Best Restaurants in San Diego 2026: The Ranked Guide
Our ranked guide to the best restaurants in San Diego for 2026, from three-Michelin-star Addison and the ocean-view rooms of La Jolla to the Gaslamp and Little Italy tables our guests ask for by name.
Why we wrote this guide
San Diego has quietly become one of the best dining cities on the West Coast, and the range is what makes choosing hard. In a single weekend you can eat a ten-course tasting menu in a Mediterranean villa, watch the Pacific break against the windows of a room that has run since 1941, and split handmade pasta on a La Jolla rooftop at sunset. The city stretches from the three-Michelin-star tier down through James Beard finalists, in-house-butchery steakhouses, and Michelin Bib Gourmand kitchens doing Roman, Mediterranean, and California cooking as well as anywhere. This is our ranked guide to the best San Diego restaurants in 2026, built from the tables our guests ask for by name. Every venue below is one we reserve directly. Last updated late June 2026.
Looking for the table, not the reading? Tell us the night, the group, and the occasion and we will route you to the right room. The order below blends the quality of the kitchen with the setting and the occasion each room fits best, not just the accolade count. A note on how San Diego works: outside Las Vegas the restaurant reservation itself sits with the venue, so we point you to the right room, help you time it, and build the rest of the trip around it.
The ranked guide
1. Addison (Del Mar)
The apex of dining in San Diego. Addison by William Bradley is the city's only three-Michelin-star restaurant, and the first in Southern California to reach the guide's highest honor, with the first star in 2019, the second in 2021, and the third in December 2022. Bradley has led the kitchen since 2006, a rare run at this level, and the format is a tasting menu and nothing else, roughly ten courses of contemporary California cooking built on regional ingredients. The dining room sits inside the Fairmont Grand Del Mar and reads like a Mediterranean villa, with soaring ceilings, arched windows, and a cellar of around ten thousand bottles at its center. It is a room built for a long, unhurried evening. See Addison.
Best for: the milestone dinner, the once-in-a-trip tasting menu.
2. George's at the Cove (La Jolla)
One of the most complete dining destinations on the California coast, and after four decades above La Jolla Cove it still earns that every service. The three-level restaurant at 1250 Prospect Street gives you a genuine choice of experiences: the rooftop Ocean Terrace, freshly renovated and reopened in early 2026, with panoramic Pacific views and the best lunch seat in La Jolla; California Modern, the fine-dining room where the serious tasting-menu work happens and where the kitchen earned Michelin Plate recognition; and a street-level bar. Executive Chef Masa Kojima cooks California's pantry hard, from local yellowtail to Hokkaido scallops in green curry, with Chino Farms produce and Catalina Offshore seafood behind it. See George's at the Cove.
Best for: the definitive La Jolla dining experience with real culinary ambition behind the view.
3. The Marine Room (La Jolla)
The view no other San Diego room can match: waves that break directly against the floor-to-ceiling windows while you eat. Open on La Jolla Shores at 2000 Spindrift Drive since 1941, the building sits at sea level on purpose, and its High Tide Dinners are scheduled around peak tides when the ocean puts on its most dramatic show. Executive Chef Mike Minor has run the line since 2021 and moved the kitchen toward a more locally sourced, sustainable seafood program, with signatures like the aged bluefin tuna carpaccio and the sous vide Perfect Egg with beluga caviar. The dining room and Lounge were fully renovated in 2022. See The Marine Room.
Best for: the oceanfront special occasion, the High Tide table booked well ahead.
4. Animae (Marina District)
The most exciting fine-dining room downtown. Executive Chef Tara Monsod became San Diego's first-ever James Beard Award finalist in 2024 and repeated in 2025, the first San Diego chef to reach the finals back to back. Her Filipino-American cooking runs through a coal-fired oven and a Japanese robata grill: the Short Rib Kare Kare that made her reputation, the Tuna Kinilaw, the Lobster Palabok, plus a wagyu program anchored by Miyazaki beef. The 7,600-square-foot room of emerald velvet, terrazzo, and gold leaf earned Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and a place on the LA Times list of the 101 Best Restaurants in California. See Animae.
Best for: the modern celebration dinner where the room matches the cooking.
