203 Best Restaurants in Pennsylvania, USA

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

Friday Saturday Sunday

$$ | Rittenhouse Square Fodor's Choice

What was once a Rittenhouse institution is now a Rittenhouse darling after the restaurant was sold to husband-and-wife team Chad and Hanna Williams and revitalized as a warm yet elevated space with boundary-pushing but still familiar food and drinks. The new American fare ranges from a curated raw bar, featuring oysters and caviar, to delicate pastas coated in punchy sauces with proteins like lobster and pork cheek. Equal attention is given to the bar, which offers well-thought-out cocktails that look like they’re ready for a photo shoot. The restaurant received the James Beard Foundation's Outstanding Restaurant award in 2023, which has made it hard to snag a reservation, though it's worth going out of your way for special occasions.

a.kitchen

$$$ | Rittenhouse Square Fodor's Choice

Smoke, coal, fire, and ash create a through line for the menu at a.kitchen, on the ground floor of the AKA Hotel. Attired in blond wood and Carrara marble, it looks like a spa in the Italian Alps, and its Rittenhouse address guarantees a scene, but chef Eli Collins has transformed it into a serious restaurant with an ace sommelier and a steak tartare that cannot be missed. The cocktail bar next door is also among the best in the city.

Alimentari at Di Bruno Bros.

$ | Rittenhouse Square Fodor's Choice

Above the Di Bruno Bros. Rittenhouse location lives Alimentari, a casual Italian restaurant with plenty of seating and enough space for large groups. As its name implies, it's a neighborhood gathering place with ready-to-eat food, with a menu that largely pulls from items that are available in the store below—cheeses, meats, crackers, breads—as well as pizza alla Romana (Roman style) and hot Italian small plates like gnocchi and meatballs. The food pairs perfectly with the extensive wine list, which features draft wine in addition to wine by the bottle and glass; craft-beer options round out the offerings.

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Amada

$$$ | Old City Fodor's Choice

At Amada, the first of chef-restaurateur Jose Garces’s restaurants, the Ecuadorian-American chef reinterprets regional cuisine with choice ingredients and a modern touch that feature in more than 50 tapas, from the crab-stuffed peppers with toasted almonds to the flatbread topped with artichoke, black truffle, and manchego. Many ingredients—including even more glorious cheeses—are sourced from northern Spain, the main inspiration for the menu. The large, festive front room can skew loud; for a quieter meal, ask for a table in the second dining room, beyond the open kitchen.

217–19 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, PA, 19106, USA
215-398–6968
Known For
  • Andalusian cuisine
  • Spanish meats and cheeses
  • Lively scene
Restaurant Details
No lunch weekdays

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Blue Corn

$$ | Bella Vista Fodor's Choice

The sheer volume of Mexican restaurants on South 9th Street can be daunting—many are excellent, but how do you pick? The family-run Blue Corn consistently delivers, serving Pueblan cuisine with personality like tacos al pastor (taco made with spit-grilled pork) and queso fundido (hot melted cheese with spicy chorizo) alongside harder-to-find specialties like huaraches (crispy masa–pinto bean flatbreads) or whole fish stuffed with the corn truffle huitlacoche. Warm service and killer cocktails round out the experience. Note that it is cash only.

Chellas Arepa Kitchen

$ Fodor's Choice

A festive air permeates this eatery on North Queen Street, in part because the locals are thrilled that their favorite food truck (still operating outside the far-off Costco) finally graduated to a brick-and-mortar space. The bold flavors of Peru and Venezuela pop in a variety of bowls and, of course, the Venezuelan arepas, soft cornmeal rounds stuffed with savory fillings such as chimichurri chicken. Mad Chef Brewery operates a tap room on-site, pouring its own brews. 

Condesa

$$ | Center City West Fodor's Choice

In a neighborhood full of beautifully designed restaurants with exciting food to boot, it's hard to pick favorites, but Condesa certainly holds its own. Inspired by the flavors and style of Mexico City, the restaurant expands over an outdoor space, indoor dining room, lounge, and a bar, seating 140 people. The centerpiece of the food menu are the Mexican heirloom corn tortillas, which are made in-house on a daily basis, and come as a base for the tacos or as a side for the more substantial entrées. Located within the Motto Hotel by Hilton, Condesa is one of three Mexican restaurants within the space—also there is El Cafe, a ground-floor coffee and pastry shop, and El Techo, a rooftop tequila and mezcal bar with a focus on Mexican street food.

