2095 Best Restaurants in USA

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

Abel's Lobster

$$ Fodor's Choice

Winding downhill through a boatyard, this truly hidden gem juts into Somes Sound, delightfully so as the place hums on summer nights: adults grab a drink from the outside bar, families play cornhole, kids and dogs romp, and folks angle to watch lobsters steam in seawater over an outdoor wood fire before eating at picnic tables on the sloping lawn or heading in to the window-lined mid-century wood-walled dining room with views from every table. The one-page menu is easy to digest when you want to relax and enjoy the view. Another page lists inventive craft cocktails, including the bartender’s choice of the day.

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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Amour

$$$$ | West Hollywood Fodor's Choice

This enchanting French brasserie offers a charming library, a bar with a fireplace lounge, a private dining room, a beautiful covered outdoor dining patio, and a large interior dining room. The talented chefs prepare traditional French fare that includes the best French onion soup, sliced baguette with Normandy butter, garlicky escargot, steaks, duck, fish, and pasta. Select from an appealing range of California and French wines to pair with your meal. Save room for the vanilla crème brûlée and chocolate mousse cake with pistachio ice cream. Sip mimosas during the elegant Sunday brunch.

Recommended Fodor's Video

Barton G

$$$$ | West Hollywood Fodor's Choice

For an extravagant dining adventure, step into Barton G and start with a tantalizing nitro-cocktail with a flaky lobster pop tart baking inside a bright yellow retro toaster. Drinks and dishes here are to be admired and appreciated in this fun and glamorous setting. A large carnival-style popcorn machine is delivered to various tables with Old Bay spiced popcorn and crispy shrimp with a sriracha aioli dipping sauce. Save room for a smoking treasure box with Valrhona 66% double chocolate bittersweet brownies and house-made Tahitian vanilla bean nitro ice cream, and a wig of pink cotton candy piled on a Marie Antoinette silver head.

Benu

$$$$ | SoMa Fodor's Choice

Chef Corey Lee's three-Michelin-star fine-dining mecca is a must-stop for those who hop from city to city collecting memorable meals. Lee, formerly of the French Laundry, meticulously ties together cooking techniques and ingredients commonly seen in different cuisines of Asia—such as xiaolongbao (soup dumplings) and "thousand year old" eggs—with a deft gastronomic touch. You may find spectacular dishes like an haute take on grilled beef rib that is braised with pear and finishes cooking over lychee charcoal; or a delicate, impeccable salad with shaved abalone and winter melon cooked in tomato water. Bare-wood tables and a hip, minimalistic interior guarantee concentration on the plate. The tasting menu is mandatory and memorable, but the restaurant makes sure to not repeat menus for returning diners.

Bourbon Steak By Michael Mina

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

Inside the Waldorf Astoria Monarch Beach Resort & Spa is celebrity chef Michael Mina's sophisticated steak house. It's a local favorite for American classics presented with a dramatic flair. The flavorful menu items pair well with wines from an extensive international list. Start with a complimentary amuse-bouche, before ordering a generous lobster pot pie for two or steaks perfectly cut and cooked. Save room for the Basque cheesecake adorned with edible flowers on a swirl of caramel sauce.

Californios

$$$$ | SoMa Fodor's Choice

This Californian-Mexican tasting-menu concept by chef Val M. Cantú continues to be one of the hottest tickets in the entire Bay Area. Cantú and his team's creations, along with an acclaimed wine program that often pours wines from Mexico's growing wine industry, remain as special as ever, crafting what is possibly the country's leading Mexican-influenced fine-dining experience. As wonderful as what's on the table is, the posh black-walled setting with contemporary art and dramatic chandeliers is just as notable. It's also possible to make a reservation for seating at the intimate bar (with the same menu as the dining room), where guests can have a front-row seat for watching the terrific tequila and mezcal cocktails being made.

COMMUNION Restaurant & Bar

$$ | Central District Fodor's Choice

This acclaimed Black-owned restaurant dishes up “Seattle soul" in a vibrant setting. Think exquisitely prepared soul food that pays homage to family traditions, alongside creative fare honoring Seattle's multicultural intersections, like the whole fried catfish topped with a Thai-inspired papaya salad. The cocktail menu is just as creative, featuring Seattle-meets-the-South cocktails concocted with bourbon, pecan liqueur, Jamaican rum, and apple brandy, to name a few. 

