47 Best Restaurants in Cape Town, South Africa

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Cape Town is the culinary capital of South Africa and quite possibly the continent. It certainly has the best restaurants in southern Africa. Nowhere else in the country is the populace so discerning about food, and nowhere else is there such a wide selection of high-quality restaurants. Western culinary history here dates back to the 17th century—Cape Town was founded specifically to grow food—and that heritage is reflected in the city's cuisine and the fact that a number of restaurants operate in historic town houses and 18th-century wine estates.

Cape Town dining today offers a global culinary experience, with Cape chefs showing the same enthusiasm for international food trends as their counterparts worldwide. French and Italian fare has long been available, but with Thai, Japanese, and Pan-Asian influences flooding in, accents of lemongrass, miso, and yuzu have become de rigueur in fine-dining kitchens. Middle Eastern cuisine is finally making some headway, and the Americas have also come to the fore, with plenty of burgers and ribs, and even chicken and waffles popping up on menus these days, not to mention a few South American and passable Mexican eateries. Ubiquitous pan-Asian fare is probably not as good as what you might be used to in major American cities; sushi is also easily found, though largely limited to tuna and salmon, and often prepared with lots of drizzled mayo and sauces. The locavore trend toward organic produce and healthful dishes is also gaining popularity, though attitudes toward vegetarianism in this meat-happy land remain somewhat backward.

Chefs Warehouse & Canteen / Merchant Bar & Grill

$$$$ | Cape Town Central

The front door provides access to two distinct restaurants (one up, one down) both overseen by the same brilliant team and dreamed up by chef and restaurant empire-builder Liam Tomlin who began enthralling Capetonians with his shared tapas menu concept at his first Chefs Warehouse. Now, in another handsomely transformed historic building, three chefs are using their skills and knack for sharp flavors to create more of the same, with a twist—Chefs Warehouse & Canteen (downstairs) is shared tables and global tapas like flavorsome lamb dizi while the somewhat clubby Merchants Bar & Grill (upstairs) offers a choice of an a la carte or set menu, and seating is at individual tables. The food focus is nose-to-tail cooking and slow-prepared dishes, some of them made from ingredients that have spent time in the fermentation and preservation larder. Don't miss the scotch eggs, which you can even order at the bar.

91 Bree St., Cape Town, South Africa
021-773–0440
Known For
  • Tapas showcasing global influences at Chefs Warehouse
  • Delectable flavors and genuine variety as you work through the menu
  • Slick service and a gorgeous space inside a heritage building
Restaurant Details
Merchant closed Sun.–Mon., no lunch. Canteen closed Sun.
Reservations advisable
Price is per person for the Chefs Warehouse tapas menu; individual dishes at Merchants around R325

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Codfather Seafood & Sushi

$$$$ | Camps Bay

One of Camps Bay's long-standing institutions, this is still considered the place for seafood. Rather than bothering with the menu, guests head to a display of fresh seafood on ice, where, with the help of a waiter, you select everything from fish to shellfish in the quantities and style of your choosing (it's charged by weight). Possible selections include calamari grilled Cajun-style; kabeljou, yellowtail, or bluenose grilled and served with a choice of sauces; or Mozambican langoustines. All orders come with side dishes of stir-fried vegetables, rice, or fries. A conveyor belt of sushi is also on offer, and there are non-fishy and even vegetarian and vegan options, too. Although it is set back from Camps Bay's typical sea views, there are mountain views from an outdoor terrace. The food here is pricey but immaculately cooked (rather than lavishly plated), and always fresh.

37 The Drive, Cape Town, 8005, South Africa
021-438–0782
Known For
  • Excellent fresh seafood, chosen from a display
  • Unadorned cooking style (most seafood is grilled)
  • One of the few Camps Bay restaurants where the focus is on food rather than looks
Restaurant Details
Reservations essential

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The Conservatory

$$$$ | Constantia

Discover the wonders of South African haute cuisine in this modern, glassed-in conservatory overlooking the beautiful gardens of swanky The Cellars-Hohenort hotel. The food is playful but high-end, with various multicultural techniques and flavors used to great effect on local ingredients, resulting in dishes like a springbok (local venison) shank served with shimeji mushrooms in a rich raviolo, Klein Karoo rack of lamb, and traditional Cape Malay babotie. The chef's Boland cheese soufflé is made with a gin-infused sauce that keeps it light, while crispy tempura prawns and charred springbok tataki reference Asian inspiration. A stylish room in tones of silver, gray, and dark chocolate with bare dark-wood tables allows the garden views outside to shine and if you're seated alongside one of the windows, you'll feel almost as though you're outside. In fact, you can sit outside at tables under the trees, between the foliage.

