New York City Restaurants

Ready to take a bite out of New York? Hope you've come hungry. In a city where creativity is expressed in innumerable ways, the food scene takes center stage, with literally thousands of chances to taste what Gotham is all about. Whether lining up at street stands, gobbling down legendary deli and diner grub, or chasing a coveted reservation at the latest celebrity-chef venue, New Yorkers are a demanding yet appreciative audience.

Every neighborhood offers temptations high, low, and in between, meaning there's truly something for every taste, whim, and budget. No matter how you approach dining out here, it's hard to go wrong. Planning a day of shopping among the glittering flagship boutiques along 5th and Madison Avenues? Stop into one of the Upper East Side's storied restaurants for a repast among the "ladies who lunch." Clubbing in the Meatpacking District? Tuck into a meal at eateries as trendy as their patrons. Craving authentic ethnic? From food trucks to hidden joints, there are almost more choices than there are appetites. Recent years have also seen entire food categories, from ramen to meatballs to mac 'n' cheese, riffed upon and fetishized, and at many restaurants you find an almost religious reverence for seasonal, locally sourced cuisine.

And don't forget—New York is still home to more celebrity chefs than any other city. Your chances of running into your favorite cookbook author, Food Network celeb, or paparazzi-friendly chef are high, adding even more star wattage to a restaurant scene with an already through-the-roof glamour quotient. Newfound economic realities, however, have revived appreciation for value, meaning you can tap into wallet-friendly choices at every level of the food chain. Rest assured, this city does its part to satisfy your appetite. Ready, set, eat.

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  • 1. Cosme

    $$$ | Flatiron District

    When Enrique Olvera, the chef at Pujol, which many agree is Mexico's best restaurant, announced he was coming north of the border, New York foodies went loco. Olvera's haute touch to his native cuisine is magic, and, coupled with the sleek design (soft lighting, minimalist decor), Cosme makes for a fine dining experience of sophisticated food, focused on small plates.

    35 E. 21st St., New York, New York, 10010, USA
    212-913–9659

    Known For

    • Creative Mexican fare
    • Duck carnitas
    • Corn tempura soft-shell crab

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No lunch weekdays
  • 2. Cote

    $$$$ | Flatiron District

    Cote has blown up the staid New York steak-house formula by infusing the experience with Korean twists: that shrimp cocktail might look classic, for instance, but just wait 'til the hot gochujang hits your palate. The steak omakase "tasting menu" is unique, allowing you to compare several cuts of meat, but you can go old-school and just focus on your favorite; everything is cooked tableside—by you or your server—at a smokeless grill.

    16 W. 22nd St., New York, New York, 10010, USA
    212-401‒7986

    Known For

    • Chic but casual atmosphere
    • Incredible dry-aged beef
    • "Butcher's Feast" is a great value bit of everything, including Korean side dishes

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No lunch
  • 3. Eleven Madison Park

    $$$$ | Flatiron District

    Luxury, precision, and creativity are the driving forces at this internationally renowned prix-fixe restaurant in a refined high-ceilinged space. Swiss-born chef Daniel Humm oversees the kitchen, concocting unexpected, often whimsical, dishes that change often but have a solid grounding in locavore American tastes. This is one of the most fine-tuned dining experiences you can have in New York City.

    11 Madison Ave., New York, New York, 10010, USA
    212-889–0905

    Known For

    • Ultimate special-occasion restaurant
    • Shorter tasting menu at the bar
    • Reserve ahead

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No lunch Mon.–Thurs., Credit cards accepted, Reservations essential
  • 4. Atoboy

    $$$$ | Flatiron District

    The minimalist concrete space and Ikea-ish tables and chairs might lack gravitas, but the beautifully plated, delicious food shows where Atoboy is focusing its energy. The four-course ($75), small-dish tasting-menu concept lets you sample a range of the kitchen's creative Korean flavors.

    43 E. 28th St., New York, New York, 10016, USA
    646-476–7217

    Known For

    • Addictive fried chicken with spicy peanut sauce
    • It's not typical Korean, so don't expect banchan appetizers
    • Some communal tables

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No lunch
  • 5. Boqueria

    $$ | Flatiron District

    Named for the bustling food market in Barcelona, Boqueria was part of the city's first wave of tapas restaurants when it opened back in 2006 and its popularity has never waned, thanks to the seasonal, creative, and delicious food. There are leather banquettes lining the main room and a few seats at the bar, but if you want to make friends, opt for the communal table running down the center of the dining room. This original spot in the Flatiron District is so popular it's spawned offshoots around New York City, as well as in Nashville, DC, and Chicago.

    53 W. 19th St., New York, New York, 10011, USA
    212-255–4160

    Known For

    • Reliable Spanish tapas
    • Happy hour menu (weekdays 2:30--5:30)
    • Fun atmosphere
  • Recommended Fodor’s Video

  • 6. Dough Doughnuts

    $ | Flatiron District

    There’s a reason why these doughnuts in multilicious flavors have become a signature at so many cafés throughout Manhattan and Brooklyn, and at this Manhattan outpost of the Bed-Stuy original, you can get them fresh out of the oven. The ever-popular (though odd-sounding) hibiscus doughnut looks gorgeous and has just the right amount of tart fruitiness to balance the sweetness of the dough; other favorites include passion fruit, salted chocolate, and cinnamon and sugar.

