25 Best Restaurants in Oahu, Hawaii

Bogart's Café

$$ | Waikiki Fodor's choice

Well established as a local favorite, this unassuming restaurant is situated in a strip mall near Diamond Head and away from the bustle of Waikiki. It's a great spot to grab a bagel or açai bowl in the morning or to linger over a post-sunset dinner—perhaps enjoying seared scallops with cauliflower puree, a pork chop with braised fennel, or one of the pasta dishes, including the chef’s signature cacio e pepe featuring cheese imported from Italy’s Dolomites region. Interesting cocktails, a full wine list, and tantalizing desserts (the coconut panna cotta is incredibly light and creamy) round out the offerings. The interior is basic, but there's also seating on the patio out front.

Island Vintage Wine Bar

$$ | Waikiki Fodor's choice

Tucked away on the second floor of the Royal Hawaiian Center, this stylish, sleek, and cozy spot has a selection of more than 40 international wines by the glass—all served via a high-tech vending machine that uses prepaid cards. The food menu is limited, but a few favorites include oversize Wagyu burgers, poke bites with nori chips, and cheese and charcuterie plates. The restaurant also offers breakfast, lunch (featuring small plates), and a happy hour (3–6 pm) with discount wines and light bites at the bar.

Nico's Pier 38

$$ | Iwilei Fodor's choice

Lyonnaise chef Nico Chaiz's harborside restaurant is steps from the Honolulu Fish Auction, which explains his "line-to-plate" concept—super-fresh fish dishes at a reasonable price. But he lets his French flag fly in dishes like steak frites and bouillabaisse, too. Lunch focuses on local-style plate lunches and serves more of a local workers crowd. Come dinnertime, you'll see a mix of tourists and kamaaina here for beers on tap, cocktails, almost nightly music, and an excellent menu across the board. Although most indoor tables have harbor views, try to get a table on the lanai. If you're staying in a place with a kitchen and need to stock up, note that the fish market also sells prepared foods like poke, soups, and stews. In Kailua, there's a Nico's serving almost the same menu as the original at Pier 38.

Recommended Fodor's Video

The Pig and the Lady

$$ | Chinatown Fodor's choice

Chef Andrew Le's casual noodle house attracts downtown office workers by day and becomes a creative contemporary restaurant at night, pulling in serious chowhounds. Drawing on both his Vietnamese heritage and multicultural island flavors, the talented, playful Le is a wizard with spice and acid, turning out dishes of layered flavor. The restaurant has food stands at farmers' markets, and its sister restaurant, Piggy Smalls, serves a scaled-down but similar menu.

83 N. King St., Honolulu, Hawaii, 96813, USA
808-585–8255
Known For
  • banh mi sandwiches at lunch and pho all day
  • house-made soft-serve custards and sorbets, including unexpected flavors
  • Hanoi-style egg coffee
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon.

Akasaka

$$ | Ala Moana

Step inside this tiny sushi bar, tucked amid the strip clubs behind the Ala Moana Hotel, and you'll swear you're in an out-of-the-way Edo neighborhood. Don't be deterred by its dodgy neighbors or its reputation for inconsistent service—this is where locals come when they want the real deal, and you'll be greeted with a cheerful "Iraishaimase!" (Welcome!) before sitting at a diminutive table or perching at the small sushi bar. Let the chefs here decide, omakase-style, or you can go for a grilled specialty, like scallop butteryaki (grilled in butter).

1646 B Kona St., Honolulu, Hawaii, 96814, USA
808-942–4466
Known For
  • popular local spot for late-night food
  • spicy tuna roll
  • no pretense, nothing fancy
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No lunch on Sun.

Baci Bistro

$$

A long-time local favorite, elegant, inviting Baci Bistro is a classic Italian restaurant offering an extensive range of pastas, antipasti, mains, and really excellent desserts. Consider the ravioli del giorno followed by vitello (veal) cooked with a variety of sauces. Top off your meal with a dessert specialty: crème brûlée.

