53 Best Restaurants in Nevada, USA

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We've compiled the best of the best in Nevada - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

La Pizza e La Pasta

$$ | South Strip

If you’re looking for something a little more sit-down-and-relax than Eataly’s forage-style food hall, consider this mid-priced part of the Italian behemoth. Two towering, gold-tiled pizza ovens turn out Neapolitan-style pies in numerous varieties, while the pasta side offers house-made fresh pasta dishes, such as pappardelle al ragu di funghi, lasagna Emilia, and ravioli di zucca, and others made with dried pasta imported from Gragnano, Italy, such as bucatini cacio e pepe, and linguine alla scoglio. Antipasti and salads also are served. The prix-fixe Taste of Italy menu has three courses.

3770 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
702-730–7644
Known For
  • Price point not far above food hall
  • Pizzas made in state-of-the-art ovens
  • Fresh pasta and dried imported from Italy

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Lazy Dog

$$ | South Strip

As casino companies relax their historically strict no-pets policies, canine companions are popping up with increasingly frequency on the Strip. While they're still no-go inside restaurants, they're frequently welcomed by those with patios, including this spot first established in Las Vegas at Town Square. The name's a clue, of course, as is the fact that LD has a special menu for dogs. As for humans, they'll find a varied menu including such starters of spicy tuna poke on crispy sushi rice, or Cajun fries with chipotle-ranch dipping sauce. Entrees include such homey choices as campfire pot roast, or a chicken pot pie, as well as steaks, burgers, sandwiches, and salads. There's a menu for human kids, too, as well as a gluten-sensitive menu; brunch dishes such as mountain berry pancakes and quiche are served on weekends. Suburban locations are in Summerlin and Henderson.

Lindo Michoacán

$ | East Side

Javier Barajas, the congenial owner and host of this colorful cantina group, named this restaurant after his birthplace in Mexico, where he learned to cook while growing up in the culinary capital of Michoacán. Don't miss such outstanding specialties as the carnitas or cabrito birria de chivo (roasted goat with red mole sauce). Guacamole is made tableside, and the flan is a silken wonder. There's no reason to stick to Mexican-restaurant basics when the menu is so expansivethe lunch menu alone offers 37 choices. This local success story began in 1990 and now boasts three other locations—in Henderson, Summerlin, and in the Palace Station casino—but the original is a singular experience: a dense labyrinth of rooms (with a capacity of around 300) with arched ceilings and brightly colored walls covered in bric-a-brac, and table visits from strolling mariachis.

2655 E. Desert Inn Rd., Las Vegas, NV, 89121, USA
702-735–6828
Known For
  • Specialties from Michoacán region
  • Tableside guacamole
  • Colorful, lively atmosphere

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Recommended Fodor's Video

Luv-it Frozen Custard

$

Walking distance from The Strat, this tiny take-out stand offers unbelievably delicious, velvety smooth frozen custard. The flavors change daily (check the website for the schedule), and sundaes are a popular offering. Those with larger appetites should certainly try the ever-popular Western, with hot fudge, caramel, and pecans, or a Fruit Boat, with peach, pineapple, cherry, banana, marshmallow, and peanuts. It's been goin' strong since 1973, and is open most days until 10 pm, 11 pm on Friday and Saturday.

505 E. Oakey Blvd., Las Vegas, NV, 89104, USA
702-384–6452
Known For
  • Fun flavors of frozen custard
  • Daily changing availability
  • Western sundae with hot fudge, caramel, and pecans

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Mabel's BBQ

$$

Michael Symon, TV celebrity chef and the man who revived the Cleveland culinary scene, took his show on the road to Las Vegas with this meat-centric spot at the Palms. "Pig Parts" (crispy ears, tails and cracklin's) may seem like a novelty to some, but there's no doubting the seriousness of his pork, beef, poultry, and carefully conceived sides, as well as the long list of brews to go with them. The airy, two-level space takes on a sports-bar vibe for high-profile games, complete with a "Tailgate Menu."