The Coplin Dinner House

$$$ Fodor's Choice

Stretched aside Route 27 as it curves into Stratton, this eye-catching white farmhouse restaurant has an inconspicuous rear entrance, allowing for maximum use of original rooms, one tin-ceilinged, and an old-fashioned glassed porch-turned-dining space. The seasonal menu features ingredients from area farms and items range from halibut to rack of lamb. The establishment’s modern pub has a separate menu. The restaurant’s entrepreneurial owners also have a more causal eatery in the village, Backstrap Bar & Grille, that’s home to a shop selling fine cuts of meat as well as seafood, including Maine lobsters and steamer clams (live or cooked).

8252 Carrabassett Rd., Stratton, ME, USA
207-246–0016
Known For
  • Traditional rum butter-soaked doughnut topped with house-made ice cream and toppings
  • Prix fixe three-course menu
  • The pub offers a more casual menu
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.–Tues. late May–mid-Oct. and late Nov.–mid-April. Closed mid-Oct.–late Nov. and mid-Apr.–late May. No lunch

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Cotogna

$$$ | Financial District Fodor's Choice

The draw at this rustic-sleek trattoria is chef Michael Tusk's (also the chef of the nearby Quince and Verjus) flavorful, seasonally driven Italian cooking, headlined by pastas, beautifully grilled or spit-roasted meats, and homemade gelato. The look inside and outside is comfortably chic, with wood tables, quality stemware, and fantastic Italian wines by the bottle and glass.

490 Pacific Ave., San Francisco, CA, 94133, USA
415-775–8508
Known For
  • Raviolo with brown butter and egg in center
  • Tough to get dinner reservations
  • Produce from Fresh Run Farm in antipasti
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch Tues.--Thurs.
Reservations essential

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Crossroads Kitchen

$$$$ | West Hollywood Fodor's Choice

A celebrity favorite for vegan and vegetarian diners, Crossroads's level of plant-based inventiveness knows no bounds. The dining room is dimly lit with red-leather booths and a full bar. Diners enjoy the artichoke oysters, eggplant short rib, pizzas, and house made pastas. They serve coffee and pastries on the weekends on the outdoor patio starting at 10 in the morning.

Daniel

$$$$ | Upper East Side Fodor's Choice

At his namesake restaurant, celebrity-chef Daniel Boulud offers one of Manhattan's most refined dining experiences in an equally elegant dining room with a formal dress code (men's jacket required). A predominantly French-driven, five- or nine-course prix-fixe menu is served. Selections can encompass such seasonal and modern classics as upstate New York foie gras, Maine lobster, local venison, and other decadent dishes. Vegetarian menus are also available. Equally impressive are the professional service, extensive wine list, and masterful cocktails. Don't forget the decadent desserts and enticing artisan cheese trolley. 

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.

Gracias Madre

$$$$ | West Hollywood Fodor's Choice

Gracis Madre is known for its creative plant-based Mexican cuisine made from scratch. Everything is organic, non-GMO, and vegan, sourced from local and regenerative farmers. The large patio is popular on warm days and evenings. 

Hog Island Oyster Company

$$ | Embarcadero Fodor's Choice

A thriving oyster farm north of San Francisco in Tomales Bay serves up its harvest at this raw bar and restaurant in the Ferry Building, where devotees come for impeccably fresh oysters on the half shell. Other mollusk-centered options include first-rate clam chowder, grilled oysters, and steamed Manila clams; the kitchen also makes one of the city's best grilled cheese sandwiches.

1 Ferry Bldg., San Francisco, CA, 94111, USA
415-391–7117
Known For
  • Crowds slurping dozens of oysters with glasses of rosé
  • Local fish crudos and ceviches
  • Superior Bloody Mary
Restaurant Details
Reservations not accepted

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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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Meals by Genet

$$$ | Mid-Wilshire Fodor's Choice

Along Fairfax Avenue in the Little Ethiopia neighborhood locals and visitors can enjoy Ethiopian signatures like tofu tibs; spicy chicken dorowat; and potato, green bean, onion, and carrot atkilt. Chef-owner Genet Agonafer transports diners to Addis Ababa.

MXO by Wes Avila Restaurant

$$$$ | West Hollywood Fodor's Choice

Sunday brunch at James Beard Award Finalist Wes Avila's MXO has churro French toast, yellow corn pancakes, and Puerto Nuevo lobster on the menu. Located in the heart of vibrant West Hollywood, the menu is a tribute to Chef Avila's Mexican roots and Los Angeles upbringing; the MXO stands for "Mexican Origins." The wood-fired preparations are at the heart of traditional Mexican cuisine infused with seasonal California ingredients. Try the sweet potato taquitos, grilled cabbage Caesar salad, and pork al pastor.

