Head-to-Head · Aspen

Clark's Oyster Bar vs Marea Aspen

Clark's is Aspen's all-day oyster bar; Marea the St. Regis coastal-Italian outpost. Book Clark's for lunch, Marea to dine grandly.

Clark's Oyster Bar
Downtown Aspen · Seafood · No star · Food 9 / Room 8 / Value 8
Clark's full review →
vs
Marea Aspen
St. Regis · Coastal Italian · Manhattan room holds 1 star · Food 9 / Room 9 / Value 8
Marea Aspen full review →

The Verdict

Clark's Oyster Bar is the easy, all-day table of downtown Aspen. The blue-and-white room at 517 East Hyman Avenue runs from late morning to night on East Coast oysters, a much-repeated lobster roll and in-house sourdough, a seafood operation built on supply-chain discipline rather than fireworks in a landlocked mountain town. It carries no Michelin recognition, runs a la carte from roughly $60 to $110 a head, and scores 9 for food, 8 for the room and 8 for value. It is the spontaneous, light-eating pick.

Marea Aspen is the dressed-up counterpart, the seasonal Aspen residency of Michael White's Marea, the Manhattan coastal-Italian room that holds a Michelin star. Executive chef PJ Calapa cooks it at the St. Regis on 315 East Dean Street, where the kitchen turns out hand-rolled pastas, a celebrated octopus-and-bone-marrow fusilli and pristine crudo, dinner only, seven nights a week through the 2026 summer. A full dinner lands around $125 to $280 a head, and it scores 9 for food, 9 for the room and 8 for value.

The choice is mood and budget. Clark's is the bright, après-ski oyster lunch you fall into without much planning; Marea is the polished, pasta-and-crudo dinner you dress for. One is a casual raw bar, the other a destination Italian room at the base of Ajax.

Scores, Side by Side

ScoreClark's Oyster BarMarea Aspen
Food9 / 109 / 10
Atmosphere8 / 109 / 10
Value8 / 108 / 10

Which One for Which Occasion

OccasionEditorial Pick
An après-ski lunchClark's Oyster BarAll-day service, oysters and a lobster roll make it the easy, bright table to fall into off the mountain.
A grand Italian dinnerMarea AspenHand-rolled pastas and the octopus-and-bone-marrow fusilli give Aspen a serious coastal-Italian night out.
A date nightMarea AspenThe St. Regis room and Michael White's refined cooking suit a dinner you want to feel like an occasion.
A spontaneous walk-inClark's Oyster BarAn all-day kitchen and bar seats make off-peak oysters possible without a reservation.
Lighter eatingClark's Oyster BarRaw shellfish and clean seafood beat a rich pasta tasting when you want to eat well without the weight.

Price and How to Book

The split is light versus indulgent. Clark's is the all-day, a la carte oyster room that takes OpenTable bookings and keeps bar seats for walk-ins; the full picture is in the Clark's Oyster Bar review. Marea Aspen is the dinner-only St. Regis residency of Michael White's starred Marea, where prime tables go early; the detail sits in the Marea Aspen review. Both anchor our Aspen dining guide.

For cuisine context, weigh Clark's against the best seafood restaurants worldwide and Marea against the best Italian restaurants worldwide. For occasion fit, line them up with our picks for a first date and an anniversary. More Aspen match-ups sit on the compare index, including Clark's vs Le Petit Trois and Matsuhisa vs Element 47.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which is better, Clark's Oyster Bar or Marea Aspen?
They cover different evenings. Clark's Oyster Bar is the breezy all-day seafood room on East Hyman Avenue, built on East Coast oysters and a lobster roll, ideal for a relaxed lunch and scoring 9 for food. Marea Aspen is the dressier choice, the St. Regis residency of Manhattan's Michelin-starred Marea, where chef PJ Calapa cooks hand-rolled pastas and crudo for dinner. Book Clark's for an easy oyster lunch and Marea for a grand Italian dinner.
How much do Clark's and Marea Aspen cost?
Clark's is the lighter spend: a la carte oysters, a lobster roll and a glass of wine land around $60 to $110 a head depending on how much shellfish you order. Marea Aspen is the bigger night, with antipasti, hand-rolled pasta, a main and wine pushing a dinner to roughly $125 to $280 a head. Clark's is the casual daytime pick; Marea is the destination dinner.
Do you need a reservation at Clark's and Marea Aspen?
In Aspen's high season both fill, so reservations matter. Clark's takes bookings through OpenTable and keeps some bar seats for walk-ins, which makes a spontaneous oyster lunch possible off-peak. Marea Aspen serves dinner only, seven nights a week through the 2026 summer at the St. Regis, and its prime slots go early, so book as far ahead as you can, especially over holiday weeks. Plan around both with the Aspen dining guide.
What should I order at Clark's and Marea Aspen?
At Clark's order the oysters first, then the lobster roll or the fish of the day; the kitchen sources well and lives on that discipline. At Marea Aspen the move is the dish that made the Manhattan original famous, the fusilli with octopus and bone marrow, alongside the crudo and a hand-rolled pasta from chef PJ Calapa. See both in our Aspen dining guide.