Craftsman Row Saloon

$$ | Old City Fodor's Choice

A casual, fun eatery with a friendly ambience, Craftsman Row features elevated homemade bar food, including cheesesteaks, hoagies, burgers, chicken, fries, and salads. Throughout the year, the restaurant goes big on seasonal decorations filling the entire space with abundant festive decor, even creating seasonal menu items and cocktails to match.

112 S. 8th St., Philadelphia, PA, 19107, USA
215-923--0123
Known For
  • Cozy pub-like interior
  • Elevated bar food menu
  • Short walk from all the historical sites
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. No lunch weekdays

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Dim Sum Garden

$ | Chinatown Fodor's Choice

A sleek new location for this Philadelphia stalwart means more space, a full bar, and less waiting for Dim Sum Garden's exemplary soup dumplings, but you can still sneak a peek through the window in the middle of the dining room to see the restaurant's staff fold the delicate wrappings around the porky fillings. The family-owned restaurant also does a brisk business in hand-stretched noodles, steamed chicken dumplings, and pan-fried beef dumplings. 

Dobbin House Tavern

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

Built in 1776, Dobbin House is the oldest building in town and is on the National Register of Historic Places. In six original rooms adorned with Colonial decor and antiques, staff in period clothing serve Colonial and classic American fare such as baked king's onion soup and roast duck. The floors are creaky, the ceilings low, and the rooms are small, but Dobbin House is just right for date night and special occasions.

89 Steinwehr Ave., Gettysburg, PA, 17325, USA
717-334–2100
Known For
  • Warm Colonial gingerbread with lemon sauce
  • Lump crabmeat dishes
  • Time-travel experience
Restaurant Details
Reservations recommended

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EMei

$$ | Chinatown Fodor's Choice

Since 2011, Emei has been serving the city's best Sichuan food, sizzling and hot with the region's signature mouth-tingling peppercorn. Chef Yongcheng Zhao guides the kitchen crew each night, satisfying the city's need for wok-seared green beans, rich mapo (spicy sauce) tofu, and addictively salty fried chongqing (dried red chilies) chicken. The restaurant does a brisk takeout service, so tables are typically available and the large space is comfortable for groups.

915 Arch St., Philadelphia, PA, 19107, USA
215-627–2500
Known For
  • Sesame noodles
  • Good space for groups
  • Serving some of the city's best Sichuan food

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Fork

$$$$ | Old City Fodor's Choice

This comfortable, elegant eatery is one of Old City’s most respected and longest-running dinner destinations. For more than 25 years, this award-winning kitchen has been known for its innovative pastas, delectable dishes, in-house fermentation, incredible homemade breads, and the celebration of local meats and produce.

Forsythia

$$$$ | Old City Fodor's Choice

Well traveled and well trained, award-winning chef Christopher Kearse presents his unique take on French cuisine at the modern Forsythia. Start with shareable canapés, like fresh local oysters and pickled deviled eggs, before digging into small plates, pastas, and shareable mains (try the trout grenobloise or rabbit with foie gras for two) that split the difference between edgy and accessible. The space is decorated with a sophisticated, somewhat tropical feel; the long, narrow barroom, which leads to the intimate dining room and open kitchen in the rear, is an excellent stop-in for a quick cocktail or snack.

Gabriella's Vietnam

$$$ | East Passyunk Fodor's Choice

Vietnamese food is very popular in Philadelphia, and many people have a local pho spot that they frequent multiple times a week. Gabriella's, though, showcases regional dishes with light, flavorful, and addictive menu items like steamed water fern dumplings, savory crepes wrapped in herbs and lettuce, and stir-fried soft shell crab. 