Chiang Mai Thai Cuisine

$$ | Moiliili

Long beloved for its northern Thai classics, such as spicy curries and stir-fries and sticky rice in woven-grass baskets, made using family recipes, Chiang Mai is a short cab ride from Waikiki. Some dishes, like the signature barbecue Cornish game hen with lemongrass and spices, show how acculturation can create interesting pairings. The simple space is decorated with Thai fabrics and artworks.

2239 S. King St., Honolulu, Hawaii, 96826, USA
808-941–1151
Known For
  • spring rolls and Chiang Mai wings
  • limited parking in a small lot in back
  • local business-lunch favorite
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No lunch weekends

Cholo's Homestyle Mexican Restaurant

$$

There are only a couple of North Shore institutions that are considered gathering places—Foodland (the great grocery store) is one, and Cholo's is the other. Festively done up with Mexican tchotchkes, it serves decent rice-and-beans plates of Mexican standards (steak fajitas, burritos, enchiladas) at affordable prices.

Coquito's Latin Cuisine

$$

A humble, family-run restaurant in a tiny roadside shack, Coquito’s serves an eclectic array of traditional Puerto Rican and Latin American dishes, from arroz con gandules (rice with peas) and shrimp mofongo to pastel borricúa (ground green-banana masa stuffed with pork), Colombian empanadas, and Argentinian flank steak with chimichurri sauce. Order takeout for a picnic at a beach park, or dine in the small outdoor patio (no alcohol sold here, so you need to BYOB).

85-773 Farrington Hwy., Waianae, Hawaii, 96792, USA
808-888–4082
Known For
  • Cuban sandwiches
  • various desserts, including tres leches cake and Puerto Rican flancocho, flan de coco, and tembleque
  • nearly everything prepared in-house
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon.

Fête

$$ | Chinatown

At lunch, regulars pack into this tiny, brick-walled space for the burgers and specials; at dinner, they come for the pasta and locally sourced seafood dishes or the to-die-for twice-fried Kauai chicken with grits and collard greens. Here, you'll probably get cozy with the table next to you as wait staffers glide between tables with full trays and great attitudes. There's also seating in a smaller, quieter, upstairs library. The specials are fabulous, as are the craft cocktails and the beer list.

2 N. Hotel St., Honolulu, Hawaii, 96817, USA
808-369–1390
Known For
  • Brooklyn-meets-Hawaii menu
  • great pau hana (happy hour) menu
  • craft cocktails and extensive drink menu
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun.

GOEN Dining + Bar

$$

This chef Roy Yamaguchi spinoff serves elevated Hawaii regional cuisine and cocktails in the Lau Hala Shops complex, right where the old Macy's used to be. The kids' menu goes above and beyond the typical fare.

Haleiwa Beach House

$$

One of the newer restaurants on the North Shore takes full advantage of its epic water views. The menu is chock full of surf-and-turf options, from juicy burgers to grilled steaks, blackened fish to red Thai curry with lobster and shrimp .

62-540 Kamehameha Hwy., Haleiwa, Hawaii, 96712, USA
808-637–3435
Known For
  • view and setting that can't be beat
  • solid, reliable beef, seafood, salads, and kids options
  • craft beers on draft and a nice wine list
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Reservations not accepted.

Honolulu Museum of Art Café

$$ | Downtown

The Honolulu Museum of Art's cool courtyards and galleries filled with works by masters from Monet to Hokusai are well worth a visit, and, afterward, so is this popular lunch restaurant. The open-air café is flanked by a burbling water feature and 8-foot-tall ceramic "dumplings" by artist Jun Kaneko—a tranquil setting in which to eat your salad or sandwich, shaded by a 75-year-old monkeypod tree. You can also buy picnic basket meals to eat in the museum courtyard. There is no museum admission charge to eat at the café.

