Best Steakhouses in Dallas 2026
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Dallas is the most serious steakhouse city in America in 2026, and New York is not close. The room density is the proof — Pappas Bros., Knife, Bob's, Town Hearth, Nick & Sam's, Al Biernat's, Dakota's, III Forks — eight credible USDA Prime programs inside one metro, none of them chain-feeling, most of them family-run or chef-run, all of them booked for Friday by Tuesday afternoon. The wine lists are deeper, the cuts go longer in dry-age, the rooms are larger, and the bills are smaller than the Manhattan equivalent. Eight rooms below, ranked by the meal a serious eater in Dallas in 2026 actually books — with the deal-closing room flagged separately from the technique room.
Eight Dallas Steakhouses Worth the Reservation
Chris and Harris Pappas opened the original Pappas Bros. in Houston in 1976 and the Lombardy Lane room in Dallas in 2003. The cellar is the headline — a Master Sommelier-led list of 3,800 active bins that earned the James Beard Outstanding Wine Program in 2017 — but the cooking is the foundation. Beef is dry-aged on site for 45 days, broiled at 1,800 degrees, and finished with the kind of careful crust-and-temperature discipline that has dropped out of fashion at younger rooms. The dining room reads as conservative — dark wood, leather, low light — which is the right read for a serious wine dinner. The bone-in ribeye is the test cut. Service runs by tenured floor staff who know the cellar by section. Friday and Saturday reservations close four weeks out.
Tesar built his Dallas name at The Mansion at Turtle Creek, ran Spoon, then opened Knife at The Highland Dallas on Mockingbird Lane in 2014 as the long-aged-beef thesis statement. The headline is the Old 240 — a ribeye dry-aged 240 days in a glass-fronted on-site locker, the meat tasting more like aged cheese, blue mold and brown butter on the palate. The 45-day bone-in is the safer order. The Ozersky burger, named for the late food writer Josh Ozersky and on the menu since opening, is the bar order. Tesar is one of the rare American chefs whose long-aged program is academic rather than gimmick — he taught the technique on Top Chef and at industry workshops for a decade. The room is small for a steakhouse and the cocktail bar is good for a solo diner.
Bob Sambol opened Bob's on Lemmon Avenue in 1993 and built the most replicated single side dish in American steakhouse history — the giant glazed carrot, brown-sugared and table-finished, served on every plate regardless of cut. Sambol sold to Omni Hotels in 2011; the cooking has held. The Prime Kansas City strip is the test cut; the bone-in ribeye is the alternative for a richer plate. The room is dark wood, white linen, low-key — a Dallas conservative classic. The bar pours by serious bourbon section and the wine list is deep without being theatrical. The Lemmon Avenue room is the original; the second Dallas location at the Omni Park West and the hotel offshoots in Houston, Tucson, Nashville and San Francisco read as competent but the spiritual home is Oak Lawn.
Nick Badovinus opened Town Hearth in 2017 and the Design District room is the most distinctive steakhouse experience in Dallas — seventy-eight Murano-style crystal chandeliers hang at three different heights, a 1950s Indian motorcycle is parked in the dining room, and a wood-fire grill sits at the back of the open kitchen. The 35-day dry-aged ribeye is the test cut. The wood-fired Maine lobster is the cross-category move. The raw bar runs Gulf oysters and seafood towers. The room is loud, bright, theatrical — the right register for an anniversary or a birthday rather than a deal-closing dinner. Badovinus came up at Hillstone and the floor service shows that lineage: poised, fast, present without hovering.
Phil Romano (Macaroni Grill, Eatzi's, Romano's Macaroni Grill) and Joe Palladino opened Nick & Sam's on Maple Avenue in 1999 and built the highest-energy steakhouse room in Dallas — piano in the center, raw bar at the front, dining room split into low-light banquettes around the perimeter. The rib chop is the headline cut; the lamb chops are the secondary. The seafood tower with king crab, lobster, and oyster shucked at the table is the visible Dallas flex. The room runs loud past 8:00 PM on a Friday; service stays smooth regardless. The bar pour is generous and the cocktail program is competent without being clever. Power-room booking patterns — Tuesday-Wednesday for business, Friday-Saturday for celebration — apply here as much as at any Dallas restaurant.
Al Biernat opened the Oak Lawn room in 1998 after thirty years on the floor at Del Frisco's; the second location at Preston Center followed in 2017. The cooking is conservative USDA Prime — bone-in ribeye, 16oz New York, lamb chops — and the wine list is deeper than the menu suggests. The actual product is the room: the back booths host Mavericks, Cowboys, Rangers and Stars ownership on a rolling basis, the dining room is dark and the corner tables face the door, and Biernat himself works the floor most nights, calling regulars by name. This is the Dallas business steakhouse most often correctly named by out-of-towners. The cooking will not surprise anyone; the room is the reason to book. Reservations four to six weeks out for the back section.
Phil Cobb opened Dakota's in 1984 inside the underground garden plaza of Thanksgiving Tower at 600 North Akard, a downtown Dallas conceit unique to the building — a sunken courtyard with a waterfall on the side of the dining room. The cooking is conservative mesquite-grilled American steakhouse with a serious raw bar attached. The bone-in ribeye and the tomahawk for two are the headline cuts; the wedge salad and the creamed corn are the right sides. The room is the value: white linen, dark wood, low light, plus the surprise of the waterfall patio for those who book the outdoor section. Downtown Dallas is empty on Sundays and Mondays; Dakota's holds at lunch and weekday evenings on convention traffic and law-firm business.
Dale Wamstad opened III Forks at the corner of Dallas Parkway and Briargrove in 1998 — a 30,000-square-foot ranch-room with multiple private dining areas, the kind of large-format Texas steakhouse that handles a forty-person rehearsal dinner without the room reading as a banquet hall. The cooking is conservative USDA Prime — bone-in ribeye, filet, lamb chops, lobster — and the family-style six-side service (lyonnaise potatoes, jalapeño-creamed corn, sautéed mushrooms, asparagus, creamed spinach, salad) is the format that makes III Forks distinctive. The wine list runs deep on California cabernet and a serious Texas Hill Country section. The Far North location handles the Plano-Frisco corporate corridor and the room is at its best for groups of six to twelve. The brand expanded to Austin, Houston, Atlanta and other cities — the Dallas Parkway original remains the strongest of the network.
How to Pick the Right Dallas Steakhouse
Closing a deal with a Dallas executive: Al Biernat's, Oak Lawn, back booth. Pappas Bros. for the older wine-list-first generation.
A serious technique-driven dinner: Knife at The Highland for the long-aged programs. Town Hearth for the wood-fire program.
Anniversary or birthday: Town Hearth in the Design District. Nick & Sam's Uptown for the louder version.
Out-of-town principal wanting "Dallas steakhouse": Pappas Bros. Lombardy. The wine list does the welcome.
Group of six to twelve: III Forks family-style; the six-side service works in this format.
Quiet conversation dinner: Bob's Steak & Chop House on Lemmon Avenue. The Prime Kansas City strip and the glazed carrot.
Frequently Asked Questions
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