Austin's Finest Tables
80 restaurants listedBest First Date Restaurants in Austin
Best Business Dinner Restaurants in Austin
Austin's Top 10 Ranked
Hestia
The 20-foot hearth at Hestia isn't just a kitchen feature — it's a philosophy. Chef Kevin Fink's Michelin-starred restaurant made live fire the medium and every ingredient the message. The $200 tasting menu is one of the most complete dining experiences in the American South, with a 400-bottle wine program to match.
Barley Swine
Bryce Gilmore's $125 tasting menu distills everything exceptional about Austin's food culture: seasonal precision, Southwestern flavors, a deep commitment to local sourcing. The room is casual; the cooking is not. This kitchen grows its own produce and collects rainwater for its garden. The food tastes like it.
Craft Omakase
Hidden inside a Rosedale strip mall, Craft Omakase earned its Michelin star by flying fish directly from Japan and applying it with restraint and care across 22 exquisite courses. The setting is intimate, the experience singular. This is the most surprising fine dining address in Austin.
Uchi
The restaurant that began Austin's culinary transformation in 2003. James Beard Award-winner Tyson Cole's non-traditional Japanese tasting menus have lost none of their wonder after two decades. The famous daily happy hour (4–6pm) remains Austin's best-value luxury experience.
Olamaie
The South, reexamined through the lens of African diaspora culinary tradition. Chef de Cuisine Amanda Turner and Executive Chef Michael Fojtasek have crafted a dining experience that honors Gulf shrimp, field greens, and cast iron — while achieving Michelin-level precision. The buttermilk biscuit with whipped honey butter is non-negotiable.
Jeffrey's
Austin's original power restaurant, open since 1975 in the historic Clarksville neighborhood. Executive Chef Mark McCain's wood-fired dry-aged steaks and French-American classics have outlasted every trend. The tableside martini cart remains one of Austin's great dining rituals.
Nixta Taqueria
Chef Edgar Rico won a James Beard Award and a Michelin Green Star by grinding heirloom Mexican and Texan corn into masa of stunning depth. The $85 omakase masa tasting is the most exciting budget luxury in Austin. Duck carnitas on pink heirloom corn tortilla. The tuna tostada. Unmissable.
Emmer & Rye
The most experimental dining format in Austin: a rotating menu supplemented by dim sum carts circulating through the dining room. Heirloom grains milled fresh. Whole animal butchery. An extensive in-house fermentation program. The $85 tasting menu is the most ambitious deal on Rainey Street.
Garrison
The Fairmont Austin's flagship restaurant operates at the intersection of Texas heritage and international luxury hospitality. Post oak live fire, Gulf seafood, ranch-raised beef, and a private dining room for twelve. The most versatile special-occasion address downtown.
Dai Due
Chef Jesse Griffiths has imposed a rule that sounds simple and turns out to be radical: every ingredient must come from Texas. Wild boar. Antelope. Gulf shrimp. Hill Country olive oil. Texas wine. The result is the most geographically committed restaurant in the state — and one of its most delicious.
The Austin Dining Guide
What to know before you book
The Austin Food Identity
Austin occupies a singular position in American dining: a city that simultaneously invented Texas's most credible fine dining scene and became ground zero for Michelin-recognized barbecue. Both achievements required the same thing — chefs with conviction and an insistence on sourcing from the extraordinary larder surrounding the city.
Live fire is the city's signature technique. From Hestia's 20-foot stainless hearth to Garrison's post oak grill to the legendary pits of InterStellar and la Barbecue, smoke and flame shape more Austin menus than any other American city. When James Beard Award-winning pitmaster Aaron Franklin proved that smoked meat belonged in the same conversation as tasting menus, the city's culinary establishment took notice.
The city has earned 7 Michelin stars across restaurants ranging from $125 tasting menus to $20 plates of tacos. No American food city makes Michelin recognition accessible at that price spread. That is Austin's authentic achievement.
Neighborhoods to Know
South Lamar / South Congress: The historic heart of Austin's food identity. Uchi, Odd Duck, and Mattie's at Green Pastures all anchor a stretch that defines what Austin dining means. Walk-in culture, independent operators, no hotel restaurant energy.
Downtown: The Fairmont's Garrison and Hestia at 607 W 3rd represent the city's most polished and architecturally considered dining rooms. Appropriate for business, proposals, and any occasion where first impressions matter.
East Austin: The city's creative engine. Nixta Taqueria, Justine's Brasserie, and Dai Due have turned East 12th Street and Manor Road into the most interesting restaurant corridor in Texas. Less formal; completely serious about food.
Rainey Street: Austin's bar-heavy entertainment district also houses Emmer & Rye, the city's most inventive restaurant format. The dim sum carts threading through the dining room are an Austin original.
Reservations & Booking
Austin's best restaurants book out 30 days in advance. Hestia and Craft Omakase run exclusively through their own booking systems; Uchi and Garrison are on OpenTable. Nixta, Barley Swine, and Emmer & Rye use Resy. For same-week dining at the top tier, check Resy at 10am on Mondays when new slots typically release.
Walk-in culture exists but rewards patience. Uchi's bar seats are first-come, first-served and arguably the best deal in Austin fine dining. Odd Duck and Emmer & Rye typically accommodate walk-ins by 9pm on weeknights. The BBQ institutions — InterStellar, la Barbecue — require no reservation but demand early arrival; plan to queue before noon.
Austin Tech Week, SXSW (March), and Austin City Limits (October) create competition for reservations that makes even shoulder-season planning feel inadequate. Book 60 days ahead for any visit falling on those weekends.
Dress Code & Etiquette
Austin's relationship with formality is complicated. Michelin-starred restaurants here are categorically more relaxed than equivalents in New York or Chicago. Hestia requires nothing beyond "come as you are" — though the food and room will make you wish you'd dressed up. Jeffrey's has a quietly grown-up atmosphere that rewards business casual.
The city runs warm and humid from May through September. Outdoor dining at Mattie's and Justine's is spectacular in April and October but challenging in summer. Indoor air conditioning is aggressive — bring a layer to tasting menu restaurants regardless of the season.
Tipping & Costs
Standard Austin tipping is 20–22% at full-service restaurants. Several top restaurants — Craft Omakase chief among them — have shifted to all-inclusive pricing with gratuity built into the experience booking. Confirm before you arrive.
Budget expectations: Michelin-starred tasting menus run $125–$200 per person before beverages. A la carte dinner at Uchi or Olamaie typically lands at $100–$150 per person with cocktails. The city's true luxury-to-value ratio is most apparent at Nixta Taqueria ($20–45 per person) and InterStellar BBQ ($25–40 per person) — both bearing Michelin recognition.