1837 E. Passyunk Ave., Philadelphia, PA, 19148, USA
272-888–3298
Known For
  • Group dining
  • Regional Vietnamese cooking
  • Shaken beef
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No lunch

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Ground Provisions

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

The chef-owners of Philadelphia’s acclaimed Vedge, Kate Jacoby and Rich Landau, bring their mind-opening vegan cooking to the Brandywine Valley countryside at this intimate, prix-fixe restaurant in a historical building, part of the former Dilworthtown Inn complex. The modern farmhouse vibe—Instagram-worthy with fireplaces and wooden beams, floors, and tables—creates an inviting but not intimidating setting for the plant-based, multicourse (and quite filling) tasting menu, a sophisticated feast that changes seasonally but always includes global influences and local and organic produce. A vegan cheese plate is available for an extra charge, as are tempting sorbets and ice creams. Besides dining tables, there’s a chef’s table, bar area, and seasonal outdoor porch seating. Those not sure if they want the full experience can have a drink and order items from the short snack menu, but the Farmer’s Feast is a marvel. 

1388 Old Wilmington Pike, West Chester, PA, 19382, USA
610-355--4411
Known For
  • Good cocktails, mocktails, and natural wines
  • Helpful, knowledgeable servers
  • Reservations required (but walk-ins okay for drinks)
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.--Tues. No lunch
Reservations essential

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Honeysuckle Restaurant

$$$$ | North Broad Fodor's Choice

Chef-partners Omar Tate and Cybille St.Aude-Tate present this buzzy new incarnation of their Afro-centric Honeysuckle Projects in an elegant but accessible space that complements the stellar four-course prix-fixe menu, shaping the wood-lined room into a bar, a lounge section with sofas, bookcases, and the chefs' thoughtful art, and a good-size dining area with an industrial look. Music (jazz, soul, and more) adds to the ambience as diners make their choices for each course from a seasonally changing menu that highlights the global culinary influences of the Black American diaspora in dishes such as a Daily Harvest starter with black-eyed pea spread and vegetables and an epis (a Haitian seasoning base) roasted chicken with grilled collards; one limited-quantity special item attracting attention is a $65 burger, complete with caviar, gold flakes, and truffles. It's hard to go wrong with any choices here, but oysters (broiled or however presented) are a don't-miss when they're on the menu. The knowledgeable servers can answer questions about ingredients and flavors: this is a place to learn and be nourished while enjoying food that delights the eye and palate.     

631 N. Broad St., Philadelphia, PA, 19123, USA
215-307--3316
Known For
  • Wine program features Black producers, and cocktails are as creative as the food
  • Some produce comes fresh from the chefs' Bucks County farm
  • Less expensive options are Sunday brunch and ordering some à la carte items at the bar
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. No lunch Wed.–Sat. No dinner Sun.

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JG Skyhigh

$$$$ | Center City West Fodor's Choice

Of the Four Seasons Philadelphia's three restaurants, JG Skyhigh is the most approachable; it's the place to go for a drink while you take in the stunning city views from the 60th floor. The dinner menu includes modernized versions of hotel restaurant standards like a good burger, black truffle–topped pizza, and pumpkin-seed crusted salmon as well as a selection of high-end caviar. The waitstaff is as attentive and helpful as you'd expect from the Four Seasons brand.

John Wright Restaurant

$$ Fodor's Choice

At this waterfront spot in historic Wrightsville, across the Susquehanna River from Columbia, you can enjoy a breathtaking view of the river while seated outdoors eating wood-fired pizzas topped with ingredients grown on-site. The popular bar and restaurant (reservations strongly suggested) also has a glass-walled dining room to take in the scenery year-round. Several menus are offered, from lunch (cream of crab soup) and dinner (house sausage platter) to a mammoth fixed-price Sunday brunch buffet complete with a prime rib carving station, omelets made to order, and a make-your-own Bloody Mary bar. Look for weekly dinner specials and seasonally inspired favorites.

Josephine's Downtown

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

Tucked away downstairs from its sibling C'est la Vie, this cushy dinner spot is lined with photos from the golden age of Hollywood; it's the kind of place where you order a cocktail with a movie-star name. The chef spins French techniques and local ingredients into refined plates such as cream of artichoke soup and 8-ounce crab cakes, and the stunning desserts are worth the calories, but the one you must order is the lemon meringue that reveals its secret when you cut into it.

