43 Best Restaurants in San Francisco, California

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We've compiled the best of the best in San Francisco - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Abacá

$$$ | Fisherman's Wharf Fodor's choice

Defeating the cliché that restaurants in hotels can't be citywide draws, chef Francis Ang's longtime Pinoy Heritage pop-up is thriving at its permanent home within the Kimpton Alton Hotel. Ang's exciting contemporary Filipino cooking has gained rave reviews from national publications and well-deserved awards. The chic space has a slight tropical edge to it and includes a small patio at the front and a bar reserved for those who can't score a reservation.

2700 Jones St., San Francisco, CA, 94133, USA
415-486–0788
Known For
  • Lola's pork lumpia
  • Innovative desserts and terrific morning pastries
  • Cocktails that are as exciting as the food
Restaurant Details
No lunch weekdays

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Devil's Teeth Baking Company

$ | Sunset Fodor's choice

Folks line up on weekends for the amazing breakfast sandwiches here: fluffy eggs, thick bacon, pepper jack, avocado, and lemon-garlic aioli on a melt-in-your-mouth buttermilk biscuit. Made-to-order beignets are another favorite. Lunch options include chicken curry salad sandwiches, BLTs, and a seasonal soup of the day. Browse the bakery's selection of used books from local favorite Green Apple while you wait, and if you can't get a spot among the limited sidewalk seating, the beach is close by. A second location in the Outer Richmond ( 3619 Balboa St.) has the same crowd and delectable menu, but parking is much easier here.

Maison Nico

$ | Financial District Fodor's choice

Some of San Francisco's most exquisite French pastries are baked daily at this serene, cheery shop. On the savory side, most choices tend to be some form of pâté-filled pastry and are presented with all the artistry of haute cuisine; sweets are split between croissant-type items and proper dessert treats. Lunch seekers will be satisfied by the tiny selection of quiche, salads, and sandwiches.

710 Montgomery St., San Francisco, CA, 94111, USA
415-359–1000
Known For
  • Flaky brioche feuilletée filled with almond paste
  • Parisian feel
  • Duck pithivier (similar to a meat pie)
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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Recommended Fodor's Video

The Mill

$ | Western Addition Fodor's choice

“Four-dollar toast” might not sound like a lot these days, but it's a phrase used around San Francisco referring to gentrification—and it was inspired by this sun-drenched, Wi-Fi-less café. At this project between one of the city’s leading bakers, Josey Baker, and the Mission’s Four Barrel Coffee, toasts---starting at $7 these days---slathered with jam or spreads are the specialty, though pastries and whole loaves are tempting as well.

Tartine Bakery

$ Fodor's choice

Chad Robertson is America’s first modern cult baker, and this tiny Mission District outpost (along with the larger Tartine Manufactory on the eastern side of the neighborhood) is where you'll find his famed loaves of tangy country bread and beloved pastries like croissants and morning buns. You'll also find near-constant lines out the door; they're longest in the morning when locals (and plenty of tourists) need a pastry punch to start the day, and later in the afternoon when the famed loaves emerge freshly baked.

Arizmendi Bakery

$ | Sunset

A Bay Area worker-owned cooperative, this bakery lures passersby with liberal slogans and baked goodies displayed in its large storefront window. The menu changes daily, offering different types of bread, sweet treats like scones, and pizza. Plop down $28 for a whole thin-crust pizza and enjoy it in the sidewalk parklet for a perfect beginning (or end) to a Golden Gate Park excursion.

1331 9th Ave, San Francisco, CA, 94122, USA
415-566–3117
Known For
  • One amazing pizza per day, always vegetarian
  • Enthusiastic local following
  • Tough parking
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No dinner

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As Quoted

$$ | Presidio Heights

At this sleek Presidio Heights daytime café, the wellness-centric menu manages to be so delicious that guests often don't notice how virtuous the dishes are. Bread for the open-faced sandwiches is gluten-free and baked in-house; several items are vegetarian and/or vegan; and even the pappardelle is made of zucchini ribbons instead of wheat. The white-tiled and white-painted interior looks more like a luxury Beverly Hills boutique than an eatery.

3613 Sacramento St., San Francisco, CA, 94118, USA
415-914–0689
Known For
  • Post-yoga healthful meals
  • Excellent gluten-free toasts
  • Freshly made juices and smoothies
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. No dinner

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Automat

$$ | Western Addition

Marquee pop-up turned all-day restaurant, this worthwhile casual establishment is tucked away on a residential street far from the activity of Divisadero. Here family-friendly focus meets refined technique, featuring excellent sandwiches during the daytime, then the rare option of a prix fixe, counter-service dinner menu. Former Lazy Bear sous-chef Matthew Kirk gets the spotlight in the kitchen, working behind the scenes with his former boss David Barzelay (arguably the pioneer of the trend for pop-ups turning permanent in San Francisco).

