Best Restaurants in Vancouver 2026: The Ranked Guide
Our cross-cuisine ranked guide to the best restaurants in Vancouver for 2026, from Michelin-starred Published on Main and St. Lawrence to Miku, Blue Water Cafe and Ask for Luigi, with the tables we book most.
Why we wrote this guide
Vancouver is one of the most exciting dining cities in North America, and its identity is unmistakable once you eat across it: a deep Japanese backbone that runs from sushi counters to aburi flatlays, waterfront seafood pulled from the cold Pacific, French rooms with real technique, and a wave of strong 2025 openings that pushed the whole scene forward. The Michelin Guide's arrival made the ranking honest, and the stars mostly landed where the city already knew the cooking was best. This is our cross-cuisine ranked guide to the best restaurants in Vancouver in 2026, built from the tables we book most and the rooms our guests ask for by name. Every venue below is one we help you reserve directly. Last updated early July 2026.
Looking for the table, not the reading? Tell us the night and the group and we will route you to the right room. The order below blends the quality of the kitchen with the occasion it fits best, not just the buzz around the name.
The ranked guide
1. Published on Main (Mount Pleasant)
The best restaurant in the city, and the one every serious eater cites first. Holding one Michelin star, Published on Main sits on an unassuming Mount Pleasant corner, where a warm, wood-lined room turns out a tasting menu that is precise without ever being cold. Dinner opens with the Snack Attack bites and moves through barely cooked sidestripe shrimp with cucumber, apple and horseradish oil, and a chanterelle cremeux with brown butter and wild blueberry, before landing on the wintergreen ice cream regulars order on sight. Book it for Vancouver cooking at its confident peak. See Published on Main.
Best for: the special-occasion tasting menu where the kitchen is the whole event.
2. St. Lawrence (Railtown)
The most soulful room on this list, and a one-Michelin-star kitchen that cooks Quebecois-French like a love letter to home. St. Lawrence dresses its Railtown dining room like an old Montreal bistro, all warm wood and gingham. The venison tourtiere, the mushroom vol-au-vent, the daily pate en croute and the oreilles de crisse (crispy pig ears in maple syrup) read like a greatest-hits of French-Canadian comfort, executed at the level that earned the star. Book it for a cold night and a bottle of something red. See St. Lawrence.
Best for: the hearty, generous French-Canadian dinner with a special-occasion feel.
3. AnnaLena (Kitsilano)
The most fun of the starred rooms, and proof that refined does not have to mean stuffy. AnnaLena carries one Michelin star and runs a playful, design-forward Kitsilano dining room where the plating is serious and the mood is not. The kitchen builds around indulgent plates: wagyu tartare with house-torn bread, fried chicken with pate and black truffle, and BBQ duck breast with agnolotti and duck consomme. It is the starred dinner to book when you want the food to impress but the night to stay loose. See AnnaLena.
Best for: the celebration that wants Michelin cooking without the hush.
4. Kissa Tanto (Chinatown)
The most distinctive room in Vancouver, and a one-Michelin-star kitchen that fuses Italian and Japanese like nowhere else. Up a Chinatown staircase, Kissa Tanto sets its tables in a moody, 1960s-Tokyo-jazz-club room that has become one of the city's most photographed. The whole fried fish with grated-daikon soy, the tajarin with butter, miso-cured egg yolk and parmesan, and the tiramisu with plum-wine-soaked tofu show exactly how the Italian-Japanese idea works on the plate. See Kissa Tanto.
Best for: the date night with a room and a menu unlike anywhere else in town.
5. iDen & QuanJuDe (Cambie)
The city's grandest Chinese dining room, and a one-Michelin-star kitchen built around one of the great dishes in the world. iDen & QuanJuDe carries the QuanJuDe Peking duck lineage into a lavish Cambie space, and the duck, carved tableside, is the reason to come, whether classic or topped with caviar. Around it the kitchen runs bird's nest, sea cucumber and whole king crab in a setting made for a formal celebration. See iDen & QuanJuDe.
Best for: the formal celebration anchored by tableside Peking duck.
6. Barbara (Chinatown)
The most intimate of the starred rooms, and a one-Michelin-star kitchen that runs on trust. Barbara seats only a handful of guests in a spare, candlelit Chinatown space, and the format is disarmingly simple: a choose-your-own three-course tasting with three options per course, cooked with a precision that reads much larger than the room. The short menu changes with what is good, and the whole night feels like dinner at the chef's own table. Book well ahead, because there are very few seats. See Barbara.