4321 W. Flamingo Rd., Las Vegas, NV, 89103, USA
702-942–7780
Known For
  • House-smoked meats
  • Crispy pig parts
  • Bottle-aged cocktails
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. and Wed. No lunch

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Metro Pizza

$ | West Side

Younger Las Vegans call this local success story "the pizza they grew up on," while the smell of dough when they walk in the door may trigger older patrons' own childhood memories of their youthful pizza parlors. Look for size and value on the deep-dish pies, not fancy salads or artisan experiments, on the family-friendly menu. Metro is more about big stuffed pizzas with names such as the Stockyard or the Zamboni that are as hearty and meat-filled as you might imagine, and it's been growing with the city since the 1980s. The modest Westside original still has a 1950s-style diner look in a strip mall next to a supermarket. As native Las Vegans grew up and went to UNLV, home base might have become the second, freestanding location near campus (1395 E. Tropicana Ave.). The large freestanding Henderson location (4001 W. Decatur Blvd.) may be chain's pride and joy, and the fourth arrival is north in the Centennial Hills area (6720 Sky Pointe Dr.).

4001 S. Decatur Blvd., Las Vegas, NV, USA
702-362–7896
Known For
  • Giant pies
  • Family atmosphere
  • Good value

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Momofuku Las Vegas

$$$ | Center Strip

David Chang's budding New York–based restaurant empire went way west for the first time with this spot at The Cosmopolitan, which offers a mix of Momofuku favorites and only-in-Vegas choices. You can also set up slow-roasted pork shoulder for parties of four to six; other group options are five-spice roasted duck or candied walnut lobster and shrimp, for three or four. The decor is heavy on soothing woods, and the nearby Milk Bar offers MilkQuakes as well as Christina Tosi's soft serve, cookies, pies, and more.

3708 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
702-698--2663
Known For
  • Classics honed at New York original
  • Some only-in-Vegas choices
  • Pork shoulder and roasted duck for large parties

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Mountain High Sandwich Company

$

A casual, plank-floored, all-natural deli serving breakfast and lunch, Mountain High may well be the only place in Tahoe to find coconut chia seed pudding and similar delicacies. More familiar fare—biscuits and gravy (sausage or veggie) for breakfast, house-smoked tri-tip sandwiches (also tofu barbecue) for lunch—is also on the menu.

120 Country Club Dr., Incline Village, CA, 89451, USA
775-298–2636
Known For
  • Grab-and-go items
  • Inventive soups
  • Gluten-free, vegan, and vegetarian choices
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No dinner

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Nellie’s Southern Kitchen

$$ | South Strip

The Jonas Brothers have captured the hearts of a generation of music fans, and Nellie’s has claimed dominion over their stomachs. Named after their great-grandmother and an offshoot of the original in North Carolina, the restaurant serves appropriately Southern riffs-on-classics at lunch and dinner. You can start with a basket of biscuits with cinnamon butter and jam, pimento cheese or collards and artichoke dip, or fried green tomatoes, and proceed to dishes like fried chicken with four-cheese mac and drunken collard greens, a waffle with lobster tail dipped in Nashville hot sauce, meatloaf, or a rib-eye steak. Live music is, as you might expect, a staple.

3799 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
702-640–1056
Known For
  • Owned by Jonas Brothers' family
  • Southern cuisine with a few tweaks
  • Biscuits with cinnamon butter

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Netflix Bites

$$$ | South Strip

Las Vegas has had restaurants themed for Motown, ESPN, Star Trek, magic, Hello Kitty, and more over the years, so this zeitgeist-grabbing spot feels inevitable. The energy of the casino floor carries into the neon-bedecked restaurant, where you'll find food and drink inspired by Netflix favorites, such as "Eggs Benedict Bridgerton" (with smoked salmon) "Stranger Wings" (with Buffalo, lemon pepper, or bbq sauce) "Orange is the New Mac" (mac and cheese with hot Cheetos), or drinks like the "Dalgona Rum Buzz" or "The House of Usher." Or indulge in the full Bridgerton Regency Tea, with finger sandwiches, scones, and everything else Lady Whistledown would expect. This is a pop-up that is expected to last into early 2026, but maybe it'll get a second season. It closes from 2 to 5 daily.

Pasta Shop Ristorante & Art Gallery

$$

This house-made pasta pioneer (which sells to Strip resorts) is part restaurant and part art gallery, showcasing the owner's works. Pasta is, as you might expect, the specialty here, shown to advantage in dishes such as Artisan Pasta Anne (spinach pappardelle with grilled shrimp, feta, and tomatoes in a scampi sauce). There also are vegan dishes, pizzas, and salads, including the popular "Live Forever Salad" with wild greens, brown rice, tomatoes, and roasted cashews.

