Honolulu's Finest Tables
50 restaurants rankedThe Top 10 Honolulu Tables
La Mer at Halekulani
Hawaii's most decorated restaurant holds a record no other table in the islands has matched: every AAA Five Diamond Award since 1990. Chef Yves Garnier's Neo-Classical French cuisine harnesses the Pacific's finest seasonal produce — Kona lobster, locally-caught opakapaka — and presents them in a room where the ocean breathes through open air walls and white gloves have never gone out of style. For a proposal or a once-in-a-generation occasion, this is the table. Book six weeks ahead.
Senia
The most important restaurant to open in Honolulu in the last decade. Chefs Anthony Rush and Chris Kajioka — both veterans of three-Michelin-star kitchens — created Senia as a neighbourhood counter with no ceremony and maximum flavour. The 12-course tasting menu ($288 pp, Friday-Saturday at the Chef's Counter) is the gold standard. The à la carte menu available weeknights is Honolulu's best casual fine-dining value. That exposed brick room in Chinatown quietly holds the city's most coveted reservation.
Vintage Cave Club
Hidden beneath the Ala Moana Shopping Center in a subterranean cave adorned with a reported $20 million in art. The 12-course Franco-Japanese omakase unfolds over three hours in a room so visually theatrical it makes every other restaurant in Honolulu feel like a cafeteria by comparison. Membership is preferred. Walk-in prospects are slim. The wait list is worth it.
Mugen at ESPACIO
ESPACIO's ultra-luxury boutique hotel gives its exclusive restaurant all the infrastructure it needs to be exceptional. Forbes Five-Star service, Executive Chef Colin Sato's five-course menu shaped in dialogue with Alan Wong, and a wine cellar befitting the superlatives. Honolulu's most rarefied dining address for those who want both perfection and spectacle.
Alan Wong's at The Kahala
The most anticipated restaurant opening in Hawaii in years. Chef Alan Wong — the godfather of Hawaii Regional Cuisine, the man who changed how the islands eat — returns after a five-year hiatus with a new flagship at The Kahala Hotel. Where Hoku's once stood, Alan Wong's now commands the Kahala waterfront. This is the Honolulu table that rewrites the city's dining hierarchy.
Miro Kaimuki
Chef Chris Kajioka's neighbourhood counter on Waialae Avenue is the city's most intellectually exciting restaurant. A Francophile's tasting menu filtered through Japanese restraint, applied to Hawaiian produce with the confidence of someone who once cooked at Atelier Crenn and Vintage Cave. The most intimate fine-dining room in Honolulu — twelve seats, maximum concentration.
53 By The Sea
The city's supreme proposal restaurant. Diamond Head and the open Pacific fill the floor-to-ceiling windows. The five-course Hawaii Regional menu holds its own against the scenery. Since 2012, it has hosted more engagements, anniversaries, and milestone dinners than any other restaurant on O'ahu. Book the corner window table and arrive before sunset.
Tempura Ichika
Michelin-trained Chef Kiyoshi Chikano brought a radical proposition to Honolulu: tempura not as a side dish but as the entire art form. Eight counter seats. Approximately sixteen courses. The finest seasonal seafood coated in a batter so light it constitutes a philosophical statement. At $160 per person, it is Honolulu's most exciting counter experience outside a sushi bar.
Bar Māze
The most original dining concept in Honolulu: every course of Chef Ki Chung's omakase menu matched with a handcrafted cocktail by James Beard Award-recognised mixologist Justin Park. Indigo and brass surfaces, natural wood, and the studied quiet of a room where everyone at the counter is paying complete attention. This is the restaurant that proves Honolulu is not waiting for the world's approval.
Merriman's Honolulu
Peter Merriman did not invent Hawaiian cuisine, but he helped teach the islands to trust it. The Ward Village restaurant carries 30-plus years of farm-to-table doctrine into the city's most dynamic neighbourhood. Ninety percent of ingredients sourced from Hawaii farmers. A wine program that takes the Pacific seriously. The Hale 'Aina Gold Award two years running. The team dinner that makes colleagues feel like colleagues.
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The Dining Culture
Honolulu's culinary identity is unlike any other American city. The crossroads of Japanese, Chinese, Korean, Filipino, Portuguese, and Native Hawaiian culinary traditions — all refracted through the filter of aloha spirit and Pacific abundance — has produced a dining culture of extraordinary range and depth.
Hawaii Regional Cuisine, formalised in the 1990s by a collective of chefs including Peter Merriman, Roy Yamaguchi, and Alan Wong, remains the dominant force in upscale Honolulu dining. Its doctrine is simple: cook Hawaiian ingredients with the world's techniques. The results, at their best, are some of the most distinctive fine dining in America.
The city's emerging Chinatown district has become the laboratory for a younger generation — chefs like Chris Kajioka at Senia and Miro Kaimuki, and newer arrivals like Giovedi's Bao Tran — who are cooking Hawaiian-adjacent food with global ambition and neighbourhood prices.
Best Neighbourhoods for Dining
Waikiki — The tourist strip contains genuine world-class dining alongside the predictable. La Mer, Azure, Orchids, Roy's, and ESPACIO's Mugen justify the higher prices. Avoid the burger chains masquerading as Hawaiian cuisine.
Chinatown — Honolulu's most exciting dining neighbourhood and the city's best argument for walking distance dining. Senia, Giovedi, Fete, and Livestock Tavern are all within three blocks of each other. Come hungry, stay late.
Kaimuki — The neighbourhood that serious Honolulu diners call home. Miro, Leila, and The Pig & The Lady are here. Waialae Avenue rewards wandering.
Ward Village / Kakaako — The developing arts district now houses Merriman's, MW Restaurant, Bar Māze, and 53 By The Sea. The city's fastest-growing dining corridor.
Reservation Strategy
Honolulu's top tables fill quickly — particularly during the December-January peak season and the summer months. La Mer and Vintage Cave require two to four weeks' notice. Senia's Chef Counter releases Thursday at 10am Hawaii Time. Alan Wong's new Kahala restaurant is already booked weeks ahead in its opening months.
For same-week bookings at fine dining establishments, call the restaurant directly — the phone often unlocks a table that the online system shows as full. Eat at the bar or counter at Senia, Bar Māze, and Tempura Ichika for a single diner's access to the city's most exclusive seats.
Practical Details
Dress code — La Mer and Vintage Cave require collared shirts for men; smart casual suffices everywhere else. Waikiki's luxury restaurants lean elegant but Hawaii's culture resists formality. Open-toed shoes at the beach-adjacent restaurants are perfectly acceptable.
Tipping — Standard American practice: 18-22% at full-service restaurants. Omakase counters (Tempura Ichika, Bar Māze, Senia's Chef Counter) often include gratuity in the stated price — confirm before adding additional tip.
Getting there — Honolulu's dining neighbourhoods are spread across O'ahu. Rideshare is reliable and recommended for evening dining. Waikiki restaurants are walkable from most beachfront hotels. Chinatown is a 15-minute rideshare from Waikiki — go anyway.
Explore nearby dining guides: Los Angeles, San Francisco, Las Vegas.