417 Best Restaurants in Washington, USA

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

Deru Market

$$ Fodor's Choice

An organic café with everything you need for a picnic to-go or a leisurely lunch, Deru Market has something for everything. The bright, modern space starts the day with excellent coffee and pastries, with filling brunches on weekends. Lunch brings pizza, sandwiches, and salads, plus a few larger plates, while dinner brings a few extra main dishes. Vegetable side dishes compete with excellent French fries for table space, and most diners save room for a slice of the layer cakes that sit temptingly on the counter.

723 9th Ave, Seattle, 98033, USA
425-298–0268
Known For
  • Beautiful cakes
  • Pretty interior
  • Excellent vegetable dishes
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.--Tues.
The line can get long, but you can join it remotely from the restaurant's website

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Dining Room at Sun Mountain Lodge

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

A sylvan hilltop overlooking the Methow Valley sets the scene for an extraordinary dining experience featuring upscale Pacific Northwest cuisine with local and often organic ingredients, artfully presented and served in an elegant yet unpretentious, wood-filled setting. Highlights include chicken curry soup, mushroom strudel, prime beef tenderloin, and Columbia River steelhead. Desserts vary by the season: apple pie with house-made ice cream is a fall favorite, while pavlova with sugared cranberries is refreshing in winter. Beignets make an appearance on the breakfast menu, along with a tasty BLTA croissant. The 3,500-bottle wine cellar is one of the best and most extensive in the region.

Dino's Tomato Pie

$ Fodor's Choice
Long hailed as the creator of Seattle’s best pizza at his first shop, Delancey, Brandon Pettit perhaps even improves on his previous recipe as he re-creates the neighborhood joints of his New Jersey childhood. The thick, crisp corners of the square Sicilian pies caramelize in the hot oven into what is practically pizza candy, while lovers of traditional round pizza will enjoy the char on the classics. Toppings buck the New Jersey theme by adhering to Seattle style: high-quality and often local. Cocktails at the bar are affordable and simple—including Dino’s own twist on old-school drinks like hard lemonade and Long Island iced tea.
1524 E. Olive Way, Seattle, 98122, USA
Known For
  • Square pizza
  • Creative cocktails
  • Adults only
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. No lunch

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Recommended Fodor's Video

Doe Bay Cafe

$$$ Fodor's Choice

Most of the tables in this warmly rustic dining room at Doe Bay Resort overlook the tranquil body of water for which the café is named. This is a popular stop for brunch or dinner before or after hiking or biking in nearby Moran State Park—starting your day off with a smoked-salmon Benedict with Calabrian-chili hollandaise will provide you with plenty of fuel for recreation. The kitchen uses ingredients foraged from the lush resort garden in such artful, healthy dinner creations as crisp-skinned wild salmon with onion-port jam, dandelion greens, salsify-chevre-quinoa cakes, and walnuts; and Thai green curry with local spot prawns.

107 Doe Bay Rd., Orcas Island, 98279, USA
360-376–8059
Known For
  • Locally sourced and foraged ingredients
  • Smoked-salmon Benedict
  • Funky, rustic vibe
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues.–Thurs. Limited hrs Oct.–May; call ahead

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Drayton Harbor Oyster Company

$$ Fodor's Choice

With a dining room and deck that overlook the bay that supplies this venerable seafood company's delicious, briny oysters, this funky spot serves bivalves in a variety of formats: raw on the half shell, in a creamy stew, fried in po'boys, or grilled with a garlic-butter-wine sauce and other tasty toppings. It's in downtown Blaine, less than a mile from the Canadian border, and 16 miles west of Lynden.

685 Peace Portal Dr., 98230, USA
360-656–5958
Known For
  • Interesting daily specials
  • Comfy dining room heated by a gas fireplace
  • Excellent selection of wine and beer
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. and Wed.

