Orlando's Finest Tables
50 restaurants rankedOrlando's Top 10 Ranked
Sorekara
Chef William Shen's multi-room tasting menu is the most serious culinary statement in Florida. Each course navigates Japan's 72 micro-seasons through preparations that range from hushed reverence to electric surprise — a convenience-store snack reimagined as high art; nigiri that dismantles everything you thought you knew about rice and fish. Diners progress through multiple rooms over several hours. This is dining as architecture. The $345 tasting menu is earned.
Victoria & Albert's
The only AAA Five Diamond restaurant ever located inside a theme park. The Victorian room — all harp music, white-gloved servers, and a bespoke menu changed nightly — executes a vision of elevated hospitality that has no equal in central Florida. At $295 for the dining room and $425 for the Chef's Table, it is Orlando's most expensive night out. It is also its most unforgettable.
Camille
Chef Tung Phan's eight-seat counter in Baldwin Park is the most personal restaurant in Orlando. A tasting menu that moves between French technique and Vietnamese memory — banh mi reimagined, pho reframed — with $180 per person buying you among the most transportive meals available in the state. Within a year of opening, Phan had a Michelin star. Nobody was surprised.
Capa
Seventeen floors above the Four Seasons pool, with Disney's fireworks erupting on the horizon each evening, Capa occupies a position in Orlando dining that no other restaurant can replicate. Wood-fired prime cuts, gambas heavy with garlic and paprika, and a wine list curated for celebration. The view alone justifies the reservation. The food makes it mandatory.
Knife & Spoon
Chef Tyler Kineman's Ritz-Carlton flagship is the deal-closing restaurant of Orlando. Dry-aged 44 Farms beef aged in-house, inventive pastas (ube cacio e pepe demands attention), and a room designed for the kind of conversation that doesn't need background noise to compete with. The most reliably excellent fine dining experience in the city — and the one that consistently earns its Michelin star.
Ômo by Jônt
Chef Ryan Ratino transplanted the DNA of his DC two-star to a townhouse in Winter Park. The experience begins in a living room, progresses through a chef's counter, and ends in a pastry parlor. Sixteen guests per seating. Between $195 and $375 depending on menu selection. It is theatrical without being frivolous, and technically flawless.
Soseki Modern Omakase
Ten seats. Chef Michael earned his first Michelin star just one year after opening. The monthly-changing menu integrates the finest global fish with Central Florida produce in a 15- or 20-course format that makes a strong case for Winter Park as one of the country's finest omakase destinations.
Kadence
Eight seats in Orlando's Milk District, where the exterior gives almost nothing away. Inside, a counter wraps a kitchen preparing one of the most individual omakase menus in the country — Japanese in structure, Filipino in soul, and precisely $225 per person for one of the most distinctive meals available in Florida.
Christner's Prime Steak & Lobster
For three decades, Christner's has been where Orlando's business community closes its deals, celebrates its promotions, and brings its most important clients. Cold-water lobster tails from Australia and New Zealand, USDA prime beef, and a wine portfolio of 5,500 bottles in a room built for conversation. Old school — and correct to be so.
Eddie V's Prime Seafood
The anchor of Orlando's Restaurant Row corridor does seafood and steaks with national chain resources deployed with local conviction. A jazz lounge that keeps going until midnight. Whole Maine lobster, Dover sole, and the best team-dinner logistics on Sand Lake Road — ample room, professional service, and a menu that satisfies every appetite at the table.
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The Orlando Dining Guide
Everything you need to eat the city correctly
The Scene
For decades, Orlando was dismissed as a dining city — a place where theme park food courts set the cultural ceiling and tourists didn't demand better. That narrative is over. The 2022 arrival of the Michelin Guide Florida triggered an arms race that has produced one of the most concentrated clusters of serious restaurants between New York and Miami.
The transformation is anchored by Baldwin Park, the New Urbanist neighbourhood east of downtown that has become ground zero for chef-driven ambition. Sorekara and Camille sit blocks apart. The nearby Milk District and Ivanhoe Village are producing Michelin-starred Peruvian and Filipino omakase that has no equivalent in cities twice Orlando's size.
Winter Park, the affluent suburb to the north, has accumulated more Michelin stars per square mile than most American cities possess in total. Soseki and Ômo by Jônt operate within minutes of each other — the former an intimate 10-seat counter, the latter a multi-room journey through Japanese cuisine for sixteen guests.
Where to Eat by Neighbourhood
Baldwin Park: The epicentre of Orlando's Michelin moment. Sorekara at #4874 New Broad St is the two-star anchor; Camille at #4962 New Broad St is the intimate counterpoint. Walk between them.
Winter Park: Soseki at 955 W Fairbanks Ave and Ômo by Jônt at 115 E Lyman Ave. Two of the most serious omakase experiences in the American South, in a neighbourhood that still feels like a small town.
Lake Buena Vista / Grande Lakes: Capa at the Four Seasons and Knife & Spoon at the Ritz-Carlton operate within the resort corridor south of downtown. Worth the drive from any neighbourhood — especially if you've booked the window table at Capa.
Restaurant Row (Sand Lake Rd): Orlando's commercial dining corridor. Not where the Michelin stars live, but where the reliable-at-scale establishments operate. Eddie V's, Ocean Prime, and Christner's all have presence nearby.
Reservation Strategy
The Michelin-starred tasting menu restaurants — Sorekara, Camille, Ômo by Jônt, Soseki, Kadence — require advance booking measured in weeks, not days. Sorekara operates limited seatings a few nights per week. Release dates matter. Set alerts on Tock and Resy.
Victoria & Albert's books via Disney's dining reservation system, which opens 60 days in advance for resort guests and 60 days for the general public. The Chef's Table (8 seats, $425) books out immediately. The Queen Victoria Room ($375) has slightly more availability. The main dining room at $295 is the entry point but no less remarkable.
For same-week reservations at the resort properties — Knife & Spoon, Capa — call the restaurants directly. Both maintain walk-in availability at the bar, which is often the most interesting seat in the house.
Dining Culture & Practical Notes
Dress code: The Michelin-starred tasting rooms expect smart casual at minimum; Victoria & Albert's enforces a jacket-required policy for gentlemen at the Chef's Table and Queen Victoria Room. Capa and Knife & Spoon request resort casual — no athletic wear in the dining room.
Tipping: Standard American convention — 20% on pre-tax total at full-service restaurants. Omakase counters with beverage pairings often include service in the total; confirm when booking.
Best time to visit: Winter months (November through March) offer Orlando's most civilised weather and coincide with peak dining season. Summer is family-travel peak, which means resort restaurants are busier but the neighbourhood spots are quieter.
Getting around: Orlando is a car city. The restaurant clusters (Baldwin Park, Winter Park, Lake Buena Vista) require driving or rideshare. Plan your evening with a single neighbourhood focus — or budget for a rideshare between them.