Best Close a Deal Restaurants in Telluride: 2026 Guide

Close a Deal dining · Telluride · 2026 edition

"Take the gondola up at five-forty-five, the sun will hit Mount Wilson at six-twenty, and order before the light moves." That is the standing instruction at Allred's, the gondola-top room above Telluride that has served closing-meeting dinners since 1995. Telluride is a box canyon at 8,750 feet with eight thousand year-round residents and roughly twenty real restaurants — small enough that the booking conversation matters and large enough to assemble the seven rooms below for a 2026 deal-dinner short list.

Why Telluride Hosts a Negotiation

Telluride is a destination for two kinds of business dinners: the festival circuit (Film Festival Labor Day weekend, Mountainfilm in May, the Bluegrass Festival in June) and the strategic offsite that prizes the box-canyon isolation. The drive from Montrose Regional (MTJ) is sixty-five miles and ninety minutes through the San Juans; the closer Telluride Regional (TEX) is the highest commercial airport in the United States and only takes turboprop service, with frequent weather delays in winter.

Mountain Village — the gondola-connected town 1,800 feet above the historic box-canyon town — holds two of the strongest deal-dinner rooms (Allred's at the gondola summit, The Cosmopolitan in Mountain Village). The historic downtown grid runs the rest: 221 South Oak, La Marmotte, The New Sheridan Chop House. The gondola itself is free and runs until midnight in season, which matters — a dinner that starts at Allred's and ends at The Sheridan is the canonical Telluride deal-dinner format.

The booking lead is festival-driven. Labor Day weekend (Film Festival) and Christmas-to-New-Year see a six-week minimum lead at the top three rooms. Mid-week in non-festival months is dramatically easier — typically a week or less. Private dining is the asset: Allred's back room, The Cosmopolitan's Wine Cellar, 221 South Oak's upstairs PDR each handle ten-to-sixteen with a chef-built menu and a sommelier-led pour.

The Seven Picks

Chef: Erich Owen (Executive Chef since 2015)
Where: Top of Gondola Station St. Sophia, Mountain Village (10,540 ft)
Price: Mains $44–$72; tasting from $135 per person
Cuisine: Contemporary American, mountain ingredients, fireside service
Proof point: Wine Spectator Best of Award of Excellence (2024); opened 1995 at the gondola summit by Bruce Allred
Erich Owen's gondola-summit room with a 10,540-foot view of Mount Wilson — book the 18:30 seating for a closing dinner that runs into sunset.

Allred's opened at the top of Gondola Station St. Sophia in 1995 — the gondola was built that year specifically to serve the restaurant and Mountain Village's ski terrain. The room sits at 10,540 feet with a full glass wall facing west toward Mount Wilson and the San Juan range. Erich Owen has run the kitchen since 2015 and works in a contemporary American register that takes mountain ingredients seriously: elk loin with cherry mostarda, Colorado lamb chop with mountain herbs, a pan-roasted trout with brown-butter and lemon.

For a closing-meeting dinner the booking is the 18:30 seating — sunset on Mount Wilson lands at 19:20 in summer, 17:30 in winter, and the room's glass wall takes the light at exactly the moment the cheese course arrives. The wine programme runs 600 selections with depth in Burgundy, Bordeaux, and California cabernet. The back room handles private groups of twelve with a custom menu and the gondola from town is free and runs to midnight; the dinner-and-gondola format is the canonical Telluride deal evening.

What to order: The elk loin, the Colorado lamb chop, a Pinot Noir from Oregon or Burgundy..

Allred's restaurantRead the Allred's verdict →
Chef: Chad Scothorn (chef-owner since 1999)
Where: 300 West San Juan Avenue, Mountain Village (Hotel Columbia)
Price: Mains $42–$68; tasting from $125 per person
Cuisine: Contemporary American, wood-grilled, ingredient-led
Proof point: Wine Spectator Best of Award of Excellence (2024); Chad Scothorn opened in 1999 and trained at Charlie Trotter's in Chicago
Chad Scothorn's chef-owned room in Mountain Village, in business since 1999 — book the private wine cellar for a deal dinner of twelve.