    14 W. 19th St., New York, New York, 10011, USA
    212-243–6844

    Known For

    • Creative flavors
    • Good coffee
    • There are a few tables
  • 7. Eataly NYC Flatiron

    $$ | Flatiron District

    Both a bustling food hall and a marketplace where you can shop for produce, baked goods, prepared foods, and kitchen staples, Eataly is a temple to all things gourmet Italian. You can graze at individual stands, sit down for a meal at one of several restaurants that each specialize in different aspects of Italian cuisine, or head upstairs to Serra by Birreria, a covered rooftop space that's open year-round and serves Italian specialties and microbrews that change with the seasons.

    200 5th Ave., New York, New York, 10010, USA
    212-229–2560

    Known For

    • Maddening crowds on the weekends
    • Italian foods from burrata to gelato
    • Gourmet everything to eat in or take home, at a price

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Reservations not accepted
  • 8. Ilili

    $$ | Flatiron District

    Famed Washington, D.C., restaurateur and chef Philippe Massoud brings his culinary talents—emphasizing cuisine from his native Lebanon—to New York City at this bi-level, 400-seat eatery. The menu of innovative Middle Eastern fare includes a mouth-watering variety of shareable hot and cold meze, as well as mains that run the gamut from lamb chops with za'atar to chicken livers with pomegranate molasses to duck shawarma with fig jam. Waiters never fail to refresh the basket of hot, fluffy, house-baked pita bread. A glass of Lebanese or French wine is a nice accompaniment to the cuisine.

    236 5th Ave., New York, New York, 10001, USA
    212-683–2929

    Known For

    • Creative Lebanese cuisine focused on small plates
    • House-baked pita
    • Nice wine list
  • 9. Odo

    $$$$ | Gramercy

    Some of the nation’s most highly regarded food has emerged from the kitchen at Odo, which serves elaborate multicourse Japanese meals known as kaiseki for lunch ($135) and dinner ($245). With just 14 counter seats around the small open kitchen, the experience is essentially a delicious kind of theater.

    17 W. 20th St., New York, New York, 10011, USA

    Known For

    • Local and seasonal foods rather than imported Japanese specialty items
    • Reservations essential
    • Impeccable service

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Mon. No dinner Sun. No lunch Tues., Reservations essential
  • 10. Rezdôra

    $$ | Flatiron District

    New York City has no shortage of Italian restaurants but Rezdôra stands out among the multitudes with its impeccable pastas with lineage from the under-represented Emilia-Romagna region of Northern Italy. The meat and fish secondi (second courses) are wonderfully executed as well, but the pasta (handmade and hand-rolled) steals the show.

    27 E. 20th St., New York, New York, 10003, USA
    646-692--9090

    Known For

    • Regional pasta tasting menu
    • Northern Italian wine list
    • Classy but casual atmosphere

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No lunch Mon.
  • 11. S&P Lunch

    $ | Flatiron District

    This classic luncheonette, formerly known as Eisenberg's, has been slinging eggs, frothing egg creams, and slicing white bread across from the Flatiron Building since 1928. Its latest incarnation, from Court Street Grocers, opened as S&P Lunch in 2022, with its retro atmosphere and menu intact. Seats at the long deli counter up front move quickly at breakfast and lunch; there's a smattering of tables at the back.

    174 5th Ave., New York, New York, 10010, USA
    212-691–8862

    Known For

    • Long deli counter popular with locals
    • Classic egg creams and tuna melts
    • Closes at 5 pm

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No dinner
  • 12. Shake Shack

    $ | Flatiron District

    Although there are other locations of Danny Meyer's burger joint around town and around the world, Madison Square Park is where it all began (as a hot dog cart!); there's no indoor seating—just outdoor lines (go early or late to avoid a wait). The Angus beef burgers are ground daily, making them some of the freshest and tastiest in the city. For a couple more bucks you can order a double, a stack, or a vegetarian 'Shroom Burger—a melty, Muenster-and-cheddar-stuffed fried portobello. The menu also offers "beef and bird" (chicken) hot dogs, French fries, frozen custard, and—of course—shakes.

    Madison Square Park, New York, New York, 10010, USA
    212-889–6600

    Known For

    • Original outpost of the now world-famous burger spot
    • Vegetarian, nonbeef burger, and hot dog options
    • Lunchtime lines
  • 13. The Clocktower

    $$$ | Flatiron District

    On the second floor of the New York EDITION Hotel, this refined all-day spot is helmed by British superchef Jason Atherton, who presides over a high-ceilinged, dark-hued dining room. Best described as elevated British tavern fare, the dinner menu offers choices like comforting oxtail-spiked mac 'n' cheese, a hearty pork chop, and butter-roasted Dover sole; morning can mean a full English breakfast or American standards like pancakes.

    5 Madison Ave., New York, New York, 10010, USA
    212-413–4300

    Known For

    • Clubby ambience
    • Creative cocktails
    • Sophisticated pub food

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