50 W. Grant St., Lancaster, PA, 17603, USA
717-299–7090
Known For
  • Elegant decor
  • Good for special occasions
  • Live piano music
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch
Reservations recommended

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Kalaya Thai Kitchen

$$$$ | Fishtown Fodor's Choice

Chef Nok Suntaranon shares a wealth of Thai family recipes at Kalaya, which began as a BYOB in South Philadelphia and has now been expanded into a large, modern space with a full bar in Fishtown. Addressing Philadelphia’s dearth of authentic Thai restaurants, she offers curries, soups, and noodle dishes that don’t skimp one bit on real-deal fiery, fishy flavor.

4 W. Palmer St., Philadelphia, PA, 19125, USA
215-545–2535
Known For
  • Authentic Thai cooking
  • Fiery flavors
  • Warm service
Restaurant Details
No lunch weekends

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Lacroix Restaurant at the Rittenhouse

$$$$ | Rittenhouse Square Fodor's Choice

Located inside the posh Rittenhouse Hotel, this elegant dining space has a view overlooking Rittenhouse Square park. Afternoon tea is available in the Mary Cassatt Tea Room, and there's an à la carte menu that features dishes like aged duck, Berkshire pork, and King crab, but if you really want to indulge, try the Carte Blanche, a full tasting menu (wine pairings possible) that includes dishes like risotto of new potatoes with caviar, smoked king salmon, and bluefin tuna carpaccio. The wine list is also lengthy and impressive, with a broad range of impressive bottles from around the world.

210 W. Rittenhouse Sq., Philadelphia, PA, 19103, USA
215-790–2533
Known For
  • Tasting menu and afternoon tea
  • Sunday brunch and breakfast seven days a week
  • Expansive wine list
Restaurant Details
No lunch Mon., Tues., and Sat. No dinner Mon. and Tues.
Reservations essential

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Lark

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

The area's one true destination restaurant has perfectly prepared plates that make you close your eyes in appreciation after every bite, all within a gorgeous setting on the seventh floor of a Residence Inn. Seafood offerings are where the delicacy of its flavors excel the most—the sumac octopus, the dorade with a hint of chili, but the "simple" small plates like the grilled artichoke are worth investigating. In fact, like many such restaurants, you can do well by ordering lots of small plates and a pasta dish or two (also on the smaller side) to experience as many flavors as possible and forgo the mains. The restaurant is part of the Ironworks at Pencoyd Landing complex, and across the river in Bala Cynwyd, but a (mostly) pedestrian bridge connects it to Manayunk from a free parking lot.

611 Righters Ferry Rd., Bala Cynwyd, PA, 19004, USA
484-434--8766
Known For
  • Exceptional flavors
  • Special night out
  • Splendid setting
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No lunch
Reservations recommended

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Laser Wolf

$$$$ | Fishtown Fodor's Choice

Like many of CookNSolo’s places, Laser Wolf focuses on an aspect of Israeli cuisine, this time the grill or skewer house. Meals are prix-fixe, so diners pick their protein to grill (beef, lamb, chicken) and the rest is taken care of. First comes the salatim (salads) and then the freshly baked pita and hummus followed by your grill choice. The icing on the cake? A homemade ice cream sundae is included.

1301 N. Howard St., Philadelphia, PA, 19122, USA
267-499–4660
Known For
  • Opened by James Beard Award winners Michael Solomonov and Steve Cook
  • A homemade ice cream sundae is included in the prix-fixe
  • Israeli grillhouse cuisine
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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Little Fish

$$$$ | Bella Vista Fodor's Choice

Philadelphia native Alex Yoon is the chef and owner of the tiny but beloved BYOB where creativity and inspiration run the show. The menu changes all the time, but the scallop toast, where raw scallops are shingled across a thick slice of sesame sourdough and topped with chopped herbs, is a favorite that diners return for over and over.