Chad Scothorn trained under Charlie Trotter in Chicago for five years before moving to Telluride and opening The Cosmopolitan in 1999. The restaurant sits inside the Hotel Columbia in Mountain Village and runs a contemporary American menu with a wood-grill focus: a 14oz dry-aged ribeye with mountain-herb butter, a slow-cooked elk shoulder with juniper jus, a daily fish that runs trout, halibut, or sea bass depending on the catch.

The private dining room is the Wine Cellar — twelve seats at a single oak table, surrounded by the restaurant's 700-bottle cellar with depth in Burgundy and Champagne. Scothorn or his sommelier runs the dinner personally; the menu is custom-built with 72 hours notice and the wine pairing typically runs $95–$185 per head depending on the selection. For a deal dinner in Mountain Village this is the second pick after Allred's and the better option if the brief favours intimacy over view.

What to order: The dry-aged ribeye, the elk shoulder, a Burgundy first growth from the cellar..

The Cosmopolitan (The Cosmo) restaurantRead the The Cosmopolitan (The Cosmo) verdict →
Chef: Eliza Gavin (chef-owner since 2007)
Where: 221 South Oak Street, Telluride (downtown box canyon)
Price: Mains $36–$58; tasting from $110 per person
Cuisine: Farm-to-table American, daily-changing menu, ingredient-led
Proof point: James Beard Foundation semifinalist for Best Chef Mountain (2018, 2019, 2023); Eliza Gavin opened in 2007 after working at Boulder's Frasca Food & Wine
Eliza Gavin's downtown room with a daily menu and the strongest pasta on the box canyon — book it for a working dinner where the menu can flex.

Eliza Gavin opened 221 South Oak in 2007 after working at Frasca Food & Wine in Boulder under Lachlan Mackinnon-Patterson. The restaurant sits in a historic miner's house on Oak Street and runs a daily-changing menu around what the morning delivers — typically a fresh-pasta course at the centre, a wood-grilled main, and a seasonal dessert that Gavin's pastry chef builds from scratch. Gavin has been a James Beard semifinalist for Best Chef Mountain three times (2018, 2019, 2023).

For a deal dinner the asset is the menu's flexibility. The upstairs PDR seats fourteen at a single oak table with a window onto Oak Street and the kitchen will build a custom menu around dietary requirements with 48 hours notice. The wine list runs 350 selections with particular depth in Italian whites, Burgundy, and Champagne; the corkage is $35 if the host brings a bottle.

What to order: Whatever the chef proposes; the tasting at $110 is the right way through..

221 South Oak restaurantRead the 221 South Oak verdict →
Chef: Mark Reggiannini (chef-owner since 1995)
Where: 150 West San Juan Avenue, Telluride (downtown)
Price: Mains $38–$62; à la carte
Cuisine: French country and bistro, ingredient-led, classic
Proof point: Operating since 1990; Mark Reggiannini took ownership 1995 and ran kitchens at Domaine Chandon and Auberge du Soleil in Napa before Telluride
Telluride's 36-year French country room with the duck confit that defines the town — pencil it in for a deal where the counterparty likes a tablecloth.

La Marmotte opened in 1990 in the historic Telluride icehouse and has run as a French country bistro since. Mark Reggiannini took the kitchen in 1995 after running stoves at Domaine Chandon and Auberge du Soleil in Napa; the menu reads as classical French: duck confit with potato pavé, escargot in garlic-parsley butter, a coq au vin that hasn't changed in twenty years. The room is small — forty-eight seats — and the bar at the front handles the after-dinner crowd.

For a deal dinner the booking is the back four-top or the window banquette (seats six). The volume in the dining room is conversation-easy and the service is old-school French — tableside Caesar, a flambéed dessert if the kitchen has time, a digestif rolled out on a wood cart. The wine programme is the strongest French list in town (the only place in Telluride with a real Bordeaux selection at the back of the book).

What to order: The duck confit, the coq au vin, a Burgundy from Reggiannini's allocation..

La Marmotte restaurantRead the La Marmotte verdict →
Chef: Ethan Riley (Executive Chef since 2018)
Where: 233 West Colorado Avenue, Telluride (The New Sheridan Hotel)
Price: Mains $42–$78 (USDA Prime steaks); à la carte
Cuisine: American steakhouse; mining-era setting
Proof point: The New Sheridan Hotel opened 1895 (one of Colorado's oldest continuously operated hotels); Chop House restored to 1895 fittings in 2014
The 130-year Sheridan Hotel's steakhouse with the original 1895 bar — book it for a deal dinner that uses the building as the message.

