12 Best Restaurants in Seattle, Washington

Background Illustration for Restaurants

Thanks to inventive chefs, first-rate local produce, adventurous diners, and a bold entrepreneurial spirit, Seattle has become one of the culinary capitals of the nation. Fearless young chefs have stepped in and raised the bar. Fresh and often foraged produce, local seafood, and imaginative techniques make the quality of local cuisine even higher.

Seattle's dining scene has been stoked like a wildfire by culinary rock stars who compete on shows like Iron Chef, Top Chef, and regularly dominate "best of" lists. Seattle chefs have won big in the prestigious James Beard competition, with Renee Erickson of Bateau, Walrus and the Carpenter, and the Whale Wins taking the "Best Chef Northwest" title in 2016 and creative genius Edouardo Jordan named one of Food and Wine Magazine's "Best New Chefs." The city is particularly strong on new American, Japanese, and Vietnamese cuisines. Chefs continuously fine-tune what can best be called Pacific Northwest cuisine, which features fresh, local ingredients, including anything from nettles and mushrooms foraged in nearby forests; colorful berries, apples, and cherries grown by Washington State farmers; and outstanding seafood from the cold northern waters of the Pacific Ocean, like wild salmon, halibut, oysters, Dungeness crab, and geoduck. Seattle boasts quite a few outstanding bakeries, too, whose breads and desserts you'll see touted on many menus.

Seattle is also seeing a resurgence in American comfort food, often with a gourmet twist, as well as gastropub fare, which can mean anything from divine burgers on locally baked ciabatta rolls to grilled foie gras with brioche toast. But innovation still reigns supreme: local salmon cooked sous vide and accompanied with pickled kimchi or fresh-picked peas can be just as common as aspic spiked with sake and reindeer meat. Many menus feature fusion cuisine or pages of small-plate offerings, and even high-end chefs are dabbling in casual ventures like pop-up eateries or gourmet food trucks. Many, if not most, of the top chefs own their businesses as well, and in recent years they’ve spread their talents around, operating two or three complementary ventures (or, in Ethan Stowell’s case, more than a dozen and counting, while Tom Douglas has nearly 20, plus a cooking school and farm). The trend toward informality and simplicity particularly plays out when it comes to dessert; most neighborhoods boast branches of at least one of the city’s popular, independently owned cupcake, doughnut, or ice-cream shops. Regardless of the format or focus, one thing's for sure: chefs are highlighting their inventions with the top-notch ingredients that make Pacific Northwest cooking famous.

Dahlia Bakery

$ | Belltown Fodor's Choice

Attached to Serious Pie, this fragrant bakery will make you reconsider cookies as a valid breakfast choice. The coffee, fresh pastries, cinnamon rolls, and breakfast sandwiches here are delicious, but Dahlia is particularly famous for its peanut butter sandwich cookies. (According to lore, the late director Nora Ephron was such a fan of the peanut butter cookies while filming the iconic rom-com Sleepless in Seattle that she requested the recipe and briefly even had the sweet treat named for her.) The decadent coconut cream pie is also a local favorite. Lunch items, including sandwiches, soups, and salads are served until 3 pm.

Marination Ma Kai

$ | West Seattle Fodor's Choice

The best view of Downtown comes at an affordable price: the brightly colored Adirondack chairs outside this Korean-Hawaiian fish shack offer a panoramic view of the entire Downtown area and a close-up of the water taxi action at Seacrest Dock. Inside, you’ll find tacos filled with Korean beef or “sexy tofu,” Spam slider sandwiches, and a classic fish-and-chips served with kimchi tartar sauce. For dessert, the Hawaiian shave ice makes it the perfect place to begin or end a beach walk on Alki, or get a bag of malasadas to go.

Beecher's Handmade Cheese

$ | Downtown

A staple in Seattle's food scene since it opened in 2003, Beecher’s is the city’s first artisanal cheese maker. Watch cheese churning and sample a bite or two of the establishment’s flagship cheese—a nutty, aged cow's milk—as you wait in line. Beecher's might attract much of the Pike Place crowd, but the decadent mac and cheese and gooey grilled cheese are understandably popular. As you wait for your lunch to be prepared, you might be tempted to purchase some of Beecher's cheese varieties to bring home. Snag a table along the waterfront to enjoy your cheesy bites.  

Recommended Fodor's Video

Bongos Cafe

$ | Phinney Ridge

Welcome to the year-round beach party at this Caribbean barbecue and sandwich shop located in an old gas station—even though the water is only Green Lake and it's across a six-lane highway. The neon-green building with hot pink and blue graffiti sets the tone and the enormous covered patio drives the message home that no matter the weather in Seattle, Bongos brings the island sunshine. The menu of sandwiches and casual plates includes Jamaican, Cuban, and Trinidadian flavors, like the Desi with citrus braised pork and caramelized onions, or the shrimp po'boy with chili sauce and mango slaw, while plantains and yuca fries are must-order sides.

