14 Best Restaurants in The Bay Area, California

Camper

$$$ Fodor's choice

If there’s such a genre as refined camping fare, then that is what chef Greg Kuzia-Carmel offers guests at his warm, bustling restaurant. Local fish, meats, and produce are highlighted, with dishes that beautifully blend pastoral with contemporary. Pastas are a particular strength, as are cocktails from the fun bar. It’s a big city–feeling restaurant where it’s possible to have an ambitious meal of charcoal-stained spaghetti with Dungeness crab, but it’s also a relaxed spot for a casual date night or to come solo for a quick cheeseburger (with an incredible “secret sauce”). 

898 Santa Cruz Ave., Menlo Park, California, 94025, USA
650-321–8980
Known For
  • cast-iron buttermilk cornbread
  • smoked half chicken from Petaluma
  • excellent wine list
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. No lunch

Chez Panisse Café & Restaurant

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Alice Waters's legendary eatery, the birthplace of California cuisine, first opened its doors in 1971. It's still known for a passionate dedication to locally sourced heirloom varieties of fruits and vegetables, heritage breeds, and ethically farmed or foraged ingredients. The restaurant offers formal prix-fixe menus and personal service, while its upstairs café serves simpler fare in a more casual setting. Both menus change daily, and legions of loyal fans insist that Chez Panisse lives up to its reputation. Reservations are practically essential. 

1517 Shattuck Ave., Berkeley, California, 94709, USA
510-548–5525-restaurant
Known For
  • sustainably sourced meats
  • attention to detail
  • pizzas and fruit galettes upstairs
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch in restaurant. No lunch Tues.–Thurs. in café, Reservations essential

Protégé

$$$$ Fodor's choice

A pair of French Laundry alums—protégés of some of the culinary world’s greatest chefs—are the driving forces of this fine-dining standout near the train station on California Avenue. The restaurant is split into two parts: the main formal restaurant with an elaborate tasting menu at a high price point; and the sleek lounge area where the menu is à la carte. Co-owner/master sommelier Dennis Kelly is one of the country’s brilliant wine minds, and his restaurant undoubtedly has one of the Bay Area’s truly magnificent wine programs. Co-owner/chef Anthony Secviar spearheads the excellent haute French-seasonal Californian cooking.

Recommended Fodor's Video

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 prix-fixe 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,

Bird Dog

$$

It’s a little strange for a chic, contemporary-minded restaurant to be best known for an avocado dish. However, that’s the case at chef Robbie Wilson’s suave downtown restaurant where the delicately grilled avocado has its own devoted following. The avocado has gentle grill grate marks and a ponzu sauce in the center. When a diner gets a forkful of the components, it’s a symphonic duet of creamy texture and umami-packed flavor. The bar is a popular spot for after-hours networking, while the dining room is a little more buttoned-up.

420 Ramona St., Palo Alto, California, 94301, USA
650-656–8180
Known For
  • inventive dishes with unique spices and sauces
  • best cocktails in town
  • fish crudo
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun.–Mon. No lunch.

Bungalow 44

$$

An open, well-lit space with booths and countertop seating from which diners can watch the cooks in action sets the scene at this lively eatery, which serves contemporary California cuisine and inventive cocktails. The menu focuses on locally sourced veggies and seafood. Diners can enjoy meals in the enclosed patio, alive with hanging plants and a crackling fireplace, or take their drinks and apps outdoors among the palms and firepits.

44 E. Blithedale Ave., Mill Valley, California, 94941, USA
415-381–2500
Known For
  • $1 oyster happy hour
  • root beer–braised short rib
  • kickin’ fried chicken
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No lunch

Bungalow Kitchen

$$$

Tiburon's low-key, mostly casual dining scene received a jolt of energy when celebrity chef Michael Mina and partner Brent Bolthouse opened this hip restaurant right next to the ferry dock in 2021. It's certainly a scene and a place to dress up, yet it's also a compelling destination for terrific eats that don't adhere to many rules or cuisines other than high-quality ingredients. There's jalapeño shrimp toast and sweet potato pancakes topped with gravlax, and then there's also Mina's signature lobster potpie and a cacio e pepe pasta with shaved truffles. It's a restaurant that's hard not to love and have fun at.

