All Washington DC Restaurants
Washington DC — Penn Quarter
minibar by José Andrés
The most theatrical 12 seats in Washington. José Andrés rewrites the laws of food at a counter that makes Michelin inspectors weep with gratitude.
Washington DC — Shaw / 14th Street
Jônt
Ryan Ratino's 17-seat counter is the most coveted ticket in DC. Japanese precision meets American imagination in a room where every seat faces the fire.
Washington DC — Shaw
The Dabney
The only place in DC where the Mid-Atlantic gets the Michelin treatment it deserves. Jeremiah Langhorne's open hearth is a love letter to this region's forgotten terroir.
Washington DC — 14th Street
Bresca
14th Street's crown jewel. The room glows gold, the pappardelle is perfect, and the foie gras negroni is exactly the kind of move that makes people stay for another bottle.
Washington DC — Penn Quarter
Fiola
Fabio Trabocchi's Michelin-starred Italian flagship on Pennsylvania Avenue. Where lobbyists close bills over handmade pasta and ambassadors entertain with flawless service.
Washington DC — Capitol Hill
Rose's Luxury
Capitol Hill's most beloved room — no pretension, maximum pleasure. The menu changes nightly, the lychee habanero salad is mandatory, and the birthday energy is unmatched.
Washington DC — Adams Morgan
Tail Up Goat
Adams Morgan's Michelin-starred outlier. Caribbean-inflected, Mediterranean-rooted, utterly its own thing. The kind of first-date table that ensures a second.
Washington DC — Logan Circle
Le Diplomate
DC's great French brasserie — where the steak frites rivals Paris and the birthday table comes with theatre. Stephen Starr's perpetually booked monument to Gallic pleasure.
Washington DC — Penn Quarter
Rasika
The room where Barack Obama entertained world leaders — and you'll understand why. Vikram Sunderam's palak chaat alone is worth the price of admission.
Washington DC — Penn Quarter
Cranes
Spain meets Japan in one of DC's most intellectually daring rooms. Pepe Solla's Michelin-starred menu is a conversation piece before you've even ordered dessert.
Washington DC — Ivy City
Gravitas
DC's most unexpected proposal setting: a rooftop greenhouse in Ivy City where Matt Baker's Michelin-starred tasting menu plays second fiddle only to the view.
Washington DC — Penn Quarter
The Capital Grille
The power table on Pennsylvania Avenue. Dry-aged porterhouses, 350-label wine list, and the kind of service that makes lobbying look effortless.
Washington DC — Georgetown
1789 Restaurant
Georgetown's most distinguished address since 1960. Candlelit, colonial, consecrated — this Federal-era townhouse has hosted more proposals than any other room in Washington.
Washington DC — Shaw / U Street
Maydan
Fire-cooked everything, communal tables, and a menu that roams from Tbilisi to Beirut. DC's most transportive group dining experience — order the whole lamb and own the room.
Washington DC — Penn Quarter
Zaytinya
José Andrés' love letter to Turkey, Greece, and Lebanon. The mezze format was built for teams — order obsessively, share promiscuously, and let the labneh do the talking.
Washington DC — Union Market
St. Anselm
A fire-worshipping temple in the Union Market district. The smoked prime rib and cast-iron plates make this DC's best table for teams who eat meat and mean business.
Washington DC — Shaw
Oyster Oyster
DC's most forward-thinking counter. Vegetable-forward and oyster-accented, Rob Rubba's Michelin-starred kitchen watches the future arrive one thoughtful course at a time.
Washington DC — Penn Quarter
L'Ardente
The 40-layer short rib and truffle lasagna are practically political acts. Downtown DC's most ambitious Italian room — where the birthday table always gets the tableside show.
Washington DC — Georgetown
Café Milano
Georgetown's unofficial embassy dining room since 1992. Princes, presidents, and power brokers all know the owner by name — and the owner knows which table closes deals.
Washington DC — Downtown / White House
Old Ebbitt Grill
Opened in 1856. Still packing them in. The raw bar alone — across the street from the White House — is reason enough to love this city and its magnificent contradictions.
Washington DC — NoMa
Elcielo
Chef Juan Manuel Barrientos turns a Colombian tasting menu into pure theatre. Every course arrives like a magic trick — the chocotherapy dessert course alone justifies the reservation.
Washington DC — Georgetown / Four Seasons
Bourbon Steak
Michael Mina's steakhouse in the Four Seasons Georgetown. Where the deal is already half-done before the wagyu arrives. The duck fat fries are not optional.
Washington DC — 14th Street / U Street
Compass Rose
A rowhouse of global wandering on 14th Street. Georgian cheese bread meets Indonesian peanut noodles and a rooftop built for lingering over wine until the city goes dark.
