Colombo's Finest Tables
5 restaurants listed$ under $40 · $$ $40–$80 · $$$ $80–$150 · $$$$ $150+ per person
Best for First Date in Colombo
View all first-date restaurantsA first date in Colombo is won or lost on three variables: acoustics, setting, and the ability of the menu to structure a conversation that hasn't yet found its rhythm. Our top Colombo picks for first dates are Nihonbashi, The Gallery Café, Upali's by Nawaloka. Each chosen for its calibrated intimacy, its conversation-friendly acoustic, and its willingness to let a slow meal happen without pressure.
Best for Business Dinner in Colombo
View all business dining restaurantsClosing a deal in Colombo is partly about the restaurant's ability to handle a three-hour dinner without hurrying you out, and partly about the quiet social signal that the choice of venue sends to the client across the table. Our top picks: Ministry of Crab, Nihonbashi. Each is discreet enough for confidential conversation and visible enough to communicate seriousness.
The Colombo Top 5
- 1. Ministry of Crab , Sri Lankan Seafood, Colombo Fort / Old Dutch Hospital
Sri Lanka's answer to a seafood Michelin star, run by chef-restaurateur Dharshan Munidasa with cricketing legends Mahela and Sangakkara. The crab is the point. Don't skip it. - 2. Nihonbashi , Japanese, Colombo 3 / Fort
Dharshan Munidasa's older Japanese kitchen. Asia's 50 Best alum, Sri Lanka's best sushi counter, and the most serious Japanese cooking in South Asia. - 3. The Gallery Café , Contemporary Sri Lankan / International, Colombo 3 / Cinnamon Gardens
Geoffrey Bawa's former office, converted into a restaurant, gallery, and courtyard dining room. Colombo's most beautifully considered space and one of its best cocktail bars. - 4. Upali's by Nawaloka , Traditional Sri Lankan, Colombo 7 / Cinnamon Gardens
The Cinnamon Gardens rice-and-curry room that Sri Lankans take their visiting relatives to. Traditional cooking, done honestly, without tourist-menu compromises. - 5. Paradise Road The Gallery , Contemporary Sri Lankan, Colombo 3
Udayshanth Fernando's design-house-turned-café on Dharmapala Mawatha. A garden courtyard, a design shop attached, and the most considered colonial Ceylon aesthetic in Colombo.
Colombo Dining Guide
Colombo is a dining city that outruns the expectations most international visitors arrive with. The Sri Lankan kitchen. Built around rice and curry, roti and sambol, and the island's astonishing range of seafood. Is the foundation, but Colombo's contemporary scene is broader than that: celebrity-chef seafood palaces inside the restored Old Dutch Hospital, Michelin-caliber Japanese rooms (Nihonbashi is Asia's 50 Best-ranked and rated among the strongest Japanese kitchens in South Asia), heritage restaurants inside Geoffrey Bawa's restored homes, and the Jaffna cuisine that the post-war period has re-introduced to the capital.
The dining geography centres on three zones. Colombo Fort and the Old Dutch Hospital. The restored 17th-century colonial shopping arcade. Hold Ministry of Crab and several of the most serious seafood rooms. Colombo 7 (Cinnamon Gardens) is the tree-shaded heritage district where Bawa-restored villas like The Gallery Café and Paradise Road operate. Galle Face and Kollupitiya (Colombo 3) hold the major hotel restaurants. The Shangri-La, the Cinnamon Grand, Galle Face Hotel. And the seafront grill operations.
Reservations are recommended at Ministry of Crab (the crab sells out nightly and bookings run a week ahead for weekends), Nihonbashi, and the top hotel rooms. Dress is smart-casual; the climate makes jackets impractical. Tipping of 10% is standard and usually already added to the bill as a service charge. Alcohol is available at licensed venues. Dinner peaks at 8pm-9pm; the city's traffic situation makes earlier reservations substantially more pleasant.