art, a gleaming cappuccino machine on the bar—this place is quite the cosmopolitan departure in this pocket of the state. The San Francisco–trained chef might whip up seared scallops over ginger-marinated cabbage or pappardelle topped with tomatoes and cracked-pepper mascarpone. Sapore is open all day as a café, and also serves breakfast.

7 E. Main St., Westfield, NY, 14787, USA
716-326–7707
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
Closed Sun. and Mon. in Nov.–Apr.
Reservations not accepted

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Surf's Out

$$ | Kismet

Bringing a fun, Key West vibe to Fire Island, this restaurant and bar hosts live music and weekly events like tacos and trivia, Italian night, lobster bash, and an occasional clam shucking contest, wine festival, or drag show. The menu consists of some simple favorites like burgers, lobster rolls and wings, pasta, and fresh salads, and there's also a sushi menu and raw bar for more adventurous eaters.

Tantalus

$

The name is a nod to the son of Zeus in Greek mythology, but the tome of a menu in this semicasual, rustic-industrial space—with huge windows, cement floors, and Mexican-style woven rugs hung from exposed piping—hails from seemingly every part of the old and new worlds: a Cuban sandwich on homemade rustic bread; a "filled burger," stuffed with feta, kalamata olives, and sun-dried tomatoes; house-made ricotta ravioli with prosciutto in Gorgonzola-arugula sauce; plus 20 pizzas, a page of salads, and entrées of duck, fish, pork, and beef. Thursday is Mexican day. The wine and beer lists are equally lengthy and varied.

634 Main St., East Aurora, NY, 14052, USA
716-652–0341
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted

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Tapas 177

$

Spanish-style appetizers and entrées draw from Latin and European roots, as does the music and decor, at this below-street-level restaurant. The decor, with candlelight, brick arches, and curtained-off cubbyhole seating is Morocco-meets-Paris, and the menu, which changes weekly, highlights seafood, with options for vegetarians well as carnivores. You might choose from chicken empanadas or Thai-glazed barbecued ribs (on the tapas menu) or wasabi-pea-encrusted tuna or guava-chipotle beef fillet (among the main dishes). A full martini menu includes chocolate, melon, lemon, and orange varieties. The specialty dessert—bananas wrapped in a fried, cinnamon-and-sugar-covered tortilla—is always available.

177 Saint Paul St., Rochester, NY, 14604, USA
585-262--2090
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted

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Telio

$$ | Upper West Side

Since the 1990s, this popular neighborhood outpost has been serving homemade Greek and Italian specialties in a simple, casual setting. The menu is large, and it’s always a tough choice between the moussaka and spanakopita (spinach pie), lamb kebabs, and chicken Marsala. There's live music several evenings a week by local musicians.

Tula Kitchen

$$

With an array of meat-free dishes like seared organic seitan with vegetables and Thai peanut sauce and sesame-crusted tofu with coconut basmati rice, this place is loved by vegetarians and vegans. Tula also offers healthy and delicious organic chicken, turkey burgers, and seafood dishes. The interior is funky—a little bit Moroccan and a little bit gothic—with bright red walls, pillowed banquettes, and wrought-iron candelabras. Try one of their artifully prepared cocktails, and save room for the "rockin'" vegan cupcake. The entertainment roster ranges from solo singer-guitarists to jazz bands.

41 E. Main St., Bay Shore, NY, 11706, USA
631-539–7183
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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