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The Early Bird

$ Fodor's Choice

From students recovering after a night of partying to hikers fueling up before hitting the trail, this cozy downtown café with big windows and an expansive side patio serves brunch daily—with cocktails, if you wish. Specialties include breakfast poutine with sausage gravy and salsa verde, banana–and–macadamia nut waffles, and avocado toast on sourdough with eggs, cotija cheese, and cherry tomatoes.

Elements Restaurant

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

A favorite spot for special occasions, this intimate downtown bistro is highly regarded for its deftly prepared, European-influenced Northwestern cuisine, such as Spanish-style octopus a la plancha with harissa and kalamata olive oil emulsion, and cocoa-and-chile-rubbed New York strip steak with red wine honey. Elements is also one of the best brunch spots in town—consider the Dungeness crab Benedict.

907 Main St., OR, 98660, USA
360-258–0989
Known For
  • Decadent steak and seafood grills
  • Exceptional cocktail list
  • Banana cream pie with caramel sauce
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. No lunch. No dinner Sun.

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Epulo Bistro

$$$ Fodor's Choice

This spacious, high-ceilinged space with a big outdoor garden patio strung with pretty lights adjoins the Cascadia Art Museum and serves seasonally focused Mediterranean food with plenty of Northwestern influences. It's very easy to make a meal here of several tantalizing small plates, like sautéed brussels sprouts with bacon, but the entrées—fettuccine with a Kobe beef Bolognese sauce, roast duck with butternut squash polenta—are well worth considering.

190 Sunset Ave. W, Edmonds, 98020, USA
425-678–8680
Known For
  • Inviting outdoor seating
  • Cured meat boards and fresh burrata
  • Wood-fired pizzas with inventive toppings
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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Fern Thai

$$ Fodor's Choice

Murals of tropical flowers and, of course, massive ferns decorate the softly lighted, sunny dining room of this superb restaurant in the heart of downtown Bellevue, which serves some of the best Thai food in greater Seattle. Specialties include Gai Tod Hat Yai, a deep-fried marinated half-chicken served with a panang curry dipping sauce and roti bread, and salmon grilled and served over a rich coconut curry sauce with eggplant and green beans. 

10134 Main St., Bellevue, 98004, USA
425-326–1624
Known For
  • Attractive sidewalk and patio seating
  • Fragrant, entrée-size soups
  • Very good selection of craft beers on tap

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Finistère

$$$ Fodor's Choice

In an uncluttered, light-filled storefront space in Uptown, this hip neighborhood bistro opened by a husband-wife team with experience at some of New York City's and Seattle's top restaurants turns out some of the most flavorful locavore-driven cuisine on the peninsula. You might start with sunchoke soup with chives and truffle oil, before graduating to rabbit lasagna with sofrito and mustard greens, or seared scallops with romesco, cauliflower, and Meyer lemon.

1025 Lawrence St., Port Townsend, 98368, USA
360-344–8127
Known For
  • Delicious sweets and goods to go at adjacent Lawrence Street Provisions
  • Romantic, candlelit dining room
  • House-made pastas with inventive sauces
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon., Tues., and Jan. No lunch weekdays

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FlintCreek Cattle Co.

$$$ | Greenwood Fodor's Choice

Ethically sourced meats, from steak cuts to gamier dishes such as bison, wild boar, and duck, headline the menu at FlintCreek, where floor-to-ceiling windows overlook a busy corner of Greenwood. A small-plates section features a cumin-dusted lamb tartare as well as mussels bathed in charred jalapeño-lime butter, while main-dish standouts include a brined pork chop on grits and a hanger steak topped with onion marmalade. The industrial-chic two-story lofted space, which has double-high ceilings and a lovely bar backed with modern yellow tile, is usually lively but not too loud, and the service is reliably solid.

Fountain Café

$$ Fodor's Choice

Local artwork lines the walls of this cozy, eclectic bistro inside a historic clapboard building a block off the main drag, near the foot of the Taylor Street staircase. The delicious seafood- and pasta-intensive menu reveals Mediterranean and Pacific Northwest influences—think cioppino with local shellfish in a tomato-saffron broth, and roasted walnut and gorgonzola penne with wild boar. There's a notable list of regional and Italian wines, and several imported ports and sherries to accompany any of the rich desserts.