Best for: the quiet, chef-driven dinner for two who want to be surprised.
7. Miku (Coal Harbour)
The restaurant that put aburi sushi on the map in North America, recognized in the Michelin Guide, with a waterfront view to match. Miku sits on the Coal Harbour seawall, and its flame-seared, pressed sushi draws lines every night. The Aburi Salmon Oshi Sushi - pressed wild sockeye with jalapeno and a special sauce - is the dish the city is famous for, joined by pressed prawn oshi sushi with lime zest and ume and house-cured saba with miso, all part of a broader aburi and kaiseki menu. See Miku.
Best for: the waterfront meal built around Vancouver's signature aburi sushi.
8. Blue Water Cafe (Yaletown)
The definitive Vancouver seafood room, a Yaletown institution that has anchored the neighbourhood for two decades. Blue Water Cafe fills a handsome converted warehouse with a buzzing raw bar and a long dining room. The three-tier seafood tower - whole chilled lobster, a Dungeness crab roll, spicy tuna roll and tuna goma-ae - is the showpiece, backed by soy-and-sake-marinated Haida Gwaii sablefish and a rotating raw bar of oysters and the Seafood Plateau. This is the classic, generous Pacific Northwest seafood night. See Blue Water Cafe.
Best for: the seafood-tower celebration in a lively, polished room.
9. Hawksworth (Downtown)
The city's benchmark for polished contemporary fine dining, recognized in the Michelin Guide, inside the Rosewood Hotel Georgia. Hawksworth is where Vancouver goes for a grown-up special occasion, a refined downtown room where chef David Hawksworth's cooking is as precise as the service. The matsutake and foie gras mushroom consomme and the agnolotti with hazelnut, celery foam and king oyster mushrooms show the range, while the Sunday Roast of dry-aged Bradner Farms prime rib with Yorkshire pudding has become its own institution. See Hawksworth.
Best for: the refined downtown celebration, or the Sunday Roast.
10. Ask for Luigi (Railtown)
The most beloved pasta room in the city, a Michelin Guide favourite where the wait is part of the legend. Ask for Luigi packs a small, sunny Railtown corner and turns out fresh, handmade pasta that regulars plan their week around. The pappardelle with duck ragu, the bigoli with shellfish and Luigi's meatballs are the dishes people order without looking, and the room hums with the easy energy of a great neighbourhood trattoria. A booked table takes the pressure off a hard-to-get room. See Ask for Luigi.
Best for: the casual pasta dinner that is worth the hype.
11. Savio Volpe (Fraserhood)
The cozy, rustic Italian room the whole city seems to love, a Michelin Guide osteria built around the fire. Savio Volpe fills a warm Fraserhood corner with the smell of the rotisserie, and its menu reads like an ideal Italian dinner: bagna cauda and old-school garlic bread to start, the rosemary-lemon rotisserie chicken as the house signature, and pastas like tagliatelle alla bolognese and spaghetti vongole. It is the neighbourhood trattoria done at a level worth crossing town for. See Savio Volpe.
Best for: the warm, rustic Italian dinner around the rotisserie.
12. Mott 32 (Downtown)
The most glamorous Chinese dining room downtown, a destination for celebratory Cantonese. Mott 32 dresses its space in dramatic, high-design style and matches it with a kitchen known for its signature duck: the Apple Wood Roasted Forty-Two Days Peking Duck, which should be ordered ahead. Around it, the black truffle, iberico pork and soft-quail-egg siu mai and a run of Cantonese share plates and dim sum make it a natural for a group that wants to eat well and be seen. See Mott 32.
Best for: the glamorous group dinner over Peking duck and Cantonese share plates.
13. Le Crocodile (Downtown)
The grande dame of Vancouver French dining, the classic room to know when you want the old-world version done right. Le Crocodile has run its downtown dining room for decades, and it remains the city's reference for Alsatian-French cooking with proper tableside service. The steak tartare au boeuf mode with grilled levain, the escargot de Bourgogne in pernod-parsley-garlic butter, the grilled veal tenderloin medallions with morel sauce and the Dover sole deboned tableside with caper beurre blanc have kept regulars coming back for a lifetime. See Le Crocodile.
Best for: the timeless French dinner with tableside service.
How to choose, fast
The single best table in the city: Published on Main.
The hearty, soulful French-Canadian dinner: St. Lawrence.
Vancouver's signature aburi sushi with a harbour view: Miku.
The seafood-tower celebration: Blue Water Cafe.
