Best Steakhouses in Miami (2026)
Miami's best steakhouses ranked for 2026, from Papi Steak's rhinestone Beef Case to COTE's Michelin-starred Korean grill. Book the table with MyRSVP.
Why we wrote this guide
A Miami steakhouse is never just about the steak. It is about the room it arrives in - the rhinestone briefcase wheeled out under a light show, the power table angled so you see everyone who walks in, the smokeless grill set into your own tabletop, the DJ that turns dinner into a night out before the check lands. The beef is genuinely excellent across this list, dry-aged and Wagyu-graded and cooked by serious kitchens. But in this city the chophouse is a stage, and the crowd came dressed for it. That is the through-line: rooms where a great steak and a great scene show up at the same table.
This is our ranked guide to the best steakhouses in Miami in 2026, built from the tables we book most and the rooms our guests ask for by name. Every venue below is one we 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 leads with the strongest steak rooms and the occasions they fit best.
The ranked guide
1. Papi Steak (South of Fifth)
The definitive scene-y steakhouse in South of Fifth, a high-energy chophouse from David Grutman's Groot Hospitality and partner David "Papi" Einhorn. A Rockwell Group redesign left the room pure Miami glamour - deep red velvet banquettes, resin-topped tables, a statement chandelier - with DJs spinning into the early hours so dinner runs hot and loud. The menu is built on theater and premium beef: the signature 32-ounce tomahawk Papi Steak with its secret sauce, a Wagyu sampler of Japanese, Australian, and American cuts on a hot stone, and the famous Beef Case, a 55-ounce Australian Wagyu tomahawk presented tableside in a rhinestone briefcase with a light show. This is the steak dinner as a full production.
See Papi Steak.
Best for: the celebration table that wants theatrics with the tomahawk.
2. COTE Miami (Design District)
The Korean steakhouse that put fine dining and live-fire barbecue in the same room, and its Design District outpost carries a Michelin star to prove the point. Proprietor Simon Kim's formula runs on a sleek, low-lit space where every table is built around a smokeless tabletop grill, so the meat cooks in front of you. The move is the Butcher's Feast, a chef's selection of four cuts grilled tableside with a spread of Korean banchan, while bigger appetites go for the Steak Omakase, a guided run through USDA Prime and Wagyu. The kitchen leans on dry-aged, high-grade beef, and the wine list runs past 1,200 labels. It is the pick when the occasion is worth a proper reservation.
See COTE Miami.
Best for: the milestone occasion dinner or the deal you want to close.
3. Prime 112 (South of Fifth)
The landmark that reset Miami's steakhouse scene when it opened on Ocean Drive in 2004, under restaurateur Myles Chefetz in the historic Brown's Hotel. Prime 112 broke the dark-wood mold with bright lighting, up-tempo music, and modern decor - expect A-list celebrities, Miami Heat players, and the Kardashians mixed into the crowd. The menu centers on dry-aged USDA Prime beef, with the Dry-Aged Bone-In New York Strip and the Veal Rib Chop anchoring it, and shareable sides like Truffled Lobster Mac and Cheese lifting it beyond the standards. It runs as a single, bustling dining floor built for visibility, with no quiet corners - the see-and-be-seen power table in its purest form.
See Prime 112.
Best for: the see-and-be-seen power dinner in South Beach.
4. Gekko (Brickell)
Brickell's most coveted reservation and a Japanese steakhouse through and through, opened in 2021 under David Grutman and co-owner Bad Bunny. The menu balances premium Japanese technique with steakhouse tradition: A5 Wagyu hot stone for tableside grilling, whole lobster with caviar service, and signature plates like wagyu crispy rice and lobster dumplings, with a sushi bar as the theatrical centerpiece. The jewel-toned, dimly lit interiors play on the "moonlight" the name invokes, and the space flows from intimate dining into a vibrant lounge where top DJs push the energy toward after-hours.
See Gekko.
Best for: the date night or business dinner that wants Wagyu and a lounge to slide into.
5. Sunny's Steakhouse (Little River)
One of the toughest reservations in the city, and it earns the hype. Set in Little River inside a beautifully reimagined former roofing factory, from the team behind Jaguar Sun, Sunny's reads more like a stylish dinner party than a traditional chophouse - a 13,000-square-foot indoor-outdoor space with a brick courtyard shaded by a massive banyan tree. The kitchen, led by chef-partner Carey Hynes with executive chef Aaron Brooks, is more ambitious than the steakhouse label suggests: USDA prime hanger steaks, American and Australian wagyu dry-aged on site, a 26-ounce dry-aged ribeye, and a raw bar of Treasure Coast oysters and Royal Red shrimp. Design-forward, celebratory, and humming.
See Sunny's Steakhouse.
Best for: the design-forward celebration dinner for people who book early.