The New Sheridan Hotel opened in 1895 — the year Telluride's silver-mining economy peaked — and the building has run continuously since, with the original bar intact and the dining room restored in 2014 to its 1895 fittings. The Chop House sits at the corner of the hotel and runs a USDA Prime steak programme: bone-in ribeye, NY strip, a 32oz tomahawk for the table, a wood-grilled trout for the variation course. Ethan Riley has run the kitchen since 2018 and the dry-aging programme is the longest in the box canyon.

For a deal dinner the room is the message. The original 1895 bar — wood-and-mirror, with a piano in the corner — is one of the oldest continuously operating bar rooms in Colorado; the dining room next door seats sixty at white-tablecloth four-tops and an upstairs PDR seats fourteen. The wine list runs 400 selections with proper California cabernet and a deeper Italian section than the steakhouse format would suggest.

What to order: The 32oz tomahawk for the table, the wood-grilled trout, a Napa cabernet from the 1990s..

The New Sheridan Chop House restaurantRead the The New Sheridan Chop House verdict →
Chef: Paolo Canevari (chef-owner since 1997)
Where: 114 East Colorado Avenue, Telluride (downtown)
Price: Mains $32–$54; pasta from $26
Cuisine: Italian, regional, pasta-led; Tuscan and Piedmont wine list
Proof point: Paolo Canevari trained in Modena and Bologna before opening Rustico in 1997; longest-running Italian restaurant in Telluride
Paolo Canevari's 29-year Italian room on Colorado Avenue — pencil it in for a working dinner that doesn't need to be the closing dinner.

Paolo Canevari grew up in Modena and trained in Emilia-Romagna and Piedmont before moving to Telluride and opening Rustico in 1997. The restaurant runs a regional Italian menu — Bolognese, hand-cut tagliatelle, agnolotti with brown butter, an osso buco that needs to be ordered two days ahead — and the wine list is heavy on Italian regional selections (Barolo, Brunello, Friulian whites).

For a deal dinner this is the room for the working dinner that doesn't need to be the closing dinner. The volume is louder than Allred's or The Cosmopolitan and the service is informal. The back private dining room seats eight and the menu can be built around dietary lines with 24 hours notice. Best as the room for night two of a three-night deal, or for a working group that wants pasta over a steak course.

What to order: The hand-cut tagliatelle with Bolognese, the osso buco (order 48 hours ahead), a Barolo from the back of the list..

Rustico Ristorante restaurantRead the Rustico Ristorante verdict →
Chef: Honga Im (chef-owner since 1994)
Where: 135 East Colorado Avenue, Telluride
Price: Mains $28–$48; tasting from $85 per person
Cuisine: Pan-Asian; Korean-Japanese-Thai; ingredient-led
Proof point: Honga Im has run the kitchen continuously since 1994; the restaurant has appeared on the Aspen Food & Wine Festival's Best Chef's Choice list (2019, 2022)
Honga Im's 32-year pan-Asian room on Colorado Avenue — try it once for a deal dinner where the counterparty has had three nights of American steaks.

Honga Im opened Honga's Lotus Petal in 1994 and has cooked every plate herself for thirty-two years. The format is pan-Asian — Korean-Japanese-Thai weighted toward the Korean canon (a proper bibimbap, a slow-braised galbi, a fresh-rolled spring roll programme that runs eight varieties) — and the kitchen does a sushi service at the back counter four nights a week. The room is intimate (thirty-eight seats) and the food is the strongest non-Western kitchen in the box canyon.

For a deal dinner this is the variation room — book it for the second or third night of a multi-day visit when the counterparty needs relief from American steaks and French bistro. The sushi counter handles a private omakase for four-to-six (the chef will close the bar for a group with 48 hours notice). The wine programme is short but the sake list runs deeper than expected and pairs the meal correctly.

What to order: The galbi, the bibimbap, the omakase counter for the private group..

Honga's Lotus Petal restaurantRead the Honga's Lotus Petal verdict →

How to Book a Telluride Deal Dinner

Festival weekends are the booking bottleneck. The Telluride Film Festival (Labor Day weekend) and Mountainfilm (Memorial Day weekend) book out Allred's, The Cosmopolitan, 221 South Oak and La Marmotte by April. Christmas-to-New-Year and Presidents' Day Week run at six-week lead times. Mid-week outside festival months — true off-season is April-May and October-November — typically opens at one-week lead and can confirm a same-day table.