93 Brommersvlei Rd., Cape Town, 7800, South Africa
021-794–2137
Known For
  • An exquisite setting where you can eat any time of day
  • An amazing wine list
  • Solicitous service
Restaurant Details
Reservations essential

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Recommended Fodor's Video

Den Anker

$$$$ | V&A Waterfront

Take a break from your Waterfront wanderings at this Belgian-style eatery, where you can enjoy great views while also savoring an impressive range of Belgian beers and as good a pot of moules et frites as you're likely to find anywhere in Cape Town. With its focus on meat and seafood, expect other dishes like fillet béarnaise, rabbit simmered in Belgian beer, or Norwegian salmon in a beurre blanc. Sitting on the pier between the Albert Mall and the Clock Tower (where boat trips to Robben Island depart), this glassed-in Belgian-themed space with a fireplace in winter enjoys lovely harbor and mountain views whether you sit inside or out, and makes for great people- (or seal-) watching.

Pierhead, Cape Town, 8002, South Africa
021-419–0249
Known For
  • 25 bottled Belgian beers available, including Duvel, plus 6 Belgian beers on tap
  • Attractive glassed-in space with harbor and mountain views
  • One of the Waterfront's original restaurants

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Gold Restaurant

$$$$ | Green Point

In a huge brick warehouse space decorated with African artifacts and artworks, like giant Malian puppets, beautiful beadwork, and wooden carvings, Gold instantly prepares you for the touristy but thoroughly enjoyable meal and show to come. Your 14-course pan-African "taste safari" may include dishes from Cape Malay curry to Moroccan tagine; the food is fine but not the only reason you're here. Throughout the meal, performers emerge to sing, drum, and dance, and their skill makes the trip well worthwhile if you are looking for both food and entertainment. A full vegetarian menu is also available.  Start your evening with the interactive Djembe drumming session, a surprisingly fun way to whet your appetite.

15 Bennett St., Cape Town, 8005, South Africa
021-421–4653
Known For
  • A lively if entirely touristy food-and-entertainment experience
  • A show with music, singing, puppets, and dancing
  • A convenient way to sample a variety of dishes form different parts of Africa
Restaurant Details
No lunch
Reservations essential

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Grand Africa Café & Beach

$$$$ | V&A Waterfront

In a restored warehouse, this trendy operation has turned a once-derelict piece of land near the V&A Waterfront into a private beach space with several bars and comfortable covered seating areas inside and out. Although the food—huge rectangular pizzas, colorful salads, Wagyu burgers, seafood platters, steaks, fish-and-chips, and tasty but not-exactly-authentic sushi—is slightly overpriced, remind yourself that you're paying for the view, the toes-in-the-sand vibe, and the chance to rub shoulders with some of Cape Town's shiniest, happiest people. This is simply a beautiful place to have a cocktail and create memorable moments with a like-minded tribe of partiers and carefree pleasure-seekers.

1 Haul Rd., Cape Town, South Africa
021-425–0551
Known For
  • Boozy lunches that might last until late at night
  • Massively popualr summertime hangout for families and scensters
  • Seafood platters and bubbly

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Haiku

$$$$ | Cape Town Central

This centrally located and very popular pan-Asian restaurant's complex menu of dim sum, sushi, grilled, and wok-fried items has something for everyone, but picky connoisseurs of Asian cuisine might find the lack of specialization problematic. Popular with business and leisure diners alike, the darkly elegant lacquered box dining room affords partial views of chefs in the four kitchens preparing your food. The dim sum is probably the best option (the crispy prawn cheung fan is excellent), and the Peking duck with paper-thin pancakes are a favorite. Grills include mint lamb chops served with dry red chilies and garlic. Four kitchens mean that dishes arrive when ready, which translates into efficiency, but also the possibility of fellow diners watching while you eat, or vice versa. The owners of Haiku also own Bukhara, the very good Indian restaurant next door.