5. Nobu San Diego (Gaslamp Quarter)
The marquee global name, done right. Inside the Hard Rock Hotel at 207 Fifth Avenue, this is the original Gaslamp location, and the Nobu playbook still works because the cooking is that precise. Chef Nobu Matsuhisa's Japanese-Peruvian language runs through the Black Cod with Miso, the Yellowtail Sashimi with Jalapeno, and the Crispy Rice with Spicy Tuna, with a $200 Omakase for tables that want to be guided. The Rockwell Group room holds its own around an onyx sushi bar, and the location puts you a short walk from Petco Park, the convention center, and the district's nightlife. See Nobu San Diego.
Best for: a world-class anchor dinner before a night out in the Gaslamp.
6. Callie (East Village)
Mediterranean cooking with a serious pedigree and none of the stiffness. Chef Travis Swikard grew up in the San Diego area, spent close to a decade in New York as Daniel Boulud's right hand at Boulud Sud, and brought that whole coastline home when he opened Callie in 2021. The menu is built for sharing, from the dips and puffed house pita to cured Baja yellowtail, spot prawns done gambas al ajillo, and handmade pastas, with a family-style Mediterranean Feast for larger tables. Callie holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand, a Wine Spectator award, and has been named among the best new restaurants in America by Esquire and Robb Report. See Callie.
Best for: a group dinner downtown that wants to share and linger.
7. Marisi (La Jolla)
Coastal Italian in the heart of La Jolla Village, a few blocks up from the cove. Marisi channels the Amalfi Coast without the cliche, built around a ten-foot brick-and-tile hearth, a circular bar, a sunlit courtyard, and a glass-walled private space known as the Lemon Room. The food is hearth-driven and ingredient-led, from squid-ink linguine with littleneck clams to agnolotti with Chino Farms peas and hearth-roasted bone marrow. San Diego Magazine named it Best New Restaurant in 2023, placed it in the city's Top 5 in 2024, and crowned it Best Italian Restaurant in 2025. See Marisi.
Best for: the celebratory Italian dinner or a long lunch in the La Jolla sun.
8. Cowboy Star (East Village)
One of the most serious steakhouses on the West Coast, and independently owned since 2008. Executive Chef and Partner Victor H. Jimenez trained at Le Cordon Bleu in Paris and has led the kitchen since day one. The difference is the butchery program: every steak is cut in-house each morning, the Cattleman's Cut bone-in ribeye is dry-aged 35 days, and the room is one of very few in Southern California pouring A5 Japanese Omi Gyu. The menu ranges past beef into wild game and a rigorously sourced seafood list. San Diego Magazine has named Cowboy Star the city's best steakhouse every year from 2019 through 2025. See Cowboy Star.
Best for: the steak dinner for people who take steak seriously.
9. Herb & Wood (Little Italy)
Little Italy done right, and the flagship of the Puffer Malarkey Collective. A full-block dining room on Kettner Boulevard built around an open wood-fired hearth and vaulted ceilings, with the kind of room energy that pulls every occasion upward. Since October 2024 Culinary Director Aidan Owens has led the kitchen, and the menu earns its reputation from the fire: roasted oysters and bone marrow, the much-ordered oxtail gnocchi, Iberico pork secreto, and pizzas on dough made fresh daily. Herb & Wood holds Michelin Plate recognition. See Herb & Wood.
Best for: a lively Little Italy dinner where the hearth does the work.
10. Ironside Fish and Oyster (Little Italy)
The seafood room to book in Little Italy. Ironside opened in 2014 in a restored 1920s warehouse on India Street, the former Ironside Metal Supply, and the design leans hard into maritime nostalgia: a towering octopus sculpture, a piranha wall, brass portholes, and garage doors that open onto the neighborhood. The menu pivots twice daily around the catch, with a raw bar sourcing oysters from Baja and British Columbia, the warm lobster roll with clarified butter, and rockfish ceviche with citrus and habanero. It lands somewhere between a bustling fish house and a polished neighborhood anchor. See Ironside Fish and Oyster.
Best for: the oyster-and-raw-bar dinner, the seafood table with atmosphere.
11. Mister A's (Bankers Hill)
The view, and it has owned that distinction since 1965. On the 12th floor of the Manchester Financial Building, the 270-degree panorama takes in San Diego Bay, Coronado, the Coronado Bridge, Balboa Park, the downtown skyline, and jets on final approach. It is still the first place locals bring out-of-town guests they want to impress. The room has had only three stewards in sixty years, and Executive Chef Stephane Voitzwinkler cooks French and California-rooted fine dining, from Rack of Lamb Provencal to a Maine Lobster Roll on house-made brioche, backed by a cellar of several thousand bottles. See Mister A's.
