Head-to-Head · Nashville
Jeff Ruby's Steakhouse vs The Catbird Seat
Jeff Ruby's is downtown Nashville's prime-steak palace; Catbird Seat its 13-course counter. Book Catbird to celebrate, Jeff Ruby's for a night out.
The Verdict
Jeff Ruby's Steakhouse is downtown Nashville's full-volume steak experience. The room at 300 4th Avenue North in SoBro runs on chandeliers, live nightly music and USDA Prime cuts, with a 16-ounce filet and dry-aged ribeyes carrying a menu that also reaches into seafood and sushi. The Tennessean has voted it the city's best steakhouse, dinner lands around $100 to $180 a head, and it scores 8 for food, 8 for the room and 7 for value. It is a night out as much as a meal.
The Catbird Seat is the opposite proposition: small, focused, and ticket-only. The U-shaped chef's counter reopened in May 2025 atop the Bill Voorhees Building in the Gulch, where chefs Andy Doubrava and Tiffani Ortiz — the room's sixth chef pairing — run a 13-course modern-American tasting for $195. The kitchen was named a James Beard semifinalist for Outstanding Restaurant in 2026. It scores 10 for food, 9 for the room and 8 for value.
These two cover Nashville's dining poles. Jeff Ruby's is the celebratory, see-and-be-seen steak palace; Catbird Seat is the quiet, technique-driven counter where the meal is the entertainment. One is a group-friendly blowout, the other a tasting menu you book weeks out.
Scores, Side by Side
| Score | Jeff Ruby's Steakhouse | The Catbird Seat |
|---|---|---|
| Food | 8 / 10 | 10 / 10 |
| Atmosphere | 8 / 10 | 9 / 10 |
| Value | 7 / 10 | 8 / 10 |
Which One for Which Occasion
| Occasion | Editorial Pick |
|---|---|
| A milestone celebration | The Catbird SeatA 13-course chef's counter with James Beard recognition makes the meal itself the occasion. |
| A steak-and-cocktails night out | Jeff Ruby's SteakhousePrime cuts, live music and a buzzing SoBro room are built for a celebratory group dinner. |
| A serious food date | The Catbird SeatThe intimate U-shaped counter and seasonal tasting suit a couple who want the cooking to lead. |
| Closing a deal | Jeff Ruby's SteakhouseBig booths, a deep wine and whiskey list and prime steak read as the classic Nashville business dinner. |
| Out-of-town visitors | Jeff Ruby's SteakhouseWalkable downtown location, nightly entertainment and a broad menu make it the easy crowd-pleaser. |
Price and How to Book
The split is spectacle versus precision. Jeff Ruby's takes bookings through OpenTable and its own site, seats large parties, and runs roughly $100 to $180 a head for a full steak dinner; the detail sits in the Jeff Ruby's review. The Catbird Seat sells tickets in advance for its 34-seat counter, releases dates on a rolling monthly basis, and runs $195 for the 13-course menu; the full picture is in the Catbird Seat review. Both anchor our Nashville dining guide.
For cuisine context, weigh Jeff Ruby's against the best steakhouses worldwide and the Catbird Seat against the best tasting menus worldwide. For occasion fit, line them up with our picks for a deal dinner and an anniversary. More head-to-heads sit on the compare index.