Washington DC — Van Ness / Dupont
Sfoglina
Fabio Trabocchi's pasta laboratory — where the sfogline roll and cut in full view and the cacio e pepe redefines what Roman simplicity can mean in DC hands.
Washington DC — Georgetown
Martin's Tavern
JFK proposed to Jackie in Booth 3. Since 1933, Georgetown's most storied dining room has been the setting for decisions that changed lives — and a city that never forgets.
Best for First Date in Washington DC
Intimate rooms, conversation-friendly layouts, and menus that impress without intimidation. These are the tables that earn second dates.
Washington DC — Shaw
The Dabney
Wood-fired charm in Blagden Alley. The open hearth creates warmth, the seasonal menu sparks conversation, and the prix fixe removes the anxiety of choice.
Washington DC — 14th Street
Bresca
The foie gras negroni breaks the ice. The Michelin star ensures it isn't broken badly. Bresca is where DC first dates become DC love stories.
Washington DC — Adams Morgan
Tail Up Goat
The narrow dining room and Caribbean spirit make Tail Up Goat feel like a secret. Michelin-starred and wonderfully unusual — exactly right for a first impression.
Best for Close a Deal in Washington DC
In a city built on the currency of power, the right table is half the negotiation. These rooms signal mastery before you've spoken a word.
Washington DC — Penn Quarter
Fiola
On Pennsylvania Avenue, steps from the corridors of power. Fiola's private dining room accommodates the kind of conversation that never leaves the table.
Washington DC — Penn Quarter
The Capital Grille
The dry-aged porterhouse and 350-label wine list are the opening argument. The private dining room closes it. This is where Washington gets things done.
Washington DC — Georgetown
Café Milano
Georgetown's power dining institution. The regulars alone are a reason to book — this is the room where handshakes become contracts over northern Italian classics.
The Washington DC Top 10
minibar by José Andrés
The most technically demanding 12-seat restaurant in the capital. José Andrés has been reinventing American fine dining at this counter since 2003, and the two Michelin stars reflect a kitchen that has never stopped pushing forward. The multi-course tasting experience blends molecular gastronomy with Spanish technique, with each bite designed to provoke, delight, and occasionally destabilize your assumptions about what food can be. Book six months out. Consider it infrastructure for the serious diner.
Jônt
Ryan Ratino's 17-seat tasting counter above Bresca is the most singular dining experience in Washington. Japanese ingredients — Hokkaido scallops, A5 wagyu, uni from the coldest waters — meet American creativity in a menu that changes constantly but never loses its edge. The open kitchen means you watch every move. The dessert lounge downstairs means you don't have to leave. The two Michelin stars are well-earned and only partly explain the three-month wait for a seat.
The Dabney
Jeremiah Langhorne has done more to define what DC cooking means than any other chef in the city. The Dabney's commitment to the Mid-Atlantic region — Chesapeake Bay oysters, Shenandoah Valley pork, Appalachian mushrooms — is a culinary manifesto built around a wood-fired hearth in a Blagden Alley carriage house. It won James Beard's Best Chef Mid-Atlantic in 2018 and has held its Michelin star every year since 2017. This is DC's most important restaurant.
Bresca
Before Ryan Ratino opened Jônt, he proved his chops at Bresca — and the one-Michelin-star bistro still punches above its street-level ambitions. The kitchen treats classic French technique as a canvas for American audacity. The foie gras negroni topped with Campari gelée announces intent before your main course arrives. Come for a birthday, stay for the pappardelle with lamb ragù that will haunt you for weeks afterward.
Fiola
Fabio Trabocchi's Michelin-starred flagship on Pennsylvania Avenue is the deal-closing table of choice for Washington's most sophisticated diners. Named among the world's top Italian restaurants by 50 Top Italy, Fiola combines authentic Italian regionalism with modern creativity in a room designed for both intimacy and gravitas. The handmade pasta is the finest in the city, the wine list is the argument closer, and the private dining room handles conversations that never leave these walls.
Rose's Luxury
Aaron Silverman's Capitol Hill institution reimagines what a neighbourhood restaurant can be. The lychee habanero pork and sausage salad remains one of the most celebrated dishes in the city. The menu changes constantly, the room packs with regulars and pilgrims alike, and the birthday energy is electric. It won Bon Appétit's Best New Restaurant in America upon opening — which in retrospect was simply the beginning of the legend.
Tail Up Goat
Jon Sybert and Jill Tyler's Adams Morgan jewel defies categorisation in the best possible way. The Caribbean-inflected menu and Mediterranean sensibility make Tail Up Goat feel like a meal you'd eat somewhere else — somewhere warm, unhurried, and far from the machinery of government. One Michelin star, two floors, and a drinks programme that outclasses most dedicated bars in the city.