5 Main St., Tiburon, California, 94920, USA
415-366–4088
Known For
  • tuna tartare and yellowtail sashimi preparations
  • festive, prix-fixe weekend brunch
  • the rare Marin restaurant with food on weekends until midnight
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues. No lunch weekdays

Daytrip

$$

A "fermentation-driven" restaurant sounds a bit odd, but you'll find a thrilling, umami-packed experience at this compact Temescal spot. With a disco ball overhead, you expect somebody to get up and dance with how groovy the vibe is. But the food and fresh, low-intervention wines are so great that nobody wants to shift their attention away from them. 

4316 Telegraph Ave., Oakland, California, 94609, USA
Known For
  • signature celery salad
  • colorful wall mural and Rubik's Cube–like counter
  • miso butter pasta
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No lunch weekdays, Reservations essential

Flea Street

$$$

Restaurants in Berkeley and San Francisco tend to get most of the credit for launching the local ingredient–focused farm-to-table California cuisine movement in the 1970s and 1980s. However, chef Jesse Cool played an enormous role in that as well when she opened this venerable restaurant in 1980. It’s a formal restaurant that also manages to be relaxed, where the menu changes frequently and always mentions many acclaimed Bay Area farms, ranches, and gardens. Pastas are a big strength for the restaurant, but the most excitement tends to come in the first course section, which includes vegetable preparations and a few compelling local seafood creations. Make sure to save room for the always satisfying, unfussy desserts. 

3607 Alameda de las Pulgas, Menlo Park, California, USA
650-854–1226
Known For
  • local-ingredient salads
  • grass-fed slow-braised short ribs
  • strong local-centric wine list
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch

Gather

$$

All things local, organic, seasonal, and sustainable harmonize at Gather. This haven for vegans, vegetarians, and carnivores alike serves up market and grain salads, shareable grilled local vegetables or cheese plates, roast chicken, and more in a vibrant, well-lit space that boasts funky light fixtures, shiny wood furnishings, and banquettes made of recycled leather belts.

Paseo: A California Bistro

$$$

In a cozy setting down a quiet alley with a beautiful brick-walled courtyard, peak seasonal produce and Northern California farms and artisans are highlighted on chef Brandon Breazeale. Start with one of the beautifully fresh salads before continuing on to a rustic yet refined main like duck breast with yellow mole and squash blossom tamale.

17 Throckmorton Ave., Mill Valley, California, 94941, USA
415-888–3907
Known For
  • locally rooted menu with exciting global influences
  • fantastic selection of wines and cocktails
  • weekend brunch dishes like huevos rancheros with homemade chorizo
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon. No lunch weekdays

Plumed Horse

$$$$

Plumed Horse is a venerable institution for outstanding luxury mixed with the brightness and freshness of local ingredients. The posh, shimmering space is highlighted by a giant glass wine storage area. Chef-owner Peter Armellino offers an elaborate tasting menu or full à la carte menu for guests. As formal as the restaurant can seem, it’s also a place where locals come to celebrate and have fun.

14555 Big Basin Way, Saratoga, California, 95070, USA
408-867–4711
Known For
  • incredible Champagne collection
  • black pepper and Parmesan soufflé
  • lively and well-heeled crowd
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues. No lunch

Pomet

$$

Many restaurants have direct relationships between nearby farms and the kitchen, but very few are truly co-owned. Here, with chef Alan Hsu at the helm in the kitchen, top-tier local produce is showcased in excellent contemporary Californian dishes. One of the co-owners also is part of the family that owns the renowned K&J Orchards, a supplier of top-tier produce to some of the Bay Area's greatest restaurants.

4029 Piedmont Ave., Oakland, California, 94611, USA
510-450–2541
Known For
  • "ugly mushroom" pasta with locally made miso butter
  • salt-and-pepper quail
  • warm, quaint setting with a large open kitchen
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues. No lunch

Selby's

$$$$

It’s a trip back in time at this elegant retro sibling to the Village Pub. Dishes are grand and elaborate, often with luxurious flourishes, yet deeply rooted in the seasonal focus that is the hallmark of California cuisine. It’s a delicious tie between the sensational black label truffle burger and the honey-lacquered duck breast for what is considered the signature dish here. The main dining room serves a three-course menu with several choices in each category; the bar menu is à la carte. The handsome mid-century modern design is worth a trip alone with impeccable details like perfectly smooth white tablecloths, miniature lamps on tables, a roaring fireplace, and a dramatic arched bar backdrop in the lounge.