6. Daniel's Miami (Coral Gables)
The classic power-steakhouse night out in Coral Gables, minus the stuffiness - built for a see-and-be-seen crowd of deal-makers, date nights, and groups who want white-tablecloth service in a lively room. The sister concept to the MICHELIN Guide-recommended Daniel's in Fort Lauderdale, run by Gioia Hospitality with culinary director Danny Ganem, it leans into dark woods and velvet seating lifted by golden Murano glass chandeliers, a wine wall, and an open kitchen. The kitchen is steak-forward but broad, with returning orders like the Florida Blue Crab Cake, the Australian hanger steak, and the Maine Lobster Mac and Cheese. There is a real dress code, so plan the outfit.
See Daniel's Miami.
Best for: the polished business or deal-maker dinner in the Gables.
7. Dirty French Steakhouse (Brickell)
One of the most talked-about openings in Brickell, from Major Food Group - the team behind Carbone - with Chef Rich Torrisi leading a kitchen that blends French culinary tradition with American steakhouse bravado. Ken Fulk designed the space and it shows: a Jungle Bar entrance with an onyx bar under a gold-leafed ceiling, deep aubergine velvet wingback banquettes tucked into private alcoves, silk lanterns, and service captains in custom pink tuxedos. The heart of the menu is a collection of Prime Aged Steaks served with sauces from Au Poivre to Cajun, plus two celebratory shares - a 40-ounce Porterhouse and a Wagyu Tomahawk. High-octane, theatrically opulent, and dressed to match.
See Dirty French Steakhouse.
Best for: the group blowout that wants a scene as bold as the beef.
8. Klaw Miami (Edgewater)
The surf-and-turf answer on this list, doing two hard things well at once: dry-aged steak and live Norwegian king crab, inside the restored Miami Woman's Club in Edgewater with Biscayne Bay through the windows. Set across three floors of a landmark 1920s building, with dark wood, floor-to-ceiling windows, and Edgewater's only rooftop bar, it reads special-occasion rather than scene-first. The steaks are USDA Black Angus and Kobe-grade, dry-aged on site, while the signature king crab is kept live in in-house tanks and brought to the table pre-cracked for drawn butter.
See Klaw Miami.
Best for: the waterfront celebration dinner that wants steak and king crab both.
Frequently asked questions
Which Miami steakhouse is best for a special occasion or a big group?
For a milestone worth the reservation, COTE Miami leads - the Michelin star, the tabletop Butcher's Feast, and the deep wine list make it the occasion pick. For a celebratory group that wants theater, Papi Steak is built for it, with the rhinestone Beef Case and a 32-ounce tomahawk made for sharing, while Dirty French Steakhouse handles a Brickell group blowout with its Porterhouse and Wagyu Tomahawk shares. Klaw Miami is the move for a waterfront celebration that wants steak and king crab together. Tell us the headcount and we will route the room that fits.
What is the difference between Wagyu and dry-aged steak on these menus?
They are two different things, and several rooms here offer both. Wagyu refers to the breed and its intense marbling - Papi Steak runs a sampler of Japanese, Australian, and American Wagyu, Gekko grills A5 Wagyu on a hot stone, and COTE's Steak Omakase runs through USDA Prime and Wagyu. Dry-aging is a process that concentrates flavor by aging the beef in controlled conditions - Prime 112 centers on dry-aged USDA Prime, and Sunny's and Klaw dry-age on site. Want the buttery, high-marble experience, order Wagyu; want deeper, more concentrated beef flavor, order the dry-aged cuts.
What is the dress code at Miami steakhouses?
Plan to dress up. These are see-and-be-seen rooms, and several enforce a real dress code - Daniel's Miami, for one, does not allow shorts, tank tops, flip-flops, or baseball caps in the dining room. Across the board, smart and elegant or upscale attire is the safe read for the marquee rooms, and the scene-driven spots like Papi Steak and Dirty French Steakhouse skew even more dressed-up as the DJ picks up later in the night. When in doubt, err toward the sharper outfit.
Can I walk in, or do I need a reservation?
At prime time, especially on weekends, these rooms effectively require a reservation - Prime 112's weekend 7-to-10 p.m. slots book weeks ahead, and Sunny's is one of the hardest tables in the city to land at all. Bar seats can sometimes open up on a slower weeknight, but that is not reliable for a group or a special occasion. Let us hold the table so the night is not left to chance.
How far in advance should I book a top Miami steakhouse?
For a standard weekend prime-time table, plan one to two weeks out at most rooms, and further for the hardest reservations like Sunny's and Gekko, which run 30 days out for prime slots. Reservations tighten sharply around Art Basel Miami Beach, the Miami Grand Prix, and the winter high season, when you should stretch that to two to six weeks. Weeknights and earlier or later seatings are far easier. We can frequently place tables the public apps show as fully booked.
Reserve your Miami table
Tell us the night and the group and we will match the steakhouse to the occasion, from a Wagyu-and-lounge date night to a full Beef Case blowout. We come back with the table and build the rest of the night around it, from the club after to the pool day before.
Build a plan with us
Want the full lineup? Browse every Miami 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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