900 S. Beretania St., Honolulu, Hawaii, 96814, USA
808-532–8734
Known For
  • piadina pesto-caprese flatbread sandwich
  • limited but beautifully prepared menu of soups, salads, sandwiches, and mains
  • nice spot for Sunday brunch
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon.–Wed. No dinner

Kalapawai Cafe & Deli

$$

This one-stop, green-and-white, Mediterranean-leaning café, wine bar, bakery, and gourmet deli is the creation of the Dymond family, two generations of restaurateurs who have shaken up the windward food scene. Come in on your way to the beach for a cup of coffee and bagel, and stop back for a gourmet pizza or bruschetta for lunch or a candlelight dinner at night. The breakfast and lunch menus are a mix of sandwiches, salads, and other creative offerings; the place transforms at night, with table service, candles, and a frequently changing menu of freshly grilled fish and turf offerings. The original Kalapawai Market, a grab-and-go spot, is right at Kailua Beach.

Liko’s Tap & Table

$$

This open-air, upscale taproom puts a local spin on classic American dishes and has an excellent waterfront view from its otherwise nondescript strip-mall location. A long beer, wine, and cocktail menu includes locally sourced drinks. The food portions are large, and TVs around the restaurant make for good game-day viewing or distraction for the kids. Stop here for lunch in between south and windward shore activities.

Livestock Tavern

$$ | Chinatown

Livestock Tavern scores big with its seasonal offerings of comfort foods and craft cocktails and its cowboy-minimalist decor. Although meat, including some of the best burgers in town, commands the menu, offerings like burrata, creative salads, sandwiches, and fish round out the possibilities. Note the seasonal drink specials with creative names. Weekend brunch is also served.

Lucky Belly

$$ | Chinatown

A hip local crowd sips cocktails and slurps huge bowls of noodles with a modern twist at this popular fusion ramen bar known for its savory broth and its trendy small plates, such as pork belly buns and oxtail dumplings. The service here is unpretentious and attentive if you eat in, but you can also order your food to go, and late-night hours make it a great stop after shows at the Hawaii Theatre or when dinner elsewhere didn't quite do the trick.

50 N. Hotel St., Honolulu, Hawaii, 96817, USA
808-531–1888
Known For
  • steaming hot pot dishes
  • small but unique cocktail menu
  • "Belly Bowl" with smoked bacon, sausage, and pork belly
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. No lunch

Moku Kitchen

$$ | Kakaako

In the hip SALT complex, Moku appeals to both foodies and families with authentic farm-to-table cuisine and a laid-back, urban setting. It's one of legendary chef Peter Merriman's restaurants and focuses on upcountry farm fare cooked in the on-site rotisserie; pizzas, salads, and sandwiches; and craft cocktails. Happy hour and evening music can sometimes get really loud, so if you want to chat, ask to be seated away from the entertainment.

660 Ala Moana Blvd., Honolulu, Hawaii, 96813, USA
808-591–6658
Known For
  • happy hour
  • impressive list of craft cocktails, wine, and beer, including the signature monkeypod mai tai
  • live music

Mud Hen Water

$$ | Kaimuki

The name of this restaurant is the English translation of waialae (meaning a gathering spot around a watering hole). Renowned chef Ed Kenney explores modern interpretations of the Hawaiian foods he remembers from his childhood with an ever-changing locavore menu. Sit at the bar, on the lanai, or in the casual, homey dining room. Spread out and talk story with your neighbor. That's what inspired Kenney to open the place, after all.

Panya

$$ | Kakaako

Run by Hong Kong–born sisters Alice and Annie Yeung, this easy-breezy café is known for its pastries, desserts, and happy hours but also offers crowd-pleasing, contemporary fare, both American (salads, sandwiches, pastas) and Asian (Thai-style steak salad, Japanese-style fried chicken, Singaporean seafood laksa). Dine inside for the air-conditioning and disco vibe, or choose a spot on the covered lanai. Across the street is South Shore Market with its local shops, Nordstrom Rack, and T. J. Maxx.

