The Restaurant
1000 NORTH opened in 2016 at the eastern end of US-1 just south of the Indiantown Road bridge, on a parcel that fronts the Jupiter Inlet's Intracoastal stretch. The property is a co-investment with several professional athletes who live locally — including Tiger Woods, Michael Jordan, and Dustin Johnson — and the design pedigree shows: four interlocking dining rooms (the main glass-walled gallery, the open-air dock terrace, the upstairs Sea Level Lounge, and a private club room) connect via a marble central bar and 350 feet of working dock that hosts daily boat arrivals.
The kitchen serves a modern American menu that leans hard on the waterfront strengths: a daily fish board with local snapper, grouper, and pompano caught within twenty miles; prime steaks from a small Pennsylvania farm relationship; a raw-bar program built around East Coast oysters that turn over daily. Signature plates include the seared local snapper with sweet corn and brown butter, the Wagyu meatballs in San Marzano sauce served from a copper pot, and a tableside-finished Caesar that has become an unofficial benchmark for the town.
The wine list runs to about three hundred and fifty labels with serious depth in Napa Cabernet, Burgundy white, and a unique selection of Italian Super-Tuscans that the wine director sources directly through importer relationships. Service is at the upper tier of Palm Beach County: black-jacketed, on-script, and pace-aware. The kitchen closes at 9pm Monday through Thursday but stays open until 10 on weekends, and Sunday brunch on the dock has become the established Jupiter season-opener.
Why This Is Jupiter’s Impress Clients Pick
For clients flying into PBI or driving up from Palm Beach for a Jupiter meeting, 1000 NORTH is the address that does the talking for you. The Inlet view through the glass wall is a working credential — it tells a guest you understood that the geography matters as much as the menu. The room is loud-enough to feel populated and quiet-enough to negotiate. The wine list lets you make a careful impression without grandstanding. And the dock entrance — guests literally tie up and walk in — is the closing image of an evening that South Florida professionals never forget.
Leave a Review
Registered members get published by default; guest reviews are moderated first.