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Best Trendy Table Hotspots Seafood Restaurants in West Loop

6 hand-picked restaurants, critic-reviewed and ranked

Last Updated: February 2026

Our Top Pick
Mako
A chef-driven omakase with a serious cooked-course bench.

Essential Picks

9.1
$$$$ West Loop Japanese, Sushi
A 22-seat, reservation-driven omakase built around pristine fish, tightly paced courses, and cooked interludes that keep the meal from becoming a pure nigiri parade. This is destination sushi for when you want chef-led progression, quiet focus, and a night that feels deliberately composed from first bite to dessert.
Must-Try Dishes: Omakase tasting, Chawanmushi (seasonal savory custard), Braised abalone (cooked course)
What makes it special: A chef-driven omakase with a serious cooked-course bench.

Notable Picks

$$$ West Loop Italian, Steakhouse
Gibsons Italia is a riverfront Italian steakhouse pairing gold-extruded pastas, Prime beef and seafood with skyline views from multi-level dining rooms. Downtown diners use it for client dinners, occasion meals and polished date nights where service and execution are tightly controlled.
Must-Try Dishes: Spicy Rigatoni, Cacio e Pepe, Roasted Mediterranean Branzino
What makes it special: Italian steakhouse where serious pastas meet river and skyline views.
$$$ West Loop American, Seafood
The Publican is a beer-focused hall where farmhouse-style pork, seafood, and bread anchor communal tables. It has evolved into a long-running West Loop fixture for big groups, hearty shared plates, and serious Belgian-leaning beer lists.
Must-Try Dishes: Publican farm chicken with frites, Charcuterie and cheese board, Crispy pork rinds
What makes it special: Beer hall–style room where pork, seafood, and beer share top billing.
$$$ West Loop Seafood
Leña Brava channels Baja California’s wood-fired seafood tradition with a menu built around raw and flame-kissed fish, shellfish, and mezcal-focused cocktails. Since opening in 2016, it has become a West Loop destination for seafood platters, whole grilled fish, and vibrant salsas in a design-forward room.
Must-Try Dishes: Wood-grilled whole striped bass, Baja Mariscada seafood platter, Ceviche with salsa macha
What makes it special: Baja-inspired wood-fired seafood and raw bar plates with serious mezcal.
$$$$ West Loop Sushi, Seafood
A roomy West Loop sushi restaurant that works when you want flexibility—nigiri, rolls, and a reservation-only omakase option—without committing to a tiny counter format. The menu rewards a curated approach: choose either a chef’s-choice path or a tight nigiri-and-handroll lane and keep the add-ons minimal.
Must-Try Dishes: 14-course omakase (reservation-only), 10-piece dressed nigiri + handroll set, Chef’s choice nigiri (customized)
What makes it special: Choose between à la carte sushi or a reservation-only omakase lane.

Worthy Picks

$ West Loop Seafood
Madai is a sushi counter inside Time Out Market Chicago where chef-driven maki, nigiri, and chirashi bowls put pristine fish at the center of a busy food hall. It’s a flexible way to work high-quality seafood into a group visit, from quick salmon rolls to more elaborate specialty maki.
Must-Try Dishes: El Baja specialty roll, Salmon avocado roll, Chirashi bowl
What makes it special: Chef-led sushi counter serving inventive seafood rolls inside a curated food hall.