58 Burg St., Cape Town, 8001, South Africa
021-424–7000
Known For
  • Great dim sum
  • Sleek and sexy but somewhat loud (when full) interior
  • In high season, a strict two-seating dinner policy discourages lingering
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
Reservations essential

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Harbour House V&A

$$$$ | V&A Waterfront

Sister restaurant to the original Harbour House in Kalk Bay, the V&A location serves the same fresh and tasty seafood menu from an enviable spot overlooking the harbor. Fresh fish of the day—grilled—is always a good bet, but there are a variety of options including seafood risotto, seafood pasta, and platters with a bit of everything on the (expensive and extensive) plate. Sushi and cocktails are served upstairs, from which vantage you can also get views of the mountain and sunset.

V&A Waterfront, Cape Town, 8002, South Africa
021-418–4744
Known For
  • Terrific location
  • Reliable fresh seafood
  • Sushi bar upstairs is also a popular cocktail spot in summer

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La Mouette

$$$$ | Sea Point

La Mouette serves an extremely reasonably priced tasting menu of modern French-fusion-style cuisine in a beautiful old Sea Point home that is all sash windows, working fireplaces, and bold color. With a choice of three or six courses, you'll be treated to inventive and delicious seasonal fare such as tuna tartare or duck breast with fermented red cabbage. Split into several different rooms, each of which seats only about 20 people, the restaurant allows for lingering conversation even on the busiest evenings. Friendly, competent service and a beautiful courtyard that is very popular in the summer complete the picture. Not all courses are winners, but at these prices, the overall experience is well worth a visit.

78 Regent Rd., Cape Town, 8005, South Africa
021-433–0856
Known For
  • Reasonably priced tasting menu
  • Great, friendly service
  • Only fine-dining in Sea Point
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No lunch Tues.–Sat.

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Mantra Café

$$$$ | Camps Bay

Delivering unfussy comfort food from a gorgeously casual, slightly theatrical space, Mantra's second-floor vantage provides sweeping views of the beach and sea while also lifting you above the street-level irritations of cars and hawkers. A great spot for breakfast or brunch, the range of heartier mains for lunch and dinner should lure you in for steamed mussels or pan-seared prawns, burgers, or a well-grilled steak. The décor is an eye-catching blend of photographs, vintage mirrors, dangling plants, and Moroccan-inspired tiles creating a warm ambiance that invites lingering, especially when the sun glints off the ocean and bathes everything in a golden sheen.

43 Victoria Rd., Cape Town, South Africa
021-437–0206
Known For
  • An anomaly in touristy Camps Bay, the menu caters to locals in both price and quality
  • An excellent cocktail menu which makes this a memorable spot for sundowners
  • Warm, welcoming, and friendly service

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Nobu

$$$$ | V&A Waterfront

If you've always wanted to try Nobuyuki "Nobu" Matsuhisa's famous Japanese-Peruvian fusion cuisine, but were put off by the potential bill in New York or London, this hotel restaurant offers a chance to sample what may not constitute exactly the same level of cuisine, but will nonetheless make for a highly enjoyable experience. A vast modern space in the Waterfront's One&Only resort provides a fitting backdrop for the splurge of the omakase multicourse tasting menu, which will likely include dishes such as the signature Alaskan black cod with miso, rock shrimp tempura, or Chilean sea bass with dashi ponzu. Service is gracious, and the selection of sake and local wines is superlative if costly by local standards.

Dock Rd., Cape Town, 8001, South Africa
021-431–4511
Known For
  • Omakase tasting menu for R2,300
  • Abundant, authentic sushi
  • Glitzy atmosphere and immaculate service
Restaurant Details
No lunch
Reservations essential

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Pier

$$$$ | V&A Waterfront

If your reasons for traveling are to experience some of the world's most creative dining, then chef John Norris-Rogers has plenty to dazzle you with, as he experiments with flavors and inventive ways of presenting dishes. From a platter of seafood morsels to sourdough served with curried hake butter and lamb with morel and chimichurri, diners experience show-off levels of culinary virtuosity. Whether it's the between-course nibbles and palate cleansers, the astonishingly beautiful crockery, or the glittering harbor views, this will be a full-on, immersive dining experience. Children under 8 are not allowed. 