The beloved handmade-pasta night: Ask for Luigi.
The tableside Peking duck occasion: iDen & QuanJuDe or Mott 32.
Why the Vancouver reservation is harder than it looks
The best Vancouver tables tighten around the calendar the whole city runs on: cruise season from spring through fall, the summer festival stretch, and the winter holidays. The starred rooms - Published on Main, St. Lawrence, AnnaLena, Kissa Tanto, iDen & QuanJuDe and Barbara - have very few seats and long books, and prime-time weekend slots at Miku, Blue Water Cafe and Hawksworth go first. The public reservation platforms show you what is left, not what is possible. Restaurant reservations outside Las Vegas sit with the venues themselves, so we work the direct relationships and the timing, and we can often flag a seating, a chef's counter, or a private-dining allocation the apps do not surface.
How MyRSVP holds the table
MyRSVP is a concierge, not a booking app that seats you itself. Our desk has the direct lines into the rooms above and knows which seating opens when. When a table is available on a platform, we point you to reserve direct on OpenTable, Resy, SevenRooms or Tock; when it is not, we work the venue relationship to open one.
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 table, the time, and how to lock it in.
You reserve direct with the venue, and we coordinate anything you want built around the evening.
Frequently asked questions
What is the best restaurant in Vancouver?
For the single best table in the city, Published on Main in Mount Pleasant leads, holding one Michelin star for a tasting menu that shows Vancouver cooking at its peak. For a French-Canadian classic, St. Lawrence is the other one-star room diners cite first. The right answer depends on the occasion, which is why we rank by fit above, not just reputation.
Which Vancouver restaurants have a Michelin star?
On this list, Published on Main, St. Lawrence, AnnaLena, Kissa Tanto, iDen & QuanJuDe and Barbara each hold one Michelin star. Miku, Hawksworth, Ask for Luigi and Savio Volpe are recognized in the Michelin Guide. Blue Water Cafe and Mott 32 rank here on their own merits rather than a Michelin listing. These are the rooms where a direct relationship matters most on a busy weekend.
Where should I go for the best sushi in Vancouver?
Vancouver's Japanese scene is deep. Miku is the room that made aburi (flame-seared, pressed) sushi famous in North America, with the Aburi Salmon Oshi Sushi as the signature, and its harbour-side setting makes it the easy pick for a first visit. For seafood more broadly, Blue Water Cafe pairs a strong sushi program with the city's best raw bar.
How far in advance should I book?
For a standard weekend dinner, a week or two is usually enough, though the starred rooms like Published on Main and Barbara book out further and have very few seats. For cruise season, a summer festival weekend, or the holidays, plan two to six weeks ahead, and order the Peking duck ahead at Mott 32 or iDen & QuanJuDe. We can frequently place tables the public apps show as fully booked.
Reserve your Vancouver table
Tell us the night and the group. We come back with the right table at the right room, plus whatever you want to build around it.
Build a plan with us
Want the full lineup? Browse every Vancouver 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.
More from the MyRSVP dispatch
- Best Sushi and Omakase in Vancouver 2026: The Ranked Guide · Our ranked guide to the best sushi and omakase in Vancouver for 2026, from Michelin-starred edomae counters like Masayoshi and Okeya Kyujiro to aburi at Miku, with the seats we book most.
- Vancouver Michelin Guide Restaurants 2026: Every Star, Bib and Selected Table, and How to Book · A structured 2026 guide to every Michelin-recognized restaurant in Vancouver, grouped by One Star, Bib Gourmand and Guide Selected, with the booking logistics for each.
- Best Italian Restaurants in Vancouver 2026: The Ranked Guide · Our ranked guide to the best Italian restaurants in Vancouver for 2026, from Railtown fresh pasta at Ask for Luigi to a Fraserhood osteria at Savio Volpe, with the tables we book most.
- Best Fine Dining in Scottsdale (2026) · Our ranked guide to Scottsdale's best fine dining and special-occasion rooms, anchored by Cafe Monarch's prix-fixe tasting, Mastro's City Hall, and Nobu Scottsdale.
- Best Italian Restaurants in Scottsdale (2026) · Our ranked guide to the best Italian restaurants in Scottsdale for 2026, anchored by Scott Conant's The Americano, Matt Carter's Fat Ox, and Marcellino Ristorante.
- Best Restaurants in Old Town Scottsdale (2026) · Our ranked guide to the best restaurants in Old Town Scottsdale, from The Mission and FnB to Toca Madera, with MyRSVP building the walkable night around dinner.
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