Reading Room Restaurant

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

The sunset unfolds on Frenchman Bay beyond a curved window wall as a pianist plays and diners set glasses on white tablecloths between sips—this iconic Bar Harbor Inn restaurant delivers what the setting commands with finely prepared and sourced choices like grilled filet of beef and seared scallops. Breakfast is also served in the Reading Room, which chef Zach Dallesandro has re-elevated post-pandemic. He's also started growing greens in-house, and salads here are generous—try the arugula with beets and burrata. A men’s social club built the historic property in 1887 as the Mount Desert Reading Room, and the restaurant’s Oasis Lounge evokes that past.

7 Newport Dr., Bar Harbor, ME, 04609, USA
207-288–3351
Known For
  • Dressing up for dinner, though it's not required
  • Oh-so-soft bread served with whipped blueberry butter
  • Desserts like Spiced Apple Bomb (brown butter biscuit with bourbon caramel sauce) and blueberry pie like grandma made it
Restaurant Details
Closed mid-Oct.–late Mar. No lunch
Reservations essential

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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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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.

Water Street Tavern & Inn

$$$ Fodor's Choice

The wood-warmed interior of this shingled building on Lubec's working waterfront invites diners to order a good meal and stay awhile, as do water views flowing beyond the picture windows and the deck. Sweet scallops and boiled lobster (2 pounders!) from local waters are always on the menu, but entrées change with the seasons—halibut in spring, filet mignon in July and August, and sometimes moqueca (a Brazilian seafood stew). The bar is a great place to grab a coffee, beer, or glass of wine, and if you want the lowdown on where to go or what to see in Lubec, this is the place to ask.

12 Water St., Lubec, ME, 04652, USA
941-524–6871
Known For
  • Reservations typically needed in peak season
  • Large wine list and "generous" pours
  • Also four guest rooms and a cozy suite
Restaurant Details
Closed late Oct.–mid-May; Sun. and Mon. mid-May–late Oct. (Tues. and Wed. also in shoulder seasons). No lunch

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Biga on the Banks

$$$$ | River Walk Fodor's Choice
Biga on the Banks, River Walk
Tracey Maurer

One of the city's best restaurants, Biga on the Banks's menu is big and eclectic, and the dining atmosphere manages to be both larger than life and romantic. To take advantage of the freshest ingredients available, award-winning chef Bruce Auden and his chefs update their New American fine-dining menus daily and post them on the website at 5 pm. Dishes can range from seared American red snapper to 11-spiced Axis venison and Lockhart quail. Don't skip dessert, which may be the best in town: the sticky toffee pudding is a must. Table 31 is just off the main dining room, a great spot for relaxed entertaining for 5 to 8 people.  This is a prime spot for a leisurely dinner on the River Walk, if you can get a reservation. Let's repeat that: reservations are essential.

203 S. Saint Mary's St., San Antonio, TX, 78205, USA
210-225–0722
Known For
  • Reservations are a must
  • Three-course prix-fixe menu
  • Sticky toffee pudding for dessert
Restaurant Details
Reservations essential

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The Ravenous Pig

$$$$ Fodor's Choice
The Ravenous Pig, Winter Park
Douglas Nesbitt

The Pig established the gastropub category in Orlando and then went on to spawn several offshoots. Run by James and Julie Petrakis, a husband-and-wife chef team with multiple James Beard Award nominations, its delicacies include pork porterhouse and the pub burger, though the daily-changing menu always includes less-expensive pub fare like rock shrimp tacos and homemade pretzels. All charcuterie is made in-house, from the spiced orange salami to the game-bird terrine. Adjacent is the Ravenous Pig Brewing Co., serving small-barrel craft beers and ales in a beer garden. The Pig received the Michelin Bib Gourmand designation in 2022, which recognizes great food at great value.

565 W. Fairbanks Ave., FL, 32789, USA
407-628–2333
Known For
  • Popular foodie destination
  • Homemade charcuterie
  • Adjacent Ravenous Pig Brewing Co. beer garden
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No lunch Tues.–Fri.
Reservations essential

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12 Gage Restaurant

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

When the sun sets, this intimate, fireplace-warmed indoor-outdoor restaurant is the best place to eat and socialize in Marathon. The innovative menu, featuring fresh produce from the Gage Hotel Garden across the railroad tracks, changes with the season but maintains a Southwestern flair. Entrées sizzle with prime steaks, cornmeal-fried-oyster nachos, and stuffed Texas quail. After dinner you can belly up to the bar at the White Buffalo, where people-watching is always a kick.

