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Best Business Lunch Restaurants in Brickell

9 hand-picked restaurants, critic-reviewed and ranked

Last Updated: February 2026

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Our Top Pick
Truluck's Ocean's Finest Seafood & Crab
Fresh Florida Stone Crab delivered from trap to table within 24 hours during season, served in an elegant setting with live piano nightly.

Notable Picks

$$$$ Brickell Steakhouse
A fiercely independent chain since 1992 with this Brickell location open since 2010, built entirely on sustainable Florida stone crab delivered trap-to-table within 24 hours during season—over 325,000 claws served annually, never frozen. The operation runs with corporate-hospitality polish: managers like Mickey Gonzales are routinely named in reviews, the live piano Thursday through Saturday sets a sophisticated tone, and the kitchen executes the lobster bisque and miso sea bass with reliable precision across busy service. It's unabashedly a celebration restaurant—expect business dinners, anniversaries, and expense-account crowds—which means weekend noise levels climb and the room skews older. For stone crab obsessives and anyone wanting dependable upscale seafood without pretense, this remains the Brickell standard.
Must-Try Dishes: Florida Stone Crab Claws, Lobster Bisque, Miso Sea Bass
What Makes it Special: Fresh Florida Stone Crab delivered from trap to table within 24 hours during season, served in an elegant setting with live piano nightly.
$$$$ Brickell Middle Eastern
The Miami outpost of a London-born group that opened here in 2017, LPM channels the French Riviera through a dining room dressed in linens, marble, and Belle Epoque mirrors—plus a terrace that makes business lunches feel like vacations. Executive chef Brian Brumec executes founder Raphael Duntoye's ingredient-obsessed Niçoise menu, with produce flown in from Mediterranean markets and a wine list that earned Wine Spectator's 2025 Best of Award of Excellence. Service runs the gamut from 'best I've ever experienced' to frustratingly slow depending on your server lottery, and the noise level can spike. This is a power-lunch staple for Brickell's finance crowd and a reliable impress-the-client play, though the $35 three-course lunch softens the bill for those watching spend.
Must-Try Dishes: Escargots de Bourgogne, Loup de Mer Entier, Crevettes Tièdes à l'Huile d'Olive
What Makes it Special: Wine Spectator 2025 Award of Excellence winner serving refined French Riviera cuisine with ingredients flown in from Mediterranean markets.
$$ Brickell Wings
Dominic Cavagnuolo—the owner behind Lucali, regularly cited as one of the country's top pizzerias—launched this more casual Brickell sibling in 2019, and the thin Brooklyn-style pies with buffalo mozzarella, fresh mozz, and aged parm deliver accordingly. The crust runs crispier than its Miami Beach sister location, which works for the quick-lunch crowd, and the kale Caesar holds its own against the carbs. It's a compact space with tableside tech ordering that keeps service efficient, though the stripped-down vibe won't win any atmosphere awards. Skip the meatballs if you're watching the bill and stick to the signature pie—it's why the Lucali pedigree matters here.
Must-Try Dishes: Signature Pie, Kale Caesar Salad, Sweet Hot Wings
What Makes it Special: Brooklyn-style brick-oven pizza from the owner of Lucali, featuring homemade sauce and a three-cheese blend of mozzarella di bufala, fresh mozzarella, and aged parmigiano reggiano.
$$$ Brickell Breakfast
Jacopo Giustiniani opened the first Felice on the Upper East Side in 2007 after realizing Manhattan needed a relaxed wine bar with proper Italian roots—this Brickell flagship carries that same 'extension of your living room' philosophy backed by the SA Hospitality Group that runs Sant Ambroeus. The fettuccine alla Bolognese and mezze maniche cacio e pepe use imported Italian tomatoes and the family's organic Tuscan wines from Fattoria Sardi near Lucca. Manager Flavio and executive chef Luigi Bailon have built a loyal following, with reviewers consistently praising the attentive, professional service. The outdoor seating works for date nights, though the Brickell location is still building its reputation compared to the NYC originals. A genuine Italian import, not a Miami approximation.
Must-Try Dishes: Fettuccine alla Bolognese, Mezze Maniche Cacio e Pepe, Veal Meatballs
What Makes it Special: NYC's beloved Tuscan trattoria brings countryside Italy energy to Brickell with proper Italian tomatoes and a family-first approach.
$$$$ Brickell Sushi