1801 McAllister St., San Francisco, CA, 94115, USA
415-296–6680
Known For
  • Kids' menu for kids of all ages
  • Casual fine-dining menu and vibe
  • Superb house-baked breads
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No dinner Sun.

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b Patisserie

$ | Pacific Heights

Your search for the perfect kouign-amann (a traditional glazed, butter-enriched Breton pastry made of croissant dough) ends in this buzzy café from baking wizard Belinda Leong.

2821 California St., San Francisco, CA, 94115, USA
415-440–1700
Known For
  • Impeccable kouign-amann
  • Chocolate banana almond croissant
  • Dedication to seasonal offerings
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. No dinner

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Bandit

$ | Dogpatch

Many avid San Francisco diners trek to the southeast part of the city for what are often considered the city's premier breakfast sandwiches. The eight different offerings are available all-day and arrive warm on griddled brioche buns with cage-free eggs (except the vegan, gluten-free version). Burgers and a few nonbreakfast sandwiches and salads round out the menu.

632 20th St., San Francisco, CA, 94107, USA
415-529-1562
Known For
  • The Brekkie sandwich with house-made pork sausage patty, grilled onions, and smashed tater tots
  • Dirty Bandit cold brew drink with horchata
  • Namesake sandwich with avocado, Muenster cheese, and bacon
Restaurant Details
No dinner Mon. and Tues.

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Beach Chalet

$$$ | Sunset

A perch on the second floor of a 1920s building provides first-rate views of Ocean Beach across the Great Highway (it used to be a changing room for beachgoers). But the service is just okay, and the food is basic American—burgers, chowders, and steak. Beach Chalet brews its own beers on-site and the atmosphere makes you feel a million miles away from urbanity.

Beanstalk Cafe

$ | Union Sq.

Robin's-egg-blue banquettes and metal chairs in different colors add to the cheer at this sunny spot. Drop in for hearty local coffee and excellent breakfast and lunch sandwiches, including those on the popular cragel, a combination of a croissant and a bagel.

724 Bush St., San Francisco, CA, 94108, USA
Known For
  • Cragel (croissant and bagel) sandwiches
  • Quality coffee drinks
  • Pleasant, airy space
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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Blue Bottle Coffee

$ | SoMa

Oakland-born Blue Bottle Coffee can now be found all over the Bay Area, on the East Coast, and even in Japan. However, this Mint Plaza coffee shop inside a 1912 building (fun fact: it appeared in The Maltese Falcon) remains its spiritual flagship for coffee geeks eager to gawk at the glitzy brewing equipment for sale, then enjoy perfect espresso pulls, powerful Oji cold brew, and meticulously made drip coffee from the eye-popping Japanese siphon bar.

66 Mint St., San Francisco, CA, 94103, USA
510-653–3394
Known For
  • Excellent cappuccinos
  • New Orleans–style iced coffee
  • Prime people-watching
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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Breadbelly

$ | Richmond

Creative, Asian-inspired takes on homey pastries made with elevated ingredients such as bee pollen and Maldon sea salt (with prices to match) draw enthusiastic crowds to this small storefront. The Kaya Toast—bright green coconut-pandan jam on the café's signature milk bread—is a must try. Several sandwiches round out the limited menu, including an egg salad with kabocha squash tempura, yuzu shichimi togarashi (Japanese seven spice), and cucumber pickle on light-as-a-cloud pandesal (a Filipino roll). Creativity extends to the short drink menu, which includes egg coffee and a substantial black sesame cappuccino. A few outdoor tables are available, but otherwise it's takeout only.

1408 Clement St., San Francisco, CA, 94118, USA
415-349–0969
Known For
  • Bright green, Instagrammable Kaya Toast
  • Long lines
  • Interesting ingredients in every item
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. No dinner

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Brenda's French Soul Food

$ | Tenderloin

The good times roll at the city's definitive choice for New Orleans cooking. Brunch is the preferred meal here---it's worth the trip for the five $5 breakfast sandwich options---but it's just as good to come for a weekday lunch of gumbo or a fried chicken dinner when the scene is a little more subdued.