101 N.W. 1st St., Marathon, TX, 79842, USA
432-386–4205
Known For
  • Beef tenderloin fillet
  • Extensive wine list
  • Mexican chocolate brownie with ice cream and homemade cajeta (Mexican caramel) sauce
Restaurant Details
Reservations essential

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18 Central Oyster Bar and Grill

$$$ Fodor's Choice

18 Central Oyster Bar and Grill produces excellent, creative dishes in a cozy spot high above Rockport's working harbor. Seasonally inspired, locally harvested seafood plus dishes with a hint of Southern comfort make up the backbone of the menu—think fried green tomatoes with local peekytoe crab, chili oil, and microgreens, or crispy fried chicken accompanied by collards and heirloom grits. More northerly flavor shines in such choices as finnan haddie (cold-smoked haddock), roasted mussels, and diver scallops.

18 Central St., Rockport, ME, 04856, USA
207-466–9055
Known For
  • Evenly paced, well-balanced dinners transition gracefully from one course to the next
  • Lively atmosphere encouraged by botanically infused cocktails
  • Packed as soon as the door opens for dinner
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues.–Thurs. No lunch
Reservations strongly advised; credit card required to secure reservations for more than 4; max party size 8

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1886 Cafe & Bakery

$$ | Downtown Fodor's Choice

Start your day at this timeless, Victorian-style café in the historic Driskill Hotel. Admire the classic architecture and expertly appointed interiors as you wait to place your order at the counter, whether it's a Texas-shaped pecan waffle or a cup of their famed cheese soup. The expanded breakfast menu features contemporary additions like the Hippie Hollow Omelet and brunch cocktails like the "Breakfast in a Cup," made with Jameson, orange juice, butterscotch syrup, and spicy maple bacon.

604 Brazos St., Austin, TX, 78701, USA
512-439–1234
Known For
  • Signature 1886 chocolate cake made with a heritage family recipe
  • Historic interiors in a lively Sixth Street setting
  • Mouthwatering baked goods, desserts, and grab-and-go treats

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1921 Mount Dora

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

The gift shop of the Modernism Museum across the street is attached to this tearoom-turned-restaurant, which helps to explain its striking and sublime decor. The menu changes daily featuring dishes from Florida and elsewhere in the South that are made using local ingredients whenever possible; roasted oysters, slow-cooked octopus with Japanese eggplant, or barbecue lamb shank are just some of the possibilities.

2 Amys

$$ | Upper Northwest Fodor's Choice

Call it the Brando of D.C. pizzerias, because this Neapolitan sensation has played godfather to a number of throne-stealing wood ovens elsewhere in town since it opened more than a decade ago. Simple recipes allow the ingredients to shine through and make the "wine bar" menu of small Italian plates as exemplary as the pies. You may be tempted to go for the D.O.C. pizza (it has Denominazione di Origine Controllata approval for Neapolitan authenticity), but don't hesitate to try the meatballs, salt cod croquettes, deviled eggs, or really any of the little things. At busy times, there can be a wait for a table, and the noisy din of a packed house may discourage some diners.

3715 Macomb St. NW, Washington, DC, 20016, USA
202-885–5700
Known For
  • Authentic Neapolitan wood-fired pizza with a chewy crust
  • Homemade charcuterie at the wine bar
  • Family-friendly (read: noisy) atmosphere
Restaurant Details
No lunch Mon.–Fri.
Reservations not accepted

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21 Greenpoint

$$$ | Greenpoint Fodor's Choice
Co-owned by Homer Murray (actor Bill Murray's son), this restaurant gained notoriety when it relaunched with a legendary event featuring the older Murray tending bar. But it's worth a visit, with or without Bill, for chef Sean Telo's creative menus that aim to make tasty dishes while sourcing sustainably and reducing food waste; from tempura-coated shishito peppers to wood-fired pizzas, it's always fun to see what he'll come up with. The urban-rustic design (white subway tiles, wooden tables, hanging plants) is equally welcoming for weekend brunch or a romantic dinner by candlelight.
21 Greenpoint Ave., Brooklyn, NY, 11222, USA
718-383–8833
Known For
  • Owned by Bill Murray's son
  • Creative menu
  • Dedication to sustainability
Restaurant Details
No lunch weekdays

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