United States — North Texas

Dallas — Power, Steak & Stars

Eighty restaurants. Two Michelin stars. A city that turned Texas beef and Louisiana spice into one of America's most surprising fine dining destinations. Dallas doesn't ask for your approval. It earns it.

80Restaurants Listed
2Michelin-Starred
7Occasions Covered
#8US City Ranking

Dallas's Finest Tables

80 restaurants listed
Tatsu Dallas Michelin star omakase sushi Deep Ellum interior
1
Solo Dining
Dallas — Deep Ellum
Tatsu Dallas
Edomae Sushi Omakase$$$$
Twenty seats. One Michelin star. Chef Tatsuya Sekiguchi's Deep Ellum counter is the most intimate fine dining experience in Texas — and the hardest reservation in the state.
Mamani Dallas Michelin star French restaurant Uptown interior
2
Impress Clients
Dallas — Uptown
Mamani
French Contemporary$$$$
Earned a Michelin star within weeks of opening. Chef Christophe De Lellis — formerly of Robuchon Las Vegas — brings exacting French craft to the Quad with startling speed and sureness.
Monarch Dallas rooftop Italian restaurant Thompson Hotel 49th floor
3
Proposal
Dallas — Downtown
Monarch
Modern Italian$$$$
Forty-nine floors above downtown. Wood-fired handmade pasta, floor-to-ceiling views, and a Michelin recommendation that confirms what every Dallas power couple already knows.
Lucia Dallas Italian restaurant Bishop Arts District intimate pasta
4
First Date
Dallas — Bishop Arts
Lucia
Italian$$$
Chef David Uygur's Bishop Arts obsession. Pastas that change with the seasons, house-cured salumi, and a menu so adventurous it consistently defies repetition. The smartest date move in Dallas.
Fearing's Dallas Ritz-Carlton Southwestern fine dining interior
5
Close a Deal
Dallas — Uptown
Fearing's
Southwestern$$$$
Dean Fearing invented Southwestern cuisine. His Ritz-Carlton dining room remains the definitive power table — the kind of place where deals get done before dessert arrives.
Al Biernat's Dallas classic steakhouse Oak Lawn interior
6
Close a Deal
Dallas — Oak Lawn
Al Biernat's
Classic Steakhouse$$$$
Old-world power and prime beef since 1998. The tables where Dallas old money and new money negotiate. Texas Wagyu, Allen Brothers tomahawk, and a wine list that has outlasted most friendships.
Bullion Dallas modern French brasserie Downtown gold interior
7
Impress Clients
Dallas — Downtown
Bullion
Modern French$$$$
Chef Bruno Davaillon's gold-wrapped French brasserie on the side of a downtown skyscraper. The most visually arresting dining room in Texas, backed by technique that justifies every theatrical inch.
Nuri Dallas Korean steakhouse upscale Uptown wagyu beef
8
Birthday
Dallas — Uptown
Nuri
Korean Steakhouse$$$$
Texas beef meets Korean precision. HeartBrand Akaushi, 44 Farms dry-aged, and Blue Branch Ranch rarities — Nuri landed on the World's Best Steak Restaurants list for good reason.
Stillwell's Hotel Swexan Dallas Uptown steakhouse Akaushi wagyu
9
Close a Deal
Dallas — Uptown
Stillwell's at Hôtel Swexan
Modern Steakhouse$$$$
Harwood's own Akaushi Wagyu program, a Master Sommelier wine program, and the Uptown address that signals serious intent. The newest power steakhouse in Dallas, doing everything right.
Del Frisco's Double Eagle Steakhouse Dallas Uptown prime beef
10
Birthday
Dallas — Uptown
Del Frisco's Double Eagle
Prime Steakhouse$$$$
A5 Wagyu. 44-day dry-aged tomahawk. The caviar service. Del Frisco's Double Eagle is the maximalist Dallas birthday dinner — grand, loud, and utterly committed to making you feel it.
Nobu Dallas Japanese Peruvian fine dining Uptown interior
11
Impress Clients
Dallas — Uptown
Nobu Dallas
Japanese-Peruvian$$$$
The global brand with local staying power. Nobu Matsuhisa's signature black cod, yellowtail jalapeño, and rock shrimp tempura land in Dallas as confidently as they do anywhere in the world.
Sushi Kozy Dallas omakase Korean chef Paul Ko counter sushi
12
Solo Dining
Dallas — Knox-Henderson
Sushi Kozy
Omakase Sushi$$$$
Korean-born Chef Paul Ko — veteran of Uchi — brings wit and precision to the omakase counter. Texas Monthly named it one of the best new restaurants in 2026 for good reason.
Georgie Curtis Stone Dallas Preston Center New American steakhouse
13
Birthday
Dallas — Preston Center
Georgie by Curtis Stone
New American$$$$
Celebrity chef Curtis Stone's Park Cities flagship. Butter-poached lobster, dry-aged prime beef, and a room full of Dallas money dressed for the occasion. Reliable in every good sense.
Rainbowcat Dallas Misti Norris James Beard new American creative
14
First Date
Dallas — Lower Greenville
Rainbowcat
New American$$$
James Beard finalist Misti Norris turns porchetta McMuffins and Cinnamon Toast Crunch desserts into genuine fine dining moments. Dallas's most surprising restaurant — and its most fun.
Partenope Dallas Neapolitan pizza Dino Santonicola AVPN certified
15
Team Dinner
Dallas — Knox-Henderson
Partenope Dallas
Neapolitan Pizza$$$
Texas's most decorated pizzaiolo, Dino Santonicola, earned AVPN certification and a top-10 spot on 50 Top Pizza. The margherita alone is worth the trip from anywhere in North Texas.
Carbone Dallas Italian American restaurant Uptown red sauce
16
Close a Deal
Dallas — Uptown
Carbone Dallas
Italian-American$$$$
The Major Food Group's red sauce institution arrives in Dallas with its theatrical tableside rigatoni vodka, spicy ribs, and the unmistakable sense that you're somewhere important.
Dakota's Steakhouse Dallas subterranean underground dining room downtown
17
Close a Deal
Dallas — Downtown
Dakota's Steakhouse
Classic Steakhouse$$$
Eighteen feet below street level, Dallas's only subterranean steakhouse serves prime beef to power players who've been descending these steps for decades. Old Dallas at its most atmospheric.
Revolver Taco Lounge Dallas Lower Greenville tasting menu Mexican
18
First Date
Dallas — Lower Greenville
Revolver Taco Lounge
Mexican Tasting Menu$$$
Rosario Cabrera's late-night tasting menu in a converted garage is the most adventurous Mexican dining in North Texas. A twelve-course taco progression that turns street food into high art.