652 Polk St., San Francisco, CA, 94102, USA
415-345–8100
Known For
  • Delicious beignets
  • Broiled oysters
  • Lots of charm and fun
Restaurant Details
No dinner Tues.

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Cafe de Casa

$ | Fisherman's Wharf

Start the morning on the outskirts of Fisherman's Wharf with an açaí bowl and strong coffee, or enjoy puffy chicken-and-cream cheese-filled coxinha pastries as a lunchtime snack at this cheery stop by the cable car turnaround. It's refreshing for visitors who are tired of crab and clam chowder. The breezy, tropical-leaning setting is a breath of fresh air in one of the most touristy parts of the city.

685 Beach St., San Francisco, CA, 94133, USA
415-345–1055
Known For
  • Sandwiches within a pão de queijo cheese roll
  • Fresh juices
  • Tapioca crepes with various savory or sweet fillings
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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Cafe Réveille

$ | Mission Bay

San Francisco has plenty of great food options and coffee destinations, but rarely do the two merge together as well as they do at this Mission Bay roastery, which excels at sandwiches on terrific focaccia, virtuous lunch bowls, and coffee in myriad forms. With tall ceilings, ample windows, and a pleasant parklet, the café almost has a Parisian indoor-outdoor feel. Don't miss the juice shots for a quick, powerful jolt minus caffeine.

610 Long Bridge St., San Francisco, CA, 94158, USA
Known For
  • Maybe the city's best açai bowl
  • Excellent cappuccino
  • Top-tier breakfast sandwich and burrito
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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Café Sebastian

$$ | Financial District

As part of the revamped Transamerica Pyramid complex (in a separate building across the redwood park from the actual pyramid), this daytime fast-casual café/sleek restaurant in the evening quickly emerged as a FiDi favorite after its 2024 opening. The food is courtesy of chef Brad Kilgore, a major Miami culinary figure who is thriving with his San Francisco debut. Breakfast and lunch are a mix of the familiar and more unique yet casual plates (like a marvelous tortellini en brodo with apple), while dinner shows more of an ambitious side to the compact menu.

Cassava

$ | Financial District

After several years as a full-service restaurant in the Outer Richmond and then North Beach, husband-and-wife team chef Kris Toliao and Yuka Ioroi's Japanese-Californian-inspired concept decided to downsize dramatically and switch to a daytime-only café model. However, this new home happens to be a lush palm tree and plant-filled courtyard oasis in the heart of charming Jackson Square. Since its opening in early 2025, Cassava swiftly has become the rare place that is a lunchtime go-to for both the food travel cognoscenti and nearby office workers.

633 Battery St., San Francisco, CA, 94111, USA
415-640--8990
Known For
  • Japanese egg salad sandwich on milk bread
  • The rare-to-find outstanding clam chowder
  • Instagram-stunning setting
Restaurant Details
Closed weekends. No dinner

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The Coffee Movement

$ | Nob Hill

Nob Hill's design and architecture tend to be resolutely old-school, except with this impossibly hip coffee shop. Coffee and espresso drinks are excellent, plus there's a tasting flight of the day's offerings for the most avid coffee nerd. It's the perfect caffeine fuel stop before a Nob Hill climb. There is no kitchen here—just pastries—and the only seating are two benches outside.

Dynamo Donut & Coffee

$ | Marina

The tiny kiosk on the Marina's yacht harbor is the perfect spot to grab a pick-me-up before a stroll to the Palace of Fine Arts or along the beach. The doughnuts by a former Foreign Cinema pastry chef are universally terrific, from the vanilla bean standby to chocolate star anise, and there's locally roasted coffee for an extra pre-hike jolt.

110 Yacht Rd., San Francisco, CA, 94123, USA
415-920–1978
Known For
  • Maple-bacon-apple doughnut
  • Doughnut flavors specific to each month
  • Vegan doughnut options
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues.

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Flywheel Coffee Roasters

$ | Haight

Family-owned, this light-filled café with a view of Golden Gate Park roasts its beans in-house for a great cuppa. The cold brew is very good, and the food includes vegan options.

672 Stanyan St., San Francisco, CA, USA
Known For
  • Cold brew and siphon coffee
  • Airy, artsy-rustic space
  • Location overlooking the park

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Grande Crêperie

$ | Embarcadero

The team behind French baking sensation Le Marais serves some of the greatest savory buckwheat galettes and sweet crêpes in the Bay Area at a kiosk on the water side of the Ferry Building. It's the perfect stop for breakfast, lunch, or a dessert snack. Fillings range from traditional ones like Nutella or ham and Comté, to more atypical choices such as cherry tomatoes and burrata.

