Tampa's Finest Tables
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$ under $40 · $$ $40–$80 · $$$ $80–$150 · $$$$ $150+ per person
Michelin-starred intimacy with great pasta and even better conversation — Chef Bryce Bonsack's twenty-eight-seat Tampa Heights room, hand-cut tajarin and a Lambrusco list, the city's most considered date-night choice.
Since 1956, the most serious steakhouse in Florida. Over 6,800 wine labels, beef dry-aged in-house, and a Dessert Room upstairs that has closed more deals than any boardroom in the 813.
Eighteen courses of immaculate omakase at $280 a seat — Tampa's most serious Japanese counter. Chef's Counter is where the city's food obsessives go when they need to feel alive.
Chef Ebbe Vollmer's Scandinavian tasting menu unfolds at a U-shaped marble bar in Downtown Tampa. Eleven courses at $295 — the most architecturally precise meal in Florida.
Tampa Bay Times' #1 restaurant two years running. Chef Ferrell Alvarez farms the menu daily — what's brilliant tonight might never appear again. The city's most exciting creative kitchen.
Chef John Fraser's Mediterranean vision inside the Tampa EDITION. Green velvet booths, caviar supplements at $175, and a Michelin star that says everything about your taste — without you having to.
Eight seats. One menu. Zero distraction. Tampa's most intimate dining experience is a 15-course journey at $200 a head — intimate enough to hear the rice breathe.
Florida's oldest restaurant — open since 1905. Flamenco dancers, 1,700 covers, fifteen dining rooms. A birthday dinner here is a Tampa rite of passage that spans every generation.
A 1903 water works building on the Hillsborough River, now a barbacoa-grilled dream. Tampa's most romantic setting for under $100 a head — river views, craft beer brewed on-site, and a terrace that belongs in a film.
The most exciting opening of 2025. Rocca's Chef Bryce Bonsack strips back the formality and lets classic French meet coastal Florida. The natural wine list alone is worth the journey.
Hyde Park's loudest, most fun Italian. Weekend brunch with live music, wood-fired Neapolitan pizza and wagyu carpaccio that doesn't let the party stop until midnight on Fridays.
Executive Chef Sean Brasel's glamorous take on the modern steakhouse. Hyde Park Village's most see-and-be-seen table — dressed-up, serious cuts, and a bar programme that means business.
Mesquite and oak fuel a southern drawl steakhouse that means business. Composed plates, exceptional dry-aged cuts, and a private dining room that handles a team of twelve without fuss.
The Seminole Hard Rock's crown jewel. USDA prime cuts, live jazz, and a wine list that earned its award. When a client flies in expecting Tampa's best — this is what you book.
National acclaim meets local execution. Wine Spectator recognition, impeccable seafood towers, and a dining room that telegraphs success before the first course arrives.
Champagne and caviar in a Hyde Park setting with a private room called The Vault. When the occasion demands bubbles and romance, Bouzy answers the call with style.
The best of both worlds — bold energy up front, intimate corners hidden in the back. Hyde Park's most reliable choice when you want Italian with atmosphere and the date can go either way.
An award-winning wine list and a kitchen that blends Italian and Mediterranean with genuine artistry. OpenTable diners' top pick for fine dining in Tampa — consistent, elegant, romantic.
Chef Ciro Mancini won the 2025 Gambero Rosso award for authentic Italian cuisine in the USA. When you need to demonstrate discernment over a white tablecloth, this is the booking that does it.
Ybor City's most beloved institution since 1948. Italian, Spanish, Cuban — the flavors of the neighbourhood on one menu, in a room that holds entire companies for team dinners worth remembering.
Tampa's Top Ten
Rocca
The restaurant that put Tampa Heights on the national culinary map. Chef Bryce Bonsack brings New York precision to Florida ingredients — hand-pulled pastas, tableside mozzarella, and a seasonal menu that makes you wonder why anyone eats Italian elsewhere in Florida. The Michelin star is deserved, the crowd is stylish, and the noise level is perfect for a first date where you actually want to hear each other.
Bern's Steak House
Opened by Bern Laxer in 1956, this is not merely a restaurant — it is a Tampa institution that has survived fashions, recessions, and every dining trend of the last seven decades. The beef is dry-aged in-house, the wine list runs to 6,800 labels, and the Dessert Room upstairs — a converted wine cave with individual private booths — remains the most remarkable dining experience in Florida.
Kōsen
The 18-course omakase at $280 a seat is Tampa's most uncompromising dining commitment — and worth every cent. Set in an intimate Tampa Heights space at 307 West Palm Avenue, the chef's counter experience unfolds like a carefully edited film: Toro Tartare, Duck, A5 Wagyu, then the nigiri sequence that reminds you why sushi is an art form. Book six weeks out.
Ebbe
Swedish-born Chef Ebbe Vollmer built the city's most architecturally precise dining experience at 1202 North Franklin Street — a U-shaped marble bar that seats diners around a kitchen performing at the highest level. The 11-course menu at $295 weaves Scandinavian instinct with Florida ingredient depth. No choice. No distraction. Just the best tasting menu in the state.