Russian restaurateur Arkady Novikov—with nearly 300 restaurants worldwide—opened this Downtown Miami outpost in 2018 as his first U.S. venture, bringing the London original's celebrity-magnet formula to Biscayne Bay. The live seafood display where guests hand-pick their ingredients is theatrical in the best way, and the Peking Duck holds its own against any in Miami. The outdoor terrace overlooking the bay with occasional live jazz creates a polished, grown-up atmosphere that feels distinctly international. Service is consistently praised as attentive and knowledgeable, though the $17 valet and overall pricing push this firmly into special-occasion territory. Best for business dinners or dates with people who appreciate that the dim sum cart exists for a reason.
Must-Try Dishes: Peking Duck, Duck and Foie Gras Dim Sum, Miso Black Cod
What Makes it Special: The first U.S. outpost of the world-renowned London import, featuring a live seafood display where guests hand-pick their ingredients for custom preparation.
$$$ Brickell Seafood, Latin American
A 22-year Brickell bistro built around sustainably sourced seafood, where the handmade gnocchi with jumbo lump crab has achieved near-permanent menu status and the seared scallops a la plancha run noticeably larger than competitors. The bar-centric layout anchors a room that stays energetic without tipping into chaos, drawing a weekday professional crowd at happy hour and repeat locals on weekends who treat the $2 oyster deal like a standing appointment.
Must-Try Dishes: Gnocchi & Jumbo Lump Crab with Parmesan Cream and Black Winter Truffle, Roasted Oysters with Sofrito Butter, Manchego & Chorizo, Ceviche Mixto (Lobster, Shrimp, Octopus)
What Makes it Special: Chef David Bracha's 20-year Brickell institution built on sustainably sourced seafood, anchored by handmade gnocchi with jumbo lump crab so iconic even the chef says he'd be hunted down if he removed it.
$$ Brickell Breakfast
Sam Fox—the eleven-time James Beard-nominated restaurateur behind 60+ concepts including Justin Timberlake's Twelve Thirty Club—brought this 260-seat showstopper to Brickell City Centre with a menu designed to cast an impossibly wide net. The Gatsby-era-meets-industrial design creates genuine energy, and the polished service from staff who remember orders keeps it feeling like a neighborhood joint despite the scale. Food won't blow anyone away, but the pretzels with provolone fondue and molten butter cake deliver consistent comfort. The divergence between platforms—strong on some, middling on others—suggests execution varies more than it should at this price point. Best for business lunches and celebrations where ambiance matters as much as the plate.
Must-Try Dishes: Pretzels & Provolone Fondue, Spicy Tuna & Crispy Rice, Short Rib Potstickers
What Makes it Special: A 260-seat showstopper in Brickell City Centre delivering modern American comfort food with Southern soul and polished service.
$$ Brickell Breakfast
Belgian entrepreneur Patrick Feyten partnered with French pastry chef Franck Monnier in 2010 to bring authentic French boulangerie craft to Miami, starting in Pinecrest and eventually expanding to this Brickell outpost. The almond croissants and quiche Lorraine deliver on the French promise, and the weekly $30 wine pairings add unexpected value for the financial district lunch crowd. The Saint Honoré demonstrates genuine pastry technique rarely found in the neighborhood. Some reviewers note lunch prices run high and coffee quality varies, but the outdoor seating with Brickell Avenue views provides a genuine European café moment. Best for those who want croissants that shatter properly.
Must-Try Dishes: Almond Croissant, Quiche Lorraine, Salmon Benedict
What Makes it Special: An authentic French boulangerie with a Belgian founder crafting everything in-house, plus weekly wine pairings for $30.
$$$ Brickell Steakhouse
Perched on the seventh floor of the Four Seasons with panoramic Brickell skyline and bay views, this rooftop brasserie rebranded from its steakhouse days under Parisian Chef Edouard Deplus. The Dover sole meunière and beef Wellington execute French classics competently in that polished Four Seasons way—elegantly plated, properly timed, and exactly what you'd expect from an upscale hotel restaurant. Critics note it lost some identity in the transition, feeling safer and more formulaic than the previous concept. The terrace at sunset genuinely elevates the experience when a breeze comes through, and the $34 prix-fixe executive lunch remains a legitimate Brickell power-lunch value. Best for corporate entertaining and hotel guests who want reliable elegance without leaving the property.
Must-Try Dishes: Beef Wellington, Dover Sole Meunière, Steak Frites with Wagyu Churrasco
What Makes it Special: Rooftop French brasserie at Four Seasons with panoramic Brickell skyline and Biscayne Bay views, helmed by Parisian Chef Edouard Deplus.