Best for: the sunset proposal, the anniversary, the best seat in the city.
12. Cesarina (Point Loma)
Roman cooking that takes a decade of practice to make look effortless. On a residential corner in Loma Portal, the restaurant named for co-owner and Executive Chef Cesarina Mezzoni has held a Michelin Bib Gourmand continuously since 2021. The defining feature is the pastificio, a glass-walled pasta factory visible from the dining room, where all pasta is made fresh daily with flour and water and no eggs, the way Roman tradition demands. The rigatoni carbonara is the reference dish, the crispy octopus appears in nearly every strong review, and the tableside tiramisu, assembled with a mini moka pot of fresh espresso, is the single most-cited moment on the menu. See Cesarina.
Best for: the pasta pilgrimage, the quieter neighborhood dinner worth the drive.
How to choose, fast
The single best dinner in the city: Addison.
La Jolla with an ocean view: George's at the Cove or The Marine Room.
Modern, award-winning, of-the-moment: Animae or Callie.
Steak done seriously: Cowboy Star.
Italian: Marisi in La Jolla or Cesarina in Point Loma.
The classic sunset room: Mister A's.
Why the San Diego reservation is worth planning
The best San Diego tables move fast, and they move faster on the weekends that draw a crowd. Reservations tighten sharply around Comic-Con International in July and Del Mar racing season, and the marquee rooms, from Addison and the ocean-view La Jolla addresses to the Gaslamp and Little Italy flagships, book out well ahead for prime-time seatings. The public reservation apps show you what is left, not what is possible. Outside Las Vegas the dining reservation itself runs through the venue, so what we do is point you to the right room for the occasion, flag the tasting-menu and chef's-counter formats that often stay open after the main book closes, and build the rest of the trip around dinner.
How MyRSVP holds the rest of the night
MyRSVP's concierge service in San Diego specializes in the nightclub and pool-club side of the trip, with dinner as the anchor point. Tell us the restaurant you want and the night around it, and we coordinate the club, the beach club, or the pool day so the whole evening runs in order.
The process for you is short:
Tell us the night, the group size, and the room (or tell us the vibe and we will pick).
We come back with the plan: the dinner to target, the timing, and the nightlife booked around it.
You confirm. We hold the pieces we handle.
Frequently asked questions
What is the best restaurant in San Diego?
For the single best dinner in the city, Addison by William Bradley is the answer: it is San Diego's only three-Michelin-star restaurant and the first in Southern California to reach that tier. For the definitive La Jolla experience with an ocean view, George's at the Cove and The Marine Room lead. The right answer depends on the occasion, which is why we rank by fit above, not just accolades.
What is the best restaurant in San Diego with an ocean view?
The Marine Room on La Jolla Shores puts the Pacific right against the windows, and on the right tide the waves break inches from the glass. George's at the Cove has a rooftop terrace above La Jolla Cove, freshly renovated in early 2026. For a downtown skyline-and-bay panorama rather than the open ocean, Mister A's on the 12th floor in Bankers Hill is the classic.
Which San Diego restaurants have a Michelin star or recognition?
Addison holds three Michelin stars, the only such restaurant in San Diego. Several rooms on this list carry Michelin Plate recognition, including George's California Modern, Animae, and Herb & Wood, while Callie and Cesarina both hold the Michelin Bib Gourmand. It is a genuinely deep Michelin field for a city its size.
When is the hardest time to get a San Diego reservation?
Comic-Con International in July and Del Mar racing season are the peaks, and the top rooms book out furthest ahead on those weekends. For a marquee table like Addison or a sunset seat at The Marine Room or Marisi, plan well in advance. If the main dining room is full, the chef's counter, bar seats, or a tasting-menu slot often stay open after the primary book has closed.
Does MyRSVP book San Diego restaurant reservations?
Outside Las Vegas, the dining reservation itself sits with the restaurant, so you book the table direct with the venue. What MyRSVP handles in San Diego is the nightlife and pool-club side of the trip. Tell us the dinner you are building around and we will coordinate the club, beach club, or pool day so the whole night lines up.
Reserve your San Diego table
Tell us the night, the group, and the occasion. We will point you to the right room and build the rest of the trip around dinner, from the club to the pool day.
Build a plan with us
Browse every San Diego restaurant we book to round out the trip.
Build a custom itinerary with the MyRSVP concierge. Pair the venues mentioned above into a single concierge-confirmed evening. See the full Las Vegas events calendar for every upcoming DJ and pool party across the city.
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