746 S. 6th St., Philadelphia, PA, 19147, USA
267-455–0172
Known For
  • Scallop toast
  • Seafood dishes like seared scallops and roasted halibut
  • Friendly service
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. No lunch

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LUCA

$$$ Fodor's Choice

A self-described "wood-burning Italian kitchen," LUCA serves up handmade pasta and mains, plus a large menu of hot and cold starters. Reservations are hard to get, and for good reason—the food is consistently delicious and the vibe is upbeat. The ever-changing menu might include wood-grilled strip loin or gnocchi with sweet corn and pancetta, while the carefully curated wine list includes natural, low-intervention wines. The arbor-covered patio overlooking the tree-lined residential street is open when weather permits. 

436 W. James St., Lancaster, PA, 17603, USA
717-553–5770
Known For
  • Main room can get noisy
  • Bottle shop sells wine to go
  • Large selection of Italian spirits and craft cocktails
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues.

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Manakeesh Cafe

$ | University City Fodor's Choice

A Spruce Hill staple, Manakeesh specializes in the Lebanese flatbreads of the same name. Served warm from the oven, the puffy, round loaves come with both traditional toppings (za’atar, kafta) and nontraditional ones (turkey bacon–egg–cheese, cheesesteak), which speak to the diverse crowd that fills the café-style space. Encased behind glass along the front counter, fresh-baked Lebanese pastries are some of your best bets. Stop in for a snack or a full sit-down, share-many-dishes-style meal.

Mission Taqueria

$ | Rittenhouse Square Fodor's Choice

Within the highbrow Rittenhouse neighborhood, Mission Taqueria is the cool kid in town. Its neon signs, colorful digs, and collaborative games draw the crowds, while the fresh tacos, delectable dips, and margaritas in a multitude of flavors keep them full and happy. The weekday happy hour, with $6 margaritas and $3 tacos, makes it a go-to spot for post-work hangouts.

1516 Sansom St., Philadelphia, PA, 19102, USA
215-383–1200
Known For
  • Happy hour including $3 beer, $2 tacos, and $6 margaritas
  • Cheap drinks and snacks
  • Colorful digs
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon.

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Parc

$$$ | Rittenhouse Square Fodor's Choice

Brass rails, silvered mirrors, claret-hued banquettes, and oak wainscoting reclaimed from now-shuttered Parisian restaurants imbue patina—while small touches like newspapers on wooden poles create extra realism—in the meticulous stage set placed on Philadelphia's most desirable corner by restaurateur Stephen Starr. Similarly, standard menu items (roast chicken, trout amandine) hold their own, but the little things—desserts and salads, fresh-baked goods (including house-made macarons), and excellent onion soup—stand out. Ask for an indoor-outdoor table overlooking the park: you'll get generous views and the pleasant din of the 150 diners behind you without the deafening buzz that is the restaurant's one true downside.

Penang

$ | Chinatown Fodor's Choice

The juxtaposition of bamboo and exposed pipes is indicative of the surprising mix of flavors in this perennially busy Malaysian restaurant. A taste of India creeps into a scintillating appetizer of roti canai, handkerchief-thin crepes served with a small dipping dish of spicy chicken curry, and the wide variety of soups are tasty and filling; satay, Singapore rice noodles, and chow kueh teow (Malaysian stir-fried flat rice noodles) are among the other popular dishes.

117 N. 10th St., Philadelphia, PA, 19107, USA
215-413–2531
Known For
  • Malaysian cuisine
  • Roti canai (an Indian flatbread dish)
  • Southeast Asian noodles

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Pietramala

$$$ | Northern Liberties Fodor's Choice

NoLibs' dining scene is usually known for gastropubs, but Pietramala has brought an edge of elegance and creativity to the neighborhood. While the restaurant is vegan, Chef Ian Graye isn't—a key factor because his threshold for deliciousness is that of a meat-eater—but he works hard, sourcing excellent ingredients and fermenting ingredients to build dishes that are at once comforting and unexpected. It's a small plates restaurant, with lots of Italian influence, but it's hard to put such an exceptional restaurant in a box.

614 N 2nd St., Philadelphia, PA, 19123, USA
215-970–9541
Known For
  • Vegan dishes
  • Locally sourced produce
  • Cozy vibe
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon.

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