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Best Fine Dining Restaurants in Brickell

11 hand-picked restaurants, critic-reviewed and ranked

Last Updated: February 2026

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Our Top Pick
NAOE
Miami's only Forbes Five-Star and AAA Five-Diamond Japanese restaurant, serving just 10 guests nightly with Chef Kevin Cory's family soy sauce and sake from 1825 Kanazawa breweries.

Essential Picks

9.4
$$$$ Brickell Japanese
Chef Kevin Cory's 13-year-old omakase sanctuary on Brickell Key seats just five guests per evening for a $280 prix-fixe procession of pristine nigiri, bento, and seasonal courses—all served with sake from 1825 Kanazawa breweries and soy sauce from his family's own production. The intimacy borders on private dining; Cory himself handles every detail from greeting to plating, sourcing fish daily from Japan and local waters. There's no menu, no substitutions, and no children under 12—rigidity that filters for serious eaters and rewards them with one of the country's most consistent high-end Japanese experiences. The wait for a reservation can stretch weeks, and the per-person cost puts it firmly in special-occasion territory, but those who've been call it on par with Tokyo's best.
Must-Try Dishes: Bento Box Selection, Golden Eye Snapper Nigiri, Striped Jack Nigiri
What Makes it Special: Miami's only Forbes Five-Star and AAA Five-Diamond Japanese restaurant, serving just 10 guests nightly with Chef Kevin Cory's family soy sauce and sake from 1825 Kanazawa breweries.

