Best Restaurants in New York 2026
Ten New York restaurants that have earned their place through cooking, conviction, and the kind of staying power that survives every trend cycle — from a West Village Italian-American beloved since 2016 to a Lincoln Center tasting room that still sets the global standard.
The best restaurants in New York are Via Carota, Don Angie, Tatiana by Kwame Onwuachi, and more. Start with Via Carota if you want the strongest overall first pick.

Top picks at a glance
Who this guide is for
New York doesn't need you to help it feel important. The restaurants worth your attention in 2026 are the ones that ignore the noise entirely — rooms that have been quietly perfecting their point of view for years and still manage to feel urgent the moment you sit down.
Quick picks
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How the restaurants compare




How we chose
We looked for restaurants that feel like a strong fit for the guide topic, not just the most obvious names in the city. The shortlist favors rooms with clear mood, dependable pacing, and enough distinction to help someone decide faster. Read our full methodology →
Lighting, pace, and general energy all need to support the reason someone clicked this guide.
We favored restaurants that feel best suited for the moment, not just restaurants with broad reputation.
The final list tries to give readers enough variation in neighborhood, price, and style to compare real options.
10 ranked picks
Jody Williams and Rita Sodi's West Village room has achieved something rare: a restaurant that feels like it has always existed. The cacio e pepe is taught in cooking schools. The insalata verde — twelve herbs, lettuces, and edible flowers dressed in the gentlest anchovy vinaigrette — is one of the most imitated salads in the country.
The room itself, all dark wood and candlelight on Grove Street, fills every night without visible effort. There is no reservation system, which in any other city would feel like a statement. Here it just feels right. Via Carota is what Italian cooking looks like when it is completely secure in itself.
Scott Tacinelli and Angie Rito's SoHo Italian-American is a love letter to a cuisine that New York has spent decades undervaluing. The pinwheel lasagna — crisp at the edges, molten at the centre, built like a scroll — has become one of the most photographed dishes in the city and still earns every image.
The clam toast, the branzino in acqua pazza, the spumoni for dessert: every dish feels like something remembered rather than invented. Don Angie has been a reservation problem since it opened in 2017, and nothing about 2026 has changed that. Book the moment you know your dates.
Kwame Onwuachi's restaurant at Lincoln Center arrived in 2022 with the most culturally expansive menu in New York — a tasting menu that traces his own biography through Nigerian fufu, Creole seafood, Bronx bodegas, and Caribbean jerk. The Nigerian pepper soup, the goat suya, the jollof-spiced risotto: each dish carries historical weight without ever feeling like a lecture.
In 2026, Tatiana remains the most important restaurant to open in New York this decade. Onwuachi's cooking has only grown more confident, and the room — with its sweeping Lincoln Center views — now feels like the setting this food always deserved.
Major Food Group's recreation of a midcentury Italian-American dining room on Thompson Street shouldn't work as well as it does — and yet here we are. The spicy rigatoni vodka has become a New York institution. The veal marsala is executed with a seriousness that defies its red-sauce reputation. The room is loud, theatrical, and completely assured.
Carbone is the rare restaurant where the hype and the reality coexist peacefully. The tuxedoed waiters, the red booths, the Caesar tableside: none of it is ironic. It's all committed, and that commitment is exactly why the restaurant still deserves every reservation you can score.
Missy Robbins's Williamsburg pasta restaurant is where serious New York food people send their most trusted out-of-town guests. The mafaldini with pink peppercorn and parmigiano is one of the all-time great pasta dishes — the sauce clings to every ruffle, the heat builds slowly, and the aged cheese pulls it back from the edge at exactly the right moment.
The sheep's milk cheese agnolotti and the whipped ricotta crostini are equally essential. The room is warm and unstuffy. Lilia is a reminder that a restaurant can have a single strong idea — make pasta the best it can possibly be — and build an entire enduring reputation on it.
Danny Meyer opened Gramercy Tavern in 1994 and it has not stopped being essential since. Chef Michael Anthony's approach to seasonal American cooking — rooted in the Union Square Greenmarket, refined through thirty years of practice — produces a tasting menu that manages to feel both celebratory and profoundly comfortable at the same time.
The tavern room in front, with its ale selections and changing bar bites, is one of the great casual dining rooms in the country. Few restaurants this decorated still feel this genuinely warm. Gramercy Tavern is proof that you can grow into an institution without ever losing the thing that made people care about you in the first place.
Eric Ripert's Midtown seafood temple has held three Michelin stars since 2005 and in 2026 still represents the highest standard of classical French technique applied to ocean ingredients. The barely-cooked halibut with champagne beurre blanc is a lesson in restraint. The poached lobster with coral emulsion is one of the most technically precise dishes being served anywhere in North America.
The room is formal without being cold, the service is impeccable without being stiff, and the wine list is built for people who take fish seriously. Le Bernardin is the answer when someone asks what New York fine dining can do that nowhere else can match.
Gabriel Kreuther's eponymous restaurant in the Grace Building channels the chef's Alsatian heritage through one of the most refined dining rooms in New York. The tarte flambée arrives as an amuse — thin-crusted, smoky, over in two bites — and sets the tone for what follows: smoked sturgeon with caviar cream, braised rabbit with black truffle, the pretzel-crusted veal sweetbread that regulars request before they're seated.
Kreuther's cooking is deeply rooted without feeling antiquarian. It's the work of someone who has spent decades understanding exactly where he comes from and choosing to go further. One of the most consistently excellent tasting menu experiences in the country.
Jeremiah Stone and Fabian von Hauske's Essex Street natural wine bar arrived before natural wine was a mainstream New York conversation and has only grown more essential since. The grilled bread with cultured butter and bottarga, the raw scallop with smoked crème fraîche, the pasta that changes weekly: Wildair's menu is designed to reward curiosity.
The wine list reads like a love letter to small European producers — Georgian amphora wines, obscure Jura bottles, skin-contact whites from corners of Italy that most sommeliers have never visited. Come early, come hungry, and be prepared to stay for a second bottle and a third dish that wasn't on your original plan.
SoHo's most enduring French bistro has been feeding the neighbourhood since 1975, and the dining room still carries that energy — all dark wood, closely-set tables, and a sense that everyone around you has been coming here for years. The steak au poivre is a benchmark. The moules marinières are textbook. The oeufs à la neige for dessert arrives looking like a dream.
Raoul's is not trying to be modern. It is trying to be excellent, every night, to every table, in the same room it has occupied for nearly fifty years. Most nights, it succeeds completely — and those nights remind you what a bistro is actually supposed to feel like.
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