Best Restaurants in Vancouver 2026
Ten Vancouver restaurants that define the city's quietly exceptional food culture — from a Railtown Québécois room to a Coal Harbour aburi sushi bar, a Chinatown Japanese-Italian gem, and the Mount Pleasant osteria that makes Sunday dinner feel like the most important meal of the week.
The best restaurants in Vancouver are St. Lawrence Restaurant, Kissa Tanto, Botanist, and more. Start with St. Lawrence Restaurant if you want the strongest overall first pick.

Top picks at a glance
Who this guide is for
Vancouver's culinary identity in 2026 is built on restraint, precision, and an ingredient culture that is the envy of chefs across the country. The ocean, the mountains, the farms of the Fraser Valley and the Okanagan: the city's surroundings make extraordinary cooking almost inevitable. These ten restaurants are the ones doing the most with what they have.
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
Chef J-C Poirier's Railtown restaurant is the most passionate expression of Québécois cuisine outside of Quebec, and one of the best French-Canadian restaurants in the country. The tourtière arrives as a delicate individual tart filled with braised duck and foie gras, finished with a shallot confit that ties it all together. The French onion soup, the trout with beurre blanc, the crêpes Suzette that Poirier prepares tableside: every dish tells a story about where the chef comes from and why it matters.
The wine list leans deeply into natural French producers, and the room — warm wood, candlelight, the hum of a room full of people who are genuinely happy to be there — carries the evening with ease. St. Lawrence is Vancouver's most romantic room, and the food is good enough to make you forget that entirely.
Joël Watanabe and Tannis Ling's Chinatown Japanese-Italian room is one of the most singular restaurants in Canada — a concept that sounds like it shouldn't work and delivers one of the most coherent and pleasurable menus in the country. The uni pasta with brown butter and lemon zest is as good as pasta gets in Vancouver. The kakuni pork belly, slow-braised in dashi and finished with a glaze of mirin and soy, is the kind of dish that reframes what Italian braising technique can become when applied to Japanese flavours.
The room is intimate and moody, inspired by the jazz kissaten bars of 1960s Japan. The wine and sake program is genuinely thoughtful. Kissa Tanto is the kind of restaurant that makes you feel grateful that two chefs decided to follow an unusual instinct and execute it with complete commitment.
The Fairmont Pacific Rim's signature restaurant is Vancouver's finest hotel dining room — and also one of the finest restaurants in the city regardless of its hotel affiliation. Chef Hector Laguna's menu draws on Pacific Northwest ingredients — Dungeness crab, sablefish, Okanagan Valley produce — and treats them with a technical precision that produces some of the most beautiful plates in the country.
The living plant wall that dominates the room is as spectacular as it sounds. The Sunday brunch program has become a Vancouver institution, with a pastry selection from pastry chef Oliver Dodd that is genuinely worth building a morning around. Botanist proves that hotel restaurants can be as essential as any other room in a city, when the commitment is real.
David Hawksworth's eponymous restaurant in the Rosewood Hotel Georgia is Vancouver's grande dame — a formal, beautifully appointed room that has held its place at the top of the city's dining hierarchy since it opened in 2011. The cooking is classical French in structure but deeply Pacific Northwest in ingredient: haida gwaii halibut, Qualicum Bay scallops, Vancouver Island lamb that arrives in spring with the sweetness of animals that have been eating the right things.
The wine list, managed over many years, runs deep into Burgundy and the Okanagan. The cheese trolley is one of the last in Vancouver and worth building a course around. Hawksworth is the restaurant for the evening when you want Vancouver to feel like a world-class city — because in this room, it unambiguously is.
Mark Perrier's Fraserhood Italian restaurant has become the quintessential Vancouver neighbourhood room — a place where the regulars know the staff by name, where the menu changes with the seasons, and where the food is good enough to make every visit feel like the right decision. The maltagliati with braised rabbit is the signature dish, rich and earthy and unapologetically rustic.
The pappardelle changes with what's in season but always arrives with a depth of flavour that comes from a kitchen that knows how to build a long-simmered sauce. The wine list is thoughtfully Italian, the room is warm and genuinely communal, and the whole experience feels like eating in a restaurant that was built for the neighbourhood rather than a demographic. Savio Volpe is what every city needs more of.
Tannis Ling's Chinatown Chinese brasserie is one of the most original rooms in Vancouver — a restaurant that takes the flavours of the Chinese kitchen and frames them in a contemporary context without losing any of the depth or comfort those flavours carry. The pork belly steamed buns are the most consistently excellent version in the city. The gong bao chicken, finished with sichuan peppercorn and dried chilies, has the kind of numbing heat that makes you understand why Sichuan cooking became a global obsession.
The cocktail program draws on Chinese pantry ingredients — jasmine, lychee, five spice — in ways that complement rather than compete with the food. The room is lively and unpretentious. Bao Bei is the Vancouver restaurant that most successfully bridges the city's Chinese culinary heritage and its contemporary dining culture.
Shane Pointe's Main Street restaurant is one of the most ingredient-forward rooms in Vancouver — a kitchen built around daily relationships with local farms, fishmongers, and foragers that produces a menu in constant, genuine seasonal flux. The chawanmushi arrives with whatever truffle or mushroom the kitchen is most excited about that week. The Pacific seafood changes based on what the dock delivered that morning.
The brunch program has made Published on Main one of the most beloved weekend destinations in the city — the ricotta pancakes with seasonal fruit, the smoked salmon Benedict, the pastry case that runs out by noon. At dinner, the tasting menu format allows the kitchen to show its full range. This is Vancouver cooking at its most honest and most locally rooted.
Vancouver's Coal Harbour aburi sushi restaurant has made flame-seared sushi a serious culinary category. Chef Kazuya Matsuoka's team applies a propane torch to each piece of nigiri, finishing it with a proprietary sauce that caramelizes on the surface and creates a flavour profile that has no real analogue anywhere else. The aburi salmon with miso and lemon, the aburi sockeye with truffle, the aburi albacore with yuzu: each piece is a small lesson in what heat and acid can do to a well-sourced fish.
The room, with its dramatic Coal Harbour views, makes Miku one of the most beautiful dining rooms in the city. The omakase program, available for groups who commit in advance, showcases the kitchen's full range. Miku is the restaurant that has given Vancouver a sushi identity entirely its own.
Chef Jesse Johnson's Kitsilano restaurant is one of the most quietly excellent rooms in Vancouver — a neighbourhood fine dining experience that manages to feel genuinely celebratory without any of the stiffness that often accompanies that ambition. The butter-poached sablefish with chanterelles and a sunchoke purée is the dish that defines the kitchen: technically precise, locally sourced, deeply flavourful.
The tasting menu changes seasonally and builds logically from lighter, more acidic courses toward richer, more complex preparations. The wine program leans toward natural producers in Burgundy and the Pacific Northwest. Annalena is the Kitsilano dinner that makes you understand why this neighbourhood has always been where Vancouver's most serious residents choose to eat.
Chef Jean-Christophe Poirier's Railtown Italian counter — a companion room to St. Lawrence — is one of the most pleasurable casual restaurants in the city. The pasta program is exceptional: the cacio e pepe has the right ratio of pasta water to cheese, the rigatoni all'amatriciana uses guanciale sourced from the same Italian supplier every week, and the lasagna changes with the season but always arrives with crisp edges and molten interior.
The room is small and the lines form early, but the counter seats overlooking the kitchen make even a solo dinner feel special. The amaro program is excellent, the espresso is properly extracted, and the tiramisu is among the best in Vancouver. Ask for Luigi is proof that a restaurant built around great pasta and a warm room doesn't need anything else.
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