2525 W. Horizon Ridge Pkwy., Henderson, NV, 89052, USA
702-451–1893
Known For
  • House-made pasta
  • Friendly, personable service
  • Extensive options for vegans

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Ping Pang Pong

$ | West Side

Delicious regional (mostly Cantonese) fare includes marvelous dim sum made fresh daily often compels discerning diners—many of whom hail from Vegas's large Asian community—to brave the smoky, low-rollers casino floor of the Gold Coast, an otherwise unremarkable locals casino. The hours are a testament to its popularity: it's open from 10 am to 3 am every single night of the week. Named for three characters in Puccini's opera Turandot (Pong is head chef of the imperial kitchen), this well-regarded restaurant is kwown for authentic dishes such as chicken lettuce cups, seafood fish mah stew, preserved-egg porridge, or spicy Dungeness crab with peppercorn, along with a glass of chrysanthemum iced tea and sweet pineapple buns for dessert, soft and warm from the oven. Chefs will cater to customers' requests for small, unique offerings not on the menu, as long as the ingredients are on hand. 

4000 W. Flamingo Rd., Las Vegas, NV, 89103, USA
702-247–8136
Known For
  • Dim sum plentiful and varied
  • Authentic Chinese specialties
  • Lots of Chinese expats

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Pizza Rock

$$ | Downtown

Eleven-time world pizza champion Tony Gemignani installed four ovens in this heavily renovated, industrial-chic space in the Downtown Third district so he could produce all styles of pizza: Neapolitan, Romano, American, New York, classic Italian, Californian, New York/New Haven, Sicilian, and Chicago. Don't neglect the starters, though; the fried green beans with garlic and olive oil and beer-battered fried artichokes are worth the trip alone. The group table with a roulette wheel in the center is quite a sight.

201 N. 3rd St., Las Vegas, NV, 89101, USA
702-385–0838
Known For
  • All styles of pizzas
  • Don't-miss appetizers
  • Hipsterish quasi-industrial vibe

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Ra Sushi Bar Restaurant

$$ | North Strip

Take a break from shopping and step into this dimly lighted restaurant and lounge that's part of a growing chain with a menu of both sushi and cooked entrées. Delicious sushi rolls might include the Gojira (with shrimp tempura, krab mix, cream cheese, and cucumber) or the Crazy Monkey (stuffed with smoked salmon, mango, and cream cheese and topped with avocado, red tempura bits, cashews, and sweet eel sauce). Heartier fare includes chicken, shrimp, or steak yakisoba, and chicken katsu with Asian cole slaw. The happy hour specials here are popular with the locals. Late-night noshers appreciate that it's open until midnight, until 1 am on Friday and Saturday.

3200 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
702-696–0008
Known For
  • Plenty of classic sushi
  • Far-from-classic rolls
  • Contemporary decor

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Raiders Tavern & Grill

$

With Las Vegas Raiders games packing Allegiant Stadium, fans of the Silver and Black will likely find this sports bar and grill at the M Resort as intoxicating as the spirits on tap at one of two bars in this large, 3,400-square-foot room. Raiders helmets and footballs line the entryway, while framed jerseys of past gridiron greats and a gift shop loaded with Raiders gear make this a must-stop for team diehards. The all-night menu ranges from stadium fare like burgers and Philly cheese steaks to homemade BBQ, wood-fired pizzas, street tacos, and steak and salmon entrees. Breakfast is served on Saturday and—of course—Sunday, so you can fuel up before the big game and then root, root, root for the home team on one of 45 TVs.

Rainforest Cafe

$$ | South Strip

When the Rainforest Cafe moved out of its longtime berth in the MGM Grand, the animatronic animals naturally made the journey with it, just up the Strip near Harmon Avenue. But while you're watching and listening to them there's plenty to eat, with a menu offering an eclectic mix of classic American food like St. Louis-style spareribs, chicken-fried chicken with country gravy, sandwiches, and burgers. International flavors are represented by the likes of fajitas and a spicy Korean stir-fry. And kids can indulge in "Python Pasta" or "Jurassic Chicken Tidbits." Brunch is served on weekends from 10 to 2, and an a afternoon happy hour gives Mom and Dad a break from walking the Strip. 

3717 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
702-891–8580
Known For
  • Animatronic wildlife
  • Periodically changing (indoor) weather
  • Family-friendly food

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Ronald's Donuts

$ | West Side

Some of the best doughnuts in Vegas are sold at this tiny Chinatown storefront tucked in a strip mall along Spring Mountain Road. Locals rave about the apple fritters, but more traditional selections, such as Boston cream, are addictive, too. Surprisingly, a good number of the offerings are vegan, a quirk that has put the hole-in-the-wall on the national map in recent years.