920 Washington St., 98368, USA
360-385–1364
Known For
  • Friendly, unpretentious service
  • Fresh-baked baguette with herbed butter
  • Warm gingerbread with vanilla custard
Restaurant Details
Reservations not accepted

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Frank's Diner

$$ Fodor's Choice

Right off the Maple Street Bridge, this is the state's oldest railroad-car restaurant; built as an observation car in 1906, it has original light fixtures, stained-glass windows, and mahogany details. Generously sized breakfasts are the specialty here, including unique items like Creole Benedict with lobster, shrimp, and crab. On the sweeter side, there's orange cranberry French toast and cinnamon roll waffles. For dinner there's such comfort food as turkey with mashed potatoes, meat loaf, and chicken-fried steak.

Hama Hama Oyster Saloon

$$ Fodor's Choice

You'll find Hama Hama oysters, which are harvested from this Hood Canal shellfish operation that's been going strong since 1922, at some of the top restaurants in the Pacific Northwest. Here at the farm store and in the open-air (dress warmly on cool days) saloon, you can enjoy these fresh-shucked bivalves—along with clams and mussels raw or wood-roasted with chipotle-bourbon butter—and other tasty pub fare at lunch. Save room for the warm-chocolate fudge brownie.

35846 U.S. 101, Lilliwaup, 98555, USA
360-877–5811
Known For
  • Local wines, ciders, and craft beers
  • Clams steamed in halibut–yellow curry bone broth
  • Expansive patio with water views
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.–Thurs. in winter. No dinner

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Homeskillet

$ Fodor's Choice
This decidedly offbeat breakfast and lunch spot in a quiet neighborhood just north of downtown stands out both for its prodigious portions of rib-sticking all-day breakfast fare and its funny (and often freaky) decorative elements, from dozens of clown paintings and figurines to its psychedelic color scheme. Prepare for a wait, especially on weekend mornings, and if you can possibly save room for dessert, the seasonal fruit (peach-blueberry, for example) bread puddings are to die for.
521 Kentucky St., Bellingham, 98225, USA
360-676–6218
Known For
  • Wonderfully bizarre and kitschy decor
  • Chicken-fried steak with chorizo gravy
  • Homemade cinnamon-roll French toast
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No dinner

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Hood Famous Cafe + Bar

$ | International District Fodor's Choice

Starting out small and growing on word of mouth, Chera Amlag's bakery and bar sprouted from the desserts she made for her husband's Filipino pop-up dinners. A 2022 expansion grew this elegant I.D. space where she serves her dazzling purple ube cheesecake, alongside cafe foods with Filipino touches, like hot dog ensaymadas and pan de sal sandwiches. Their coffee program can compete with some of Seattle's best, using beans from the Philippines and around Southeast Asia to make pour-over, espresso, and specialty drinks. In the evening, the menu changes to more dinner-style dishes along with drinks, still focused on Filipino flavors.

HopTown Wood Fired Pizza

$ Fodor's Choice

This down-home pizza parlor between Zillah and Yakima celebrates the produce of Yakima Valley with wood-fired pizzas topped with an array of interesting ingredients, such as roasted garlic, house-smoked mozzarella, blueberries, pine nuts, and—most notably—locally grown Cascade hops. Aptly, there's a great selection of hoppy Northwest ales, too. A second location in Sunnyside is slated to open in mid-summer 2023.

2560 Donald Wapato Rd., Wapato, 98951, USA
509-952–4414
Known For
  • Wood-fired elephant ear pastries with local honey
  • Fantastic local beer and cider list
  • Inviting outdoor space
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. No lunch Wed. and Thurs.