Dallas Top 10 Ranked

01

Tatsu Dallas

Michelin One StarEdomae Sushi · Deep Ellum$$$$

Dallas's finest table and its hardest reservation. Chef Tatsuya Sekiguchi was forged at Yasuda in Manhattan, spent a decade there, then brought his edomae mastery to the Continental Gin Building in Deep Ellum. Twenty guests per seating, twenty pieces of precision nigiri — the fish sourced from Japan, the rice seasoned to order, each piece a small argument for patience over speed. Texas had never seen anything like it. The Michelin inspector came, ate, and agreed.

02

Mamani

Michelin One StarFrench Contemporary · Uptown$$$$

Dallas's newest Michelin star arrived faster than anyone predicted. Within weeks of opening at the Quad in Uptown, Mamani's chef Christophe De Lellis — a former pillar of Robuchon's Las Vegas operation — demonstrated that his bistronomie instincts transferred intact across the desert. Elevated simple plates. A wine list of frightening depth. The room is elegant without being stiff. The food is technically serious without being humourless. Set an alert for reservations.

03

Monarch

Michelin RecommendedModern Italian · Thompson Hotel, Downtown$$$$

Forty-nine floors above Dallas. Monarch is the city's most dramatic dining room: wood-fired handmade pastas, Hokkaido scallops, and prime steaks framed by floor-to-ceiling glass and the full skyline below. Danny Grant's culinary vision pairs classical Italian technique with contemporary luxury ingredients, and the results are as impressive as the altitude. For a proposal dinner, it is almost unfair to the other person — the view does half the work.

04

Lucia

Michelin RecommendedItalian · Bishop Arts District$$$

Lucia turned 15 in 2025 and is still the smartest restaurant in Dallas. Chef David Uygur's James Beard-nominated kitchen in Bishop Arts makes the city's finest pastas — shapes you won't find outside of regional Italy, flavours that shift with the season's dictates. House-cured salumi, freshly baked bread, a room small enough to feel like someone's home. The menu changes so regularly that no two visits are alike. That is not a flaw; that is the point.

05

Fearing's

Michelin RecommendedSouthwestern · Ritz-Carlton Dallas$$$$

Dean Fearing didn't just cook Southwestern food; he invented the genre. His Ritz-Carlton restaurant, opened in 2007, remains the gold standard for Texas fine dining with a national pedigree. The five-course tasting menu showcases everything from blue corn enchiladas to Gulf Coast seafood in preparations of quiet technical brilliance. The room manages to be simultaneously grand and warm. The power-table crowd has never left — and they never will.

06

Al Biernat's

Classic Steakhouse · Oak Lawn$$$$

Al Biernat's has been feeding Dallas power since 1998. The original Oak Lawn location on Lemmon Avenue is a room of old-world gravitas — dark wood, leather booths, tuxedoed servers who move like they have somewhere to be. Texas Wagyu from Gearhart Ranch, Allen Brothers tomahawk ribeye, a wine programme that runs to 800 labels. The room is louder than it looks; the steaks are better than they need to be. Both are features.

07

Bullion

Modern French · Downtown$$$$

Bruno Davaillon's gold brasserie is the most theatrically ambitious restaurant Dallas has produced. The dining room — literally gold-clad on the side of a downtown skyscraper — is matched by cooking of genuine rigour: terrines, soufflés, and French classics executed with an engineer's precision by a kitchen that has nothing to prove and keeps proving it anyway. On the World's 50 Best Discovery list. On every serious Dallas diner's short list.