Air access shapes the schedule. Telluride Regional (TEX) is the highest commercial airport in the US (9,078 feet) and only handles turboprop service from Denver and Phoenix; winter weather diverts to Montrose (MTJ) regularly. Montrose is the reliable option — sixty-five miles and ninety minutes through the San Juans, with full-service jet handling at MTJ Jet Center. For a same-day closing meeting, plan on a Montrose arrival before 16:00 to make a 19:00 dinner reservation in Telluride.

The gondola is the city's key infrastructure. It connects historic Telluride (8,750 ft) to Mountain Village (9,545 ft) in thirteen minutes and runs free of charge from 06:30 to midnight in season. Allred's sits at the gondola summit (Gondola Station St. Sophia, 10,540 ft); The Cosmopolitan and Hotel Columbia are at the Mountain Village stop. A deal dinner that starts at Allred's at 18:30 and ends at The New Sheridan Bar in downtown Telluride at 23:30 is gondola-connected the whole way.

Dress code reads as mountain-formal: a blazer with chinos or tailored denim is the universal answer, and Western boots are accepted everywhere. Ties are rare outside of festival galas. Allred's and The Cosmopolitan lean slightly more formal in the evening; La Marmotte and The New Sheridan Chop House run white-tablecloth service that expects a jacket. The downtown rooms (221 South Oak, Rustico, Honga's) accept smart casual but a counterparty meeting still warrants the blazer.

Frequently Asked Questions

How far in advance should I book a Telluride deal dinner during a festival weekend?
For the Telluride Film Festival (Labor Day weekend), Mountainfilm (Memorial Day weekend), or the Bluegrass Festival (mid-June), book by April or earlier — six-to-eight weeks lead is the minimum for Allred's, The Cosmopolitan, 221 South Oak and La Marmotte. Christmas-to-New-Year and Presidents' Day Week run at four-to-six weeks. Mid-week outside festival months opens at one-week lead and often confirms a same-day table.
Which Telluride restaurants offer private dining for business groups?
Allred's has a back private room seating twelve at the gondola summit. The Cosmopolitan's Wine Cellar seats twelve at a single oak table with a 700-bottle cellar surrounding it. 221 South Oak's upstairs PDR seats fourteen with a custom menu on 48 hours notice. The New Sheridan Chop House has an upstairs PDR for fourteen with white-tablecloth service. Rustico's back room seats eight. La Marmotte does not offer formal PDR but holds the back four-top for groups.
How do I get to Telluride for a same-day deal dinner?
Two options. Telluride Regional (TEX) at 9,078 feet handles SkyWest turboprop service from Denver and Phoenix but is weather-vulnerable in winter and diverts to Montrose regularly. Montrose Regional (MTJ) is the reliable airport — full-service jet handling, a 100-mile drive to Telluride that takes ninety minutes through the San Juans. For a same-day dinner, plan on an MTJ arrival before 16:00 to make a 19:00 Telluride reservation. Private aviation lands at either airport.
What is the dress code at Telluride fine-dining restaurants?
Mountain-formal — a blazer with chinos or tailored denim, Western boots accepted everywhere. Ties are rare outside of festival galas. Allred's, The Cosmopolitan, La Marmotte, and The New Sheridan Chop House lean slightly more formal in the evening (jacket strongly suggested). 221 South Oak, Rustico, and Honga's accept smart casual. In ski season, daytime dress is après-ski casual and shifts to mountain-formal for dinner.
Which Telluride restaurants are gondola-accessible from Mountain Village?
Allred's sits at the gondola summit (Gondola Station St. Sophia, 10,540 ft). The Cosmopolitan in Mountain Village is two minutes from the Mountain Village gondola stop. The other five — 221 South Oak, La Marmotte, The New Sheridan Chop House, Rustico, and Honga's — are all in historic downtown Telluride, a thirteen-minute gondola ride from Mountain Village and free of charge. The gondola runs 06:30 to midnight in season.

Close a Deal elsewhere

Peer cities our editors rank for close a deal dining in 2026.

Editorial only. No paid placements on this list. Affiliate disclosure: when reservation links are present, they may earn RFK a referral fee at no cost to the diner. Read our methodology.