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La Tarasca

$ Fodor's Choice
Fans of Michoacán-style Mexican food have been known to schedule their Portland–Seattle road trips to hit this festive but unfussy family-run restaurant for dinner. Authentic meals start with pickled carrots instead of chips and salsa, and favorite dishes include classic chicken mole and carne en su jugo, a heady soup of steak strips, bacon, onion, and cilantro, served with tortillas.
1001 W. Main St., Centralia, 98531, USA
360-736--7756
Known For
  • Save room for the rich and spicy bread pudding
  • Dining room has a casual, colorful vibe
  • Regional dishes like chicken mole
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues.

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Little Conejo

$ Fodor's Choice

One of the region's best purveyors of authentic Mexico City–style tacos, this hip little counter-service cantina also boasts an impressive mezcal and margarita cocktails. About 10 reasonably priced tacos are offered, including slow-cooked brisket with fried jalapeños, garlic-roasted oyster mushrooms with salsa verde, and chorizo and crispy grilled cheese. There's a second location in the suburb of Ridgefield.

Los Hernandez Tamales

$ Fodor's Choice

From this humble mom-and-pop shop in Union Gap come heavenly tamales—shredded chicken and pork and, during spring, asparagus and pepper jack cheese. Order a pile of these delicacies that have been acclaimed by locals and critics alike—the restaurant even earned a vaunted James Beard Foundation award in the American Classics category. And what you can't eat during your visit, you can take with you to go. There's a newer, bigger, but somewhat less atmospheric branch on the west side of Yakima. 

Mackinaw's Restaurant

$$ Fodor's Choice

In a vintage brick building in downtown Chehalis, a 10-minute drive south of Centralia, you'll find the region's most sophisticated restaurant, a source of consistently imaginative, fresh Pacific Northwest fare at reasonable prices. The seasonally driven menu changes daily but might feature a starter of cheddar ale fondue with apple, artisan bread, and sausage, followed by Parmesan-crusted whitefish with a light lemon-dill sauce, or sliced duck breast with a black-cherry-and-walnut reduction—it's pretty urbane fare for this laid-back, down-home part of Washington.

545 N. Market St., Chehalis, 98532, USA
360-740–8000
Known For
  • Extensive list of local beers and wines
  • Beautifully presented dishes
  • Chocolate-coffee pots de creme
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch

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Mana

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

Set in a buttery yellow cottage with a touch of gingerbread trim, this unfussy eatery offers a refreshing break from Leavenworth's Bavaria-on-steroids exuberance. The kitchen presents artfully plated five-course meals (reservations required) of mostly organic, farm-sourced Northwestern fare. The food during these leisurely, two-and-a-half-hour repasts is simply sublime. Covered, heated outdoor dining offers privacy, and indoor dining gives a full view of the kitchen.

1033 Commercial St., Leavenworth, 98826, USA
509-548–1662
Known For
  • Changing menus with sophisticated global influences
  • Exquisite taste and presentation
  • Pairings of wine or non-alcoholic beverages offered
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.–Thurs. No lunch
Reservations essential

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Marination Ma Kai

$ Fodor's Choice

The best view of Downtown comes at an affordable price: the brightly colored Adirondack chairs outside this Korean-Hawaiian fish shack offer a panoramic view of the entire Downtown area. Inside, you’ll find tacos filled with Korean beef or “sexy tofu,” Spam slider sandwiches, and a classic fish-and-chips—served with kimchi tartar sauce. For dessert, the Hawaiian shaved ice makes it the perfect place to begin or end a beach walk on Alki—and to order more drinks through the sliding cocktail window on the side of the patio.

Mashiko

$$ Fodor's Choice

Though it opened in 1994 as a typical neighborhood sushi joint, Mashiko quickly gained a reputation as one of the top spots in town for fresh fish, even before the then-owner turned it into the first sushi restaurant to commit to solely sustainable fish. Now owned by his employees and mentees, it continues to uphold its reputation for both quality and a forward-thinking approach to the cuisine. As a product of both, the sushi here skips many classics that don't meet its standards and instead finds sustainable substitutes. But the resulting creativity makes for a unique, environmentally friendly meal, best eaten omakase-style: letting the chef choose the menu.