4600 Spring Mountain Rd., Las Vegas, NV, 89102, USA
702-873–1032
Known For
  • Vegan donuts
  • Apple fritters
  • Good coffee

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Shake Shack

$ | South Strip

This fast-casual favorite born in New York City now has seven locations in Las Vegas, and the only thing different about it is that the lines aren't so long. It's a great place to stop for a Shack Burger and fries, and don't forget the shakes and frozen custard. The Strip location has been joined by others around town and at Harry Reid International Airport.

3790 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
702-222–6730
Known For
  • Burgers made from a proprietary meat mix
  • Crinkle-cut fries
  • Shakes made from frozen custard

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Soulbelly BBQ

$ | Downtown

The soul in the belly here comes courtesy of James Beard–nominated chef Bruce Kalman, who might be recognizable on sight to viewers of foodie faves Top Chef, Chopped, and Beat Bobby Flay. Bringing the barbecue flavors of central Texas to Vegas, this atmospheric venue adds cocktails, local beers, and live entertainment to the mix to turn what might have been just a barbecue dinner into a barbecue experience and a night on the (Down)town.

1327 S. Main St., Las Vegas, NV, 89104, USA
702-483–4404
Known For
  • Authentic barbecue flavors from central Texas
  • Both combos and meat by the pound
  • Belly of the Soul sandwich with brisket, cheese sauce, and a fried egg
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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Tom's Watch Bar

$$ | South Strip

From restaurant-industry veteran and Smashburger founder Tom Ryan, this gastropub bridges a space at New York–New York between the casino and the Brooklyn Bridge that runs along the Strip, delivering great views of the action. The large menu of drinks and beers is matched by an extensive food menu, including burgers, pizzas, and other entrées. It's a good spot to try the salted caramel skillet French toast or crispy chicken and cornbread pancake for breakfast or brunch, and butter-poached lobster and shrimp tacos or Tom's Famous Prime Rib dip for lunch or dinner. The kids' menu has all of the favorites. Tom's also is open late—until till 1 or 2 am on Fridays and Saturdays—making it a handy post-game or after-concert spot.

3790 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89119, USA
702-740–6766
Known For
  • Varied menu of gastropub favorites
  • Huge selection of drinks
  • Great Happy Hour deals

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Tunnel Creek Cafe

$

The multilevel outdoor deck of this order-at-the-counter restaurant cradled in a hillside below the Ponderosa Ranch from TV's Bonanza entices weary East Shore hikers and bikers with filling fare fit for a ranch hand. Along with breakfast standards, there's a "power bowl" of eggs, avocado, cheese, and black beans—salads, sandwiches (including a tasty turkey club), and burgers appear for lunch.

1115 Tunnel Creek Rd., Incline Village, NV, 89451, USA
775-298–2502
Known For
  • Crème brûlée French toast
  • Well-made coffee drinks
  • Eight beers on tap, plus ciders and kombucha
Restaurant Details
No dinner Mon.–Thurs.

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Veranda

$$ | South Strip

If the weather's fine, decamp to the Veranda's poolside terrace for breakfast, lunch, or weekend brunch, or stay indoors, where the feeling is airy and light. The Four Seasons is probably the only place you'll find eggs cocotte on the breakfast menu, or you can go luxe with eggs and caviar or more plebian with good ol' bacon and eggs. There's a brunch buffet from 8 to 1 on weekends. For lunch, consider a bluefin tuna Nicoise salad, or mushroom ravioli with cheese fondue.

3960 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89119, USA
702-632–5121
Known For
  • Popular weekend brunch buffet
  • Pleasant outdoor terrace for poolside dining
  • Quiet and serene atmosphere
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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Wicked Spoon

$$$ | Center Strip

Unlike other buffets, which serve all of their items in large buffet pans, many of the foods here are presented as individual portionsan improvement on a number of levels. Wicked Spoon quickly became a cult favorite for desserts including gelato and homemade macarons, and dishes such as "angry mac 'n' cheese" (traditional mac and cheese with a touch of spice). There's continuous service from breakfast to lunch daily. There's also a bottomless-beverage option. The decor and music selection are modern and fun.

3708 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
702-698–7870
Known For
  • Individualized servings
  • Exotic options like frog legs and bone marrow
  • Outstanding desserts
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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