6501 Aurora Ave. N, Seattle, 98103, USA
206-420–8548
Known For
  • Great outdoor seating
  • Flavorful sandwiches
  • Beach party vibes
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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Café Flora

$$$ | Capitol Hill

This upscale vegetarian diner near the Arboretum is a Seattle institution, serving satisfying classics—black-bean burgers, pizzas, salads, polenta, succotash—since the 1990s. Weekend brunch draws lots of families for the tasty pancakes, waffles, and tofu scrambles. Prime seats are in the atrium, which has a stone fountain, skylight, and garden-style café tables.

Din Tai Fung

$$

The xiao long bao, or soup dumplings, are the famous attraction at Din Tai Fung, a U.S. branch of the famed Taipei-based chain. Watch dumplings being pleated by hand through the large glass windows in the waiting area; it's a good thing the sight is so entertaining, because there's often a long wait. The rest of the lengthy menu is nearly as enticing, from shrimp-stuffed wontons to fried rice. Shaved snow with fresh mango is a refreshing end to your meal, a cross between ice cream and shave ice. The large restaurant is busy and brisk, but a fun experience and worth the wait. There are additional locations in Seattle's University Village, Pacific Place Mall in Downtown Seattle, and Southcenter Mall in Tukwila.

10455 N.E. 8th St., Bellevue, 98004, USA
425-698–1095
Known For
  • Soup dumplings
  • Taiwanese classics
  • Visible dumpling-pleating process

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Fat's Chicken & Waffles

$$ | Central District

Offering a taste of New Orleans in the Central District, Fat's Chicken & Waffles serves authentic Southern cuisine in a hip spot filled with furniture and murals made by local artists. Helmed by a chef with deep Louisiana roots, Fat's serves shrimp and grits, red beans and rice, biscuit sandwiches, and other soul food classics in addition to the namesake chicken and waffles.

Ivar's Salmon House

$$$$ | Wallingford

This long dining room facing Lake Union has original Northwest Indian artwork collected by the restaurant's namesake founder. It's touristy, often gimmicky, and always packed. You are paying for the setting here: a building designed as a loose replica of a traditional longhouse with terrific views of Lake Union and Downtown. Try to snag a table on the deck.

401 NE Northlake Way, Seattle, 98105, USA
206-632–0767
Known For
  • Epic water views
  • Quirky setting
  • Seattle institution

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Salt and Straw

$

With its "farm-to-cone" approach and its sometimes-wacky flavors, this Portland-based ice cream chain feels right at home on Capitol Hill. Tomato gelato with olive brittle may not be for everyone, but double vanilla is a source of near-universal bliss. There's also a location in Ballard.

7414 Pike St., Seattle, 98122, USA
206-258–4574
Known For
  • Creative flavors
  • Generous sampling
  • Long lines in summer

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Serious Pie

$$ | Belltown

Serious artisanal pizzas are worth the wait here—and there will be a wait at this tiny Belltown restaurant. Famed local restaurateur Tom Douglas delivers chewy, buttery crusts anchored by such toppings as roasted oyster mushrooms and truffle cheese; or Penn Cove mussels, pancetta, lemon thyme, and chili flakes. Wash it down with a local brew, a glass of local wine, or some bubbly. High seats and communal tables crowd this bustling space.

Sunny Hill

$$$ | Ballard

Dine here to experience a classic Ballard phenomenon: a casually sophisticated kid-friendly restaurant. Local families come here for pizza night, but this ain't Chuck E Cheese; toppings include foraged mushrooms, shishito peppers, garlic-and-fennel sausage, and five kinds of cheese. There are two crust choices: thin, blistered, and round, or thick, chewy, and square. That all may sound a little pretentious, but as the 10-year-old at the next table will tell you, mainly it's delicious. (She may not be so enthusiastic about the charred broccoli.) Local microbrews and a long, predominantly Italian wine list help keep the grownups happy.

3127 NW 85th St., Seattle, 98117, USA
206-659–0355
Known For
  • Delicious pizza, both Neaplitan and Detroit style
  • Family-friendly setting and service
  • Interesting, varied beverage choices
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues.

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Uneeda Burger

$ | Fremont

A casual burger shack from a fine-dining chef means flavor and execution that are always on point. The controlled chaos of this family-friendly joint can make it hard to get an outdoor table on sunny days, but the lines and wait are worth it for the perfectly cooked burgers that range from a classic beef patty to a house-made vegetarian option. The local meat is flavorful and stands alone, but the creative toppings and combo burgers, like lamb with griddled peppers and onions, Manchego cheese, and fried lemons, make this more than just another roadside shack. Giant milk shakes and crispy onion rings are a must for kids, while adults will want to check out the row of local craft brew on tap.

By bus or car, this is on the way from the Downtown tourist area to the zoo.

4302 Fremont Ave. N, Seattle, 98103, USA
206-547--2600
Known For
  • Perfect for hungry kids
  • Fine-dining quality burgers
  • A place to sit outside

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