Hazel's Kitchen

$ | Potrero Hill

Sandwich lovers build up their appetite with a hike up the steep hill and then are greeted with some of the city's consistently excellent sandwiches at this small, friendly shop where the menu seems bigger than the actual space. If you're not in a sandwich mood, there are also a few other items like breakfast scrambles, fish tacos, and salads. Plan on taking your food elsewhere since seating is limited outside.

1319 18th St., San Francisco, CA, 94107, USA
415-647–7941
Known For
  • Breakfast burritos
  • Tuna salad and cheddar sandwich
  • Any of the gooey melts
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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Holbrook House

$$$ | Financial District

Everything feels like a Roaring '20s party at the FiDi's go-to glamorous restaurant-bar for power lunches and celebratory happy hours (there are switches at each table to summon champagne and martini carts), except it actually only opened in a different '20s decade (2023). The food could coast in mediocrity because of the elegant, eye-catching environs; but thankfully it doesn't, thanks to sharp dishes like a fantastic petrale sole with hazelnut brown butter that will win over any skeptic of that oft-ignored flaky fish. The adjacent glass-ceiling atrium, known as the Conservatory at One Sansome, is utterly spectacular and often used for extra seating.

1 Sansome St., San Francisco, CA, 94104, USA
415-515--6444
Known For
  • Oysters and caviar
  • HH breakfast sandwich
  • Cocktail menu split between modern and classics
Restaurant Details
Closed weekends

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Jane on Fillmore

$ | Pacific Heights

Stop into this bright spot for their famous avocado mash, homemade baked goods and cookies, and coffee from beans roasted in-house. Look for other Janes around the city, including on Larkin Street in the Tenderloin and Jane the Bakery on Geary Street in Japantown.

2123 Fillmore St., San Francisco, CA, 94115, USA
Known For
  • Addictive cheddar-chive biscuits
  • Excellent house-made breads
  • Cute space and hipster vibe
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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Jina Bakes

$

Come to the Japan Center early to pick up Jina's innovative French-Korean pastries, savory like the kalbijjim short rib croissant or slightly sweet like the mochi-filled injeolmi croissant dusted with soybean flour. The bakery's popular cream puffs are only available Friday to Sunday, and it's strictly takeout every day.

1581 Webster St., San Francisco, CA, 94115, USA
Known For
  • Spicy kalbijjim croissant
  • Extra honeycomb toffee latte
  • Long lines
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. No dinner

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Just For You Cafe

$

Whether you're looking for a New Orleans-, Mexican-, or California-inspired breakfast or lunch, this beloved café is the place for you. The signature pillowy beignets deserve all the considerable hype and people drive an hour just to try them. But there's no going wrong on the extensive menu, served in a warm, welcoming space that feels like a modern diner. Weekends get quite festive when the pint-sized mimosas are flowing.

732 22nd St., San Francisco, CA, 94107, USA
415-647–3033
Known For
  • Breakfast burritos
  • Outstanding brioche French toast
  • Beignet sampler with three flavors
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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La Torta Gorda

$

Enormous tortas (Mexican sandwiches with meat, avocado, queso fresco, and refried beans on a soft-interior/crunchy-exterior roll) are a culinary specialty of the state of Puebla in Mexico, and they're also the signature item of this Mission District daytime favorite. The tortas come in two sizes (you likely only need the smaller one). Beyond the must-order house specialty, the extensive menu includes everything from coffee and breakfast to tostadas and tacos.

2833 24th St., San Francisco, CA, 94110, USA
415-642–9600
Known For
  • Mega Cubana torta with several kinds of meat
  • Wonderful quesadillas
  • Pleasant outdoor patio
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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The Laundromat

$$ | Richmond

It may seem like everyone at this bagel shop/pizza joint knows each other, and they probably do. This place has become so popular in the neighborhood that several new businesses have sprung up around it. Come in the morning for some of the best New York--style bagels in the city (takeout only) or in the evening for thick-crust rectangular pizza. Favorites include the classic pepperoni and the broccoli with shaved fennel; spring for the truffle honey for a surprising lift. Wednesdays they also serve smash burgers---beef and veggie---and there's always a good wine and beer selection.

3725 Balboa St., San Francisco, CA, 94121, USA
415-379-4340
Known For
  • Good neighborhood vibes
  • Long waits for a table at dinner
  • Chewy NY-style bagels
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. No lunch
Reservations not accepted

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