V&A Waterfront, Cape Town, South Africa
021-879–6328
Known For
  • Special events and occasions kind of place
  • Food that sometimes looks too good to eat
  • Flavors and cooking techniques for the culinary curious

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The Roundhouse

$$$$ | Table Mountain National Park

Known for its exceptional natural beauty, Cape Town is surprisingly short on restaurants with killer views; The Roundhouse, serving modern South African cuisine, is helping close that gap. Converted from its origins as an 18th-century Table Mountain–side hunting lodge, this unique fine-dining restaurant overlooking Camps Bay specializes in applying creative flavor combinations to local ingredients—think Karoo ostrich with a fennel seed glaze or hake with carrot and cashew puree. All three connected dining rooms exude a romantic warmth with their white tablecloths and copper hurricane lamps, with the Somerset Room enjoying the best sea views, and the private whiskey room being ideal for larger parties of up to eight guests.

Check out the adjacent "Rumbullion" picnic area, an excellent place to while away a summer's afternoon enjoying breathtaking mountain and sea views and a more casual burger-and-pizza-style menu. Opening hours vary with the season, so best to call and check.

Round House Rd., Cape Town, 8040, South Africa
021-438–4347
Known For
  • Excellent and exceptionally suave team of waiters
  • Gorgeous views over Camps Bay
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No dinner Sun. No lunch May–Sept.
Reservations essential

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SeaBreeze Fish & Shell

$$$$ | Cape Town Central

Serving locally and sustainably caught seafood, this bright and breezy restaurant has become the Bree Street go-to spot for oysters, cocktails, and fish and crustaceans prepared in a variety of ways. Bringing a contemporary take to traditional seafood dishes, expect to find things like line-caught hake and chips, Cape Malay seafood curry, game fish nicoise, fish pie, prawns and mussels in fish ink tagliatelle, and grilled whole fish. On warmer days, you can sit outside in the sunshine and watch the back and forth of pedestrians. 

213 Bree St., Cape Town, South Africa
074-793–9349
Known For
  • Boozy lunches
  • Fresh oysters and well-prepared seafood
  • Relaxed vibe and choice of indoor and sidewalk seating

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The Wes

$$$$ | Cape Town Central

Despite the off-the-wall quirkiness of the concept—a bistro and bar that exists as an homage to the stylistic idiosyncrasies of film director Wes Anderson (he of The Grand Budapest Hotel)—the menu sticks with the classics, serving simple, straightforward food prepared properly. The small yet refined selection of no-nonsense, nostalgia-satisfying choices includes bouillabaisse with a slightly localized Cape Town twist; entrecôte (rib-eye) steak with frites and Café de Paris butter; beetroot tarte Tatin; catch of the day with fennel confit; and good old-fashioned moules marinière. The bar's a big draw, too; be prepared to step into a place that, like any Wes Anderson film, is a bit fantastical, and probably best appreciated with a glass of bubbly in hand.

55 Shortmarket St., Cape Town, South Africa
082-770--3573
Known For
  • Offbeat pastel-infused decor that playfully honors filmmaker Wes Anderson
  • Back-to-the-classics French cuisine
  • Well-priced Sunday lunch set menu
Restaurant Details
No dinner Sun.

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Willoughby & Co.

$$$$ | V&A Waterfront

Though unfortunately inside the mall, this buzzing hive of activity consistently churns out what many (but not all) say is the city's best sushi along with an array of other Japanese dishes and various seafood favorites like English-style fish-and-chips and prawn pasta. There will almost inevitably be a line during dinner hours (you'll be seated quicker if you ask to sit at the sushi bar, which is the place to be), which can create a fast-turnaround feel instead of a relaxing meal vibe.

19 Dock Rd., Cape Town, 8002, South Africa
021-418–6115
Known For
  • Long lines (day and night) alleviated by free wine samples
  • Decadent, if not always authentic, sushi rolls
  • Feels a bit overpriced given the unsalubriuous setting and sense of being rushed
Restaurant Details
Reservations not accepted

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Panama Jack's

$$$$ | Victoria and Alfred Waterfront

In this raw-timber structure in the heart of the docks, about three miles north of other V&A venues, the music is loud, the tables are crowded, and the decor is nonexistent, but tourists come in droves to gorge on fresh seafood. Expect to pay through the nose for a kilogram for local crayfish (similar to lobster) or scarce and endangered wild abalone, which is being poached nearly to extinction. Large prawns are also pricey. There is plenty of less expensive seafood, and daily specials such as baby squid and local line-caught fish are competitively priced. Lunch specials are more reasonable, but this is still more of a tourist destination than a destination restaurant.