Rasika
Vikram Sunderam has built the most consistently excellent Indian restaurant in America at this Penn Quarter address. The palak chaat — crispy spinach, tamarind, date chutney, yoghurt — has been called the best dish in DC. Multiple James Beard nominations, Presidents as regulars, and a reservation list that requires planning. The second location in West End is excellent; this one is irreplaceable.
Le Diplomate
Stephen Starr's perpetually booked Logan Circle brasserie is the closest thing Washington has to a Parisian institution. The steak frites is flawless. The onion soup is a legitimate reason to plan your evening. The birthday table gets candles, theatre, and a room full of people who all wish they were you tonight. Reservations open weeks in advance and disappear in minutes.
Gravitas
Matt Baker's Ivy City restaurant is DC's most unexpected fine dining destination — a greenhouse-topped tasting menu restaurant in a neighbourhood more associated with artisan spirits than Michelin stars. The rooftop greenhouse dining room is the most romantically unusual setting in Washington. The tasting menu is exquisitely seasonal, technically masterful, and consistently the most talked-about meal of any given week.
The Washington DC Dining Guide
Everything you need to eat well in the American capital — by neighbourhood, occasion, and insider knowledge.
Washington DC is not New York. It doesn't need to be. The capital has built a dining culture that is uniquely its own — shaped by power, politics, and a remarkable influx of international talent that has transformed what was once a culinary afterthought into one of America's most compelling food cities. The Michelin Guide has been here since 2016, and the local scene has responded by raising its game year after year.
The Neighbourhoods
The 14th Street / Shaw corridor is the city's culinary heartland. Bresca and Jônt occupy the same building at 1904 14th Street — making this block one of the most Michelin-dense addresses in America. The Dabney is minutes away in Blagden Alley. Le Diplomate anchors Logan Circle. Maydan, Compass Rose, and Tail Up Goat define the U Street and Adams Morgan stretch. This is where DC eats when it isn't eating for anyone else.
Penn Quarter concentrates the power dining. minibar, Fiola, Rasika, Zaytinya, and The Capital Grille are all within a six-block radius of the Pennsylvania Avenue corridor. This is the deal-making zone — every other diner may be a senator, a lobbyist, or a foreign minister, and the staff have learned to treat everyone with equal discretion.
Georgetown is the city's most storied neighbourhood for dining. Café Milano's power room, the candlelit dignity of 1789, Martin's Tavern's history-soaked booths, and Bourbon Steak's Four Seasons address make this Washington's most complete restaurant district for special occasions requiring history and gravitas.
Capitol Hill, from Rose's Luxury to Barracks Row's emerging scene, serves the congressional class and the food-obsessed locals who live on the east side of the Capitol building and eat exceptionally well for their trouble.
Reservation Reality
minibar and Jônt require advance planning measured in months, not weeks. Both release reservations on a rolling basis — minibar via Sevenrooms, Jônt via their own system — and availability disappears within hours. The Dabney, Bresca, and Rose's Luxury book two to four weeks ahead for prime evening slots. Le Diplomate is chronically oversubscribed; walk-ins at the bar are your best strategy for a last-minute seat. Rasika requires a week or two minimum for dinner. Gravitas, given its remote Ivy City location, is the easiest of the Michelin-starred restaurants to book with reasonable notice.
Price and Dress Code
DC is a city that dresses for dinner without being rigid about it. minibar and Jônt are smart casual at minimum — the experience is theatrical enough that looking the part matters. Fiola, Café Milano, 1789, and Bourbon Steak default to business casual or better. The Capitol Grille is a suits-optional power room. Maydan, Compass Rose, and Zaytinya embrace the full casual-to-dressed spectrum. No restaurant in DC maintains a formal dress code, but the rooms that matter have standards that diners understand without being told.
Budget for $350–500 per person at minibar and Jônt including wine pairing. The Dabney, Bresca, and Fiola run $180–280 with wine. Le Diplomate and Rasika offer the capital's best value for the quality, typically $80–140 with drinks. Maydan remains the extraordinary outlier — fire-cooked whole animals shared by the table for $60–90 per head is the city's greatest value dining secret.
Tipping and Service
DC is a tipping city. Twenty percent is baseline for adequate service; twenty-five is the message that you intend to return. At Jônt and minibar — where service teams number more than the diners and every interaction is choreographed — the gratuity is often included in the prix fixe. Verify when booking. At neighbourhood restaurants and brasseries, tip generously. The staff are usually professionals who have chosen to be here, and they notice.