1288 Ala Moana Blvd., Honolulu, Hawaii, 96814, USA
808-946–6388
Known For
  • French-style pastries and cakes
  • eclectic and extensive menu
  • Japanese cheesecake
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon.

RumFire Waikiki

$$ | Waikiki

If the perfect sunset happy hour means cocktails, bite-size shareable plates, tropical breezes, ocean sounds, and flaming oversized torches, then "Meet me at Rumfire" should be your motto. Enjoy such dishes as lemon-herb mahimahi, island fish tacos, and "local style" sesame-ahi poke; sip signature concoctions like the RumFire Mai Tai or the Fire Runner, made with spiced rum and tropical juices. At night, RumFire is a club–lounge that promises an edgy and exciting experience amid fashionable people and exquisite views.

2255 Kalakaua Ave., Honolulu, Hawaii, 96815, USA
808-922–4422
Known For
  • beachside nightlife scene with great food and cocktails
  • fabulous location right on the beach
  • hip vibe that attracts young professionals

Scratch Kitchen

$$ | Kakaako

Tucked into the chic South Shore Market in Kakaako's Ward Village, Scratch Kitchen has hipster decor, an open kitchen, and creative comfort food. It's popular for breakfast and brunch and has both small plates and generous entrées on its dinner menu. The motto—"simple, rustic, approachable"—might seem a bit overstated, particularly as diners struggle to select just one or two things from the creative menu. But the good food, fun vibe, and location have people hooked.

Side Street Inn Kapahulu

$$ | Waikiki

The original Hopaka Street pub is famous as the place where celebrity chefs gather after hours; this second Kapahulu Avenue location is also popular and closer to Waikiki. Local-style bar food—salty panfried pork chops with a plastic tub of ketchup, lup cheong fried rice, and passion fruit–glazed ribs—is served in huge, shareable portions. This is a lively, casual place where you can dress any way you like, nosh all night, and watch loud sports on TV. Pupu (in portions so large as to be dinner) are served 3–11:30 pm daily. It gets crowded quickly, so make a reservation or prepare to wait awhile.

614 Kapahulu Ave., Honolulu, Hawaii, 96815, USA
808-739–3939
Known For
  • portions that can seemingly feed you for a week
  • popular local spot with a crowd of regulars
  • sports-bar feel with lots of fried food
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No lunch

Tangö Contemporary Cafe

$$ | Kakaako

On the ground floor of a glass-sheathed condominium, Tangö's spare contemporary setting stays humming through breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Finnish chef Göran Streng honors his heritage a bit with unfussy dishes such as gravlax with crispy skin, but the menu is, by and large, "general bistro," running from bouillabaisse to herb-crusted rack of lamb, with some Asian nods. The weekend brunch menu is a local favorite as well. The Scandinavian decor includes Marimekko prints on the walls, blond and birch woods, and cloudlike hanging white lamps. Don't expect a touristy experience: Streng caters mostly to his discriminating city-dwelling clientele.

1288 Ala Moana Blvd., Honolulu, Hawaii, 96814, USA
808-593–7288
Known For
  • Hamakua mushroom risotto
  • loco moco (unlike any you'll have elsewhere)
  • attentive staff
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No dinner Sun., Reservations essential

The Beach House by 604

$$

Housed in a former officer’s dining hall right on the west-facing beach at Pokai Bay, the hip, casual, younger sibling of Pearl Harbor’s Restaurant 604 is a great place to stop for a bite before or after a surf session at Makaha or a day trip up the west side to Yokohama Bay. The island-inspired menu focuses on comfort foods and includes everything from poke, burgers, fries, and pizza to traditional island plates with fish and rice. During happy hour and sunset time, locals congregate to watch sports on large-screen TVs and watch the golden orb dip into the crystal-clear seas.