Best Tacos Restaurants in West Adams
7 hand-picked restaurants, critic-reviewed and ranked
Last Updated: February 2026
Our Top Pick
Leo’s Tacos Truck
One of the few options open until 2 a.m. in 90016 serving tacos al pastor on the street.
Notable Picks
8.6
A roaming taco truck serving al pastor, burritos and mulitas until 2 a.m. in Mid‑City, this spot delivers solid Mexican street food for late‑night cravings. Simple counter‑style service, loud music and steady queue reinforce its status among night owls.
Must-Try Dishes:
Tacos al pastor, Mulitas al pastor, Quesadilla al pastor
What Makes it Special: One of the few options open until 2 a.m. in 90016 serving tacos al pastor on the street.
8.2
Vibes:
Family Friendly Favorites
Comfort Food Classics
Cheap Eats Budget Brilliance
Group Dining Gatherings
A family taqueria where three Guadalajara-born brothers execute comfort staples with notable generosity—handmade tortillas thicker than standard, lengua stewed until it falls apart, and chilaquiles built on properly crispy totopos. The value proposition is straightforward: quality proteins at $2-3 per taco in a cozy, welcoming room where regulars chat with the owners. Best for weekend brunch crowds or weeknight pickups when you want homestyle cooking without the drive to East LA.
Must-Try Dishes:
Chilaquiles, Barbacoa, Mole
What Makes it Special: Family-run taqueria where the chilaquiles have earned a devoted following across West Adams
8.1
A streetside taco stand at the Adams and Crenshaw corner where meat hits an open flame to order and tortillas are pressed by hand — the kind of setup where you watch your food being built. West Adams regulars treat it as a default stop for hefty burritos and tortas at prices that make it easy to feed a whole car without thinking twice.
Must-Try Dishes:
Torta, Carne Asada Burrito, Al Pastor Tacos
What Makes it Special: Streetside taco stand where meat is grilled to order on open flame and tortillas are made by hand, right at the corner of Adams and Crenshaw.
#4
Chulita
8
Alta California modern Mexican built around a plant-forward kitchen that treats roasted cauliflower and oyster mushroom tacos with the same seriousness as its Creekstone hanger steak, all backed by a deep mezcal and tequila program. The West Adams location draws groups who want to split shareable plates across dietary lines without anyone feeling like they got the B-menu. Expect a brunch-to-happy-hour rhythm where the cocktail list does as much work as the food.
Must-Try Dishes:
Roasted Cauliflower Tacos, Tres Leches Cassava Waffle, Creekstone Natural Hanger Steak Tacos
What Makes it Special: Alta California modern Mexican with an extensive mezcal and tequila bar and a plant-forward menu that gives vegan dishes equal billing
8
A 20-year West Adams street corner operation where al pastor is carved to order off a spinning trompo and tortillas are pressed by hand—the kind of focused execution that keeps a taco stand alive for two decades on the same block. It runs late, draws a loyal neighborhood crowd, and delivers on tripa and lengua alongside the expected hits at prices that make repeat visits effortless.
Must-Try Dishes:
Tacos Al Pastor, Quesadillas, Tacos de Tripa
What Makes it Special: A 20-year West Adams street corner fixture run by operators from Aguascalientes, with al pastor carved straight off a spinning trompo and handmade tortillas
Worthy Picks
#6
Beto's Tacos
7.8
A weekend-focused taco operation specializing in tacos al vapor — steamed tortillas filled with mixed cabeza meats in the Guadalajara style, a preparation that's uncommon even across LA's deep taco landscape. The late-night hours and street-side setup make it a fast, low-ceremony stop where the draw is a regional Mexican technique done with care at taco-truck prices.
Must-Try Dishes:
Tacos al Vapor Estilo Guadalajara, Carne Asada Tacos, Al Pastor Tacos
What Makes it Special: Weekend-only tacos al vapor with steamed tortillas and mixed cabeza meats, a Guadalajara-style preparation rarely found even among LA's thousands of taco trucks.
7.7
A West Adams street food counter that draws a small but loyal following for its Mexican staples—the kind of spot where regulars know exactly what to order and rarely deviate. With only a handful of public reviews, the signal is thin but overwhelmingly positive, suggesting solid execution on familiar dishes. Best suited for a quick, no-fuss taco run in the neighborhood rather than a destination trip.
Must-Try Dishes:
Al pastor tacos, Carne asada tacos, Asada nachos
What Makes it Special: Neighborhood standby for Mexican street food