08

Nuri

Korean Steakhouse · Uptown$$$$

Nuri made the World's Best Steak Restaurants list from the Dallas-Fort Worth area — and it did so by doing something genuinely original. Chef brings Korean precision to Texas ranching, sourcing exclusively from HeartBrand, 44 Farms, and Blue Branch Ranch. The result: steaks carved and presented with the care of Japanese wagyu, accompanied by fermented banchan and Korean sauces that somehow make Texas beef taste even more Texan.

09

Stillwell's at Hôtel Swexan

Modern Steakhouse · Uptown / Harwood District$$$$

Stillwell's opened inside Hotel Swexan in Harwood District and immediately entered the conversation for best new steakhouse in the city. Harwood Hospitality's proprietary Akaushi Wagyu program means the beef is genuinely exclusive — you cannot buy this cow anywhere else in Dallas. Add Master Sommelier Barbara Werley's wine programme and a room of studied elegance, and you have the clearest signal that Dallas steakhouse culture is still capable of surprise.

10

Del Frisco's Double Eagle

Prime Steakhouse · Uptown$$$$

If Stillwell's is the steakhouse for people who know, Del Frisco's Double Eagle is the one for people who want everyone else to know. A5 Japanese Wagyu. 44-day dry-aged tomahawk. Caviar service. Private dining rooms for parties up to fifty. The grand Dallas birthday and anniversary destination — and one of the few restaurants in the city capable of pulling off spectacle without embarrassing itself.

Occasion

Best for First Date in Dallas

Lucia Dallas Italian first date Bishop Arts intimate
1
First Date
Dallas — Bishop Arts
Lucia
Italian$$$
Small, warm, and perpetually changing — Lucia gives every first date a story to tell the next morning.
Rainbowcat Dallas first date Lower Greenville creative
2
First Date
Dallas — Lower Greenville
Rainbowcat
New American$$$
Misti Norris's playful genius gives any first date instant talking points and a kitchen they'll remember.

See all First Date restaurants →

Occasion

Best for Closing a Deal in Dallas

See all Close a Deal restaurants →

The Dallas Dining Guide

Everything you need to eat well in North Texas

The Lay of the Land

Dallas dining distributes itself across a handful of distinct nodes. Uptown — the stretch of McKinney Avenue and its surrounds — is where you'll find the highest density of serious restaurants: Fearing's at the Ritz, Al Biernat's on Lemmon, Mamani at the Quad, Nobu, Carbone, Stillwell's, and the Korean steakhouse Nuri all within a short drive of each other.

Downtown anchors the most dramatic experiences. Monarch sits 49 floors above Elm Street in the Thompson Hotel; Bullion occupies a gold-wrapped room on South Record. Deep Ellum, the historic arts district east of downtown, is home to Tatsu — the city's Michelin star and most demanding reservation. Bishop Arts, across the Trinity in Oak Cliff, is where Lucia has quietly been the smartest restaurant in Dallas for fifteen years.

Reservation Strategy

Tatsu Dallas is the hardest book in the state. Two seatings of ten guests each, Tuesday through Saturday — the reservation system opens on a rolling 60-day window and fills within hours. Use Tock, set an alert, and check daily for cancellations. Mamani runs similarly hot since earning its Michelin star. For both, Tuesday and Wednesday evenings are marginally easier.

Monarch, Fearing's, and Al Biernat's are accessible on OpenTable, though Friday and Saturday evenings at Monarch — for the full skyline effect — should be booked two to three weeks ahead. Lucia's reservations open the first Saturday of each month for the following month. Mark the calendar.

Dallas Dining Culture

Dallas eats late and dresses up. The city has none of Houston's casual-coastal instincts or Austin's studied nonchalance about food. Dallas diners arrive at the table knowing what they want and expect to be served accordingly. Restaurants respond in kind: service at Al Biernat's, Fearing's, and Bullion is among the most polished in the American South.

The steakhouse remains the city's dominant genre — and the city approaches it with the seriousness it deserves. But the Michelin inspector's arrival in Texas in 2024 revealed what the serious Dallas dining community already knew: the city's fine dining ceiling is higher than its reputation suggests. Tatsu and Mamani made the case definitively.

Practical Notes

Tipping is standard at 18–25%. Valet parking is common at upscale venues and typically runs $8–15; self-parking is available in most Uptown and Downtown garages. Dress codes: Fearing's, Al Biernat's, and Bullion enforce smart casual at minimum; Monarch prefers business casual for dinner. Tatsu and Mamani have no stated dress code but the occasion demands appropriate effort.

Dallas has no true happy hour culture at fine dining restaurants. Most serious kitchens begin service at 5:30pm. Last seating is typically 9:30–10pm on weeknights, 10:30pm on Friday and Saturday. The city is car-dependent; rideshare from Uptown to Deep Ellum takes 8–12 minutes depending on traffic.