4725 California Ave. SW, Seattle, 98116, USA
206-935–4339
Known For
  • Creative spins on classic sushi
  • Great omakase
  • Sustainable sushi
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. No lunch
Reservations recommended

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Matt's in the Market

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

One of the most beloved of Pike Place Market's restaurants, Matt's is all about intimate dining, fresh ingredients, and superb service. You can perch at the bar for pints and the signature deviled eggs or be seated at a table—complete with vases filled with flowers from the market—for a seasonal menu that synthesizes the best picks from the restaurant's produce vendors and an excellent wine list. Dinner entrées always include at least one catch of the day—perhaps a whole fish in saffron broth or Alaskan halibut with pea vines. Your first dinner at Matt's is like a first date you hope will never end. It is owned by Dan Bugge, a bit of a celebrity himself, having appeared on TV shows with Martha Stewart, Anthony Bourdain, and Bobby Flay.

May Kitchen + Bar

$$ Fodor's Choice

This is where sophisticated foodies swoon over delectable and highly authentic Thai dishes. The ambience is scene-y (atypical for Vashon): dark with fully paneled walls in mahogany and teak—wood that owner May Chaleoy had shipped from Thailand, where it previously lived in the interior of a 150-year-old home.

17614 Vashon Hwy. SW, 98070, USA
206-408–7196
Known For
  • Real-deal Thai food that goes way beyond pad Thai
  • Vibrant atmosphere
  • Unique cocktails
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. No lunch
Reservations highly recommended

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McGlinn's Public House

$$ Fodor's Choice

A beloved downtown gastropub with rustic brick walls and soaring wood-beam ceilings, McGlinn's serves elevated comfort fare, including cavatappi with chipotle sauce, lamb tzatziki burgers, and wood-fired pizzas with inventive toppings (the blueberry-prosciutto is a favorite). There's an extensive craft-beer list, and desserts are worth saving room for. Hearty breakfasts of beer bread French toast, fried chicken with biscuits and gravy, and scrambles are served weekends.

111 Orondo Ave., Wenatchee, 98801, USA
509-663–9073
Known For
  • Chocolate chip pizza and peanut butter pie
  • Good weekend breakfasts
  • Lively, friendly crowd
Restaurant Details
No brunch weekdays
No reservations

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MyCovio's

$$$ Fodor's Choice

A tiny gem set in a weathered-shingle cottage within walking distance of the beach, MyCovio's is one of the few dining options on the upper portion of the Long Beach Peninsula, and it's well worth the drive for sublime pastas and other Italian-inspired fare. The cioppino swimming with local seafood is stellar, as is spaghetti with matsutake mushrooms and slow-roasted seasonal vegetables. Next door, the owners run a cute waffle shack that's open for breakfast and lunch.

1311 Bay Ave., Ocean Park, 98640, USA
360-642–3475
Known For
  • Quirky, intimate dining room
  • Charred romaine hearts with Dungeness crab
  • Panna cotta with rotating seasonal flavors
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. and Wed. No lunch

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Narrative Coffee

$ Fodor's Choice

Set in a dramatic 1920s downtown building with exposed rafters, big skylights, and plenty of seating, this accomplished third-wave coffeehouse is an inviting place to linger over a latte or cold brew. It's also one of Everett's best breakfast and lunch options, featuring choices like ricotta toast and bacon-brussels sprouts salads. There's a second location in Bellingham.

2927 Wetmore Ave., Everett, 98201, USA
425-322–4648
Known For
  • Mochas made with artisan dark chocolate
  • Buttermilk biscuit breakfast sandwiches
  • Cheerful living room-esque interior
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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Nell Thorn

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

On a breezy, sunny day, it's hard to find a more inviting spot for lunch or dinner than the deck of this upscale farm-to-table restaurant overlooking the pleasure boats chugging along downtown La Conner's Swinomish Channel. Whether you dine inside or out, expect a menu of stellar Pacific Northwest fare, perhaps lightly fried local oysters with lemon aioli to start, followed by a bone-in Kurobuta pork chop with stone-ground mustard demi-glace.