Notable Picks

8.9
$$$$ Brickell Sushi
German chef Rainer Becker's izakaya concept arrived in the EPIC Hotel in 2010 as Zuma's first U.S. location, and 15 years later it remains the benchmark for sophisticated Japanese sharing plates in Miami. The miso black cod has become a modern classic for good reason, but the robata grill—particularly the spicy beef tenderloin and prawn dumplings—deserves equal attention. The waterfront terrace overlooking Biscayne Bay with boat access adds a dimension few competitors can match. Weekend brunch draws a well-heeled crowd willing to linger over sake flights, though service can slow accordingly. Prices are high but calibrated to the quality; this is luxury Japanese dining that actually delivers rather than just posturing.
Must-Try Dishes: Black Cod Marinated in Miso, Wagyu Beef Sushi with Truffle, Spicy Beef Tenderloin
What Makes it Special: Chef Rainer Becker's globally acclaimed izakaya concept brought to Miami's waterfront, featuring robata grilling and one of the city's most lavish weekend brunches.
$$$$ Brickell Breakfast
David Yeo's Hong Kong-born, Michelin-starred Northern Chinese concept landed in Brickell as its second U.S. location in 2019, bringing 35,000 hand-chiseled antique grey bricks transported from a 1930s Chinese building to line the soaring walls. The flaming Peking duck—air-dried for 36 hours—provides the theatrical centerpiece that justifies the $$$$, while the red lantern soft-shell crab and ma la chili prawns deliver on the promise of elevated Northern Chinese technique. The dramatic interior design alone makes it Instagram-worthy, but the food backs it up. Platform ratings diverge notably—some praise it as Miami's best Chinese, others note prices that sting. Worth the splurge for special occasions if you're prepared for the check.
Must-Try Dishes: Flaming Peking Duck, Red Lantern Crispy Soft-Shell Crab, Ma La Chilli Prawns
What Makes it Special: A globally acclaimed Northern Chinese destination offering Miami's most theatrical Peking duck, air-dried for 36 hours and served flaming.
$$$$ Brickell Middle Eastern
The Miami outpost of a London-born group that opened here in 2017, LPM channels the French Riviera through a dining room dressed in linens, marble, and Belle Epoque mirrors—plus a terrace that makes business lunches feel like vacations. Executive chef Brian Brumec executes founder Raphael Duntoye's ingredient-obsessed Niçoise menu, with produce flown in from Mediterranean markets and a wine list that earned Wine Spectator's 2025 Best of Award of Excellence. Service runs the gamut from 'best I've ever experienced' to frustratingly slow depending on your server lottery, and the noise level can spike. This is a power-lunch staple for Brickell's finance crowd and a reliable impress-the-client play, though the $35 three-course lunch softens the bill for those watching spend.
Must-Try Dishes: Escargots de Bourgogne, Loup de Mer Entier, Crevettes Tièdes à l'Huile d'Olive
What Makes it Special: Wine Spectator 2025 Award of Excellence winner serving refined French Riviera cuisine with ingredients flown in from Mediterranean markets.
$$$$ Brickell Spanish
The Miami outpost of a Mexico City favorite that's been perfecting Basque cuisine since 2009, now occupying the ground floor of Hotel AKA Brickell with 200 seats and a striking palm-accented design. Chef Israel Aretxiga brings 15 years of traditional Spanish technique to the Josper grill, where the socarrat rice dishes deliver that prized caramelized crust worth ordering every visit. The Manchego fondant dessert has developed its own following among regulars. Service runs attentive but can lag during peak hours when the live music kicks in—some find the entertainment distracting rather than atmospheric. Come for a splurge-worthy date night when you want Basque precision without flying to San Sebastián.
Must-Try Dishes: Socarrat de Mariscos, Fried Artichokes with Idiazabal Cheese, Alaskan King Crab with Miso Glaze
What Makes it Special: San Sebastian-inspired Basque cuisine cooked over a wood-burning Josper grill, with signature socarrat rice dishes featuring the prized crispy bottom crust.
$$$$ Brickell Sushi
Russian restaurateur Arkady Novikov—with nearly 300 restaurants worldwide—opened this Downtown Miami outpost in 2018 as his first U.S. venture, bringing the London original's celebrity-magnet formula to Biscayne Bay. The live seafood display where guests hand-pick their ingredients is theatrical in the best way, and the Peking Duck holds its own against any in Miami. The outdoor terrace overlooking the bay with occasional live jazz creates a polished, grown-up atmosphere that feels distinctly international. Service is consistently praised as attentive and knowledgeable, though the $17 valet and overall pricing push this firmly into special-occasion territory. Best for business dinners or dates with people who appreciate that the dim sum cart exists for a reason.
Must-Try Dishes: Peking Duck, Duck and Foie Gras Dim Sum, Miso Black Cod
What Makes it Special: The first U.S. outpost of the world-renowned London import, featuring a live seafood display where guests hand-pick their ingredients for custom preparation.
$$$$ Brickell Steakhouse
Major Food Group's 2022 Brickell arrival brings the theatrical energy that made Carbone a Miami institution—zebra chairs, mirrored surfaces, disco-room seating, and a late-70s cocaine-dinner-party aesthetic that photographs exceptionally well. The menu from Chef Rich Torrisi sources prime cuts and seafood with genuine care, and when the kitchen is on, the hanger steak and lobster ravioli deliver. Recent reviews reveal inconsistency though: some diners report oxidized steaks and servers unfamiliar with the menu, while others rave about tender, properly charred beef. The $95 corkage fee and entrees pushing $150+ mean you're paying luxury prices even when execution wavers—best suited for those who want MFG's scene-y glamour and can absorb the occasional miss.
Must-Try Dishes: Hanger Steak with Herbed Butter, Lobster Ravioli with Sauce Nantua, Black Truffle Tortellini
What Makes it Special: Major Food Group's glamorous steakhouse combines Parisian elegance with bold American cuts in a disco-era-inspired setting with multiple distinct dining rooms.
$$$$ Brickell Italian
The Venice dynasty behind Harry's Bar brings 90+ years of Italian hospitality heritage to Miami's waterfront, serving the original Bellini and carpaccio in a Florentine-designed space with Murano chandeliers and bay views. The imported pasta and classic preparations justify special occasion splurges, though service inconsistencies and aggressive pricing draw criticism from those expecting Harry's Bar-level refinement.
Must-Try Dishes: Carpaccio Alla Cipriani, Baked Green Tagliolini with Praga Ham, Homemade Potato Gnocchi al Pomodoro
What Makes it Special: Venice's legendary Harry's Bar dynasty brought to Miami's waterfront, serving the original Bellini and carpaccio in a nautical-chic Florentine-designed space.

Worthy Picks

$$$$ Brickell Steakhouse
The original U.S. outpost from Turkish butcher-turned-Instagram-phenomenon Nusret Gökçe, who learned his craft as a childhood apprentice in Istanbul before training across Argentina and the States. The tableside theater—Salt Bae's signature forearm-roll seasoning, gold-leaf tomahawks, meat carved with surgical flair—draws a crowd that's here as much for content as cuisine. When the Wagyu hits right, it's legitimately excellent beef, and servers maintain attentive energy despite the chaos. The math gets brutal quickly: $200+ for a single steak marketed as serving two rarely does, and the club-volume DJ makes conversation difficult. This is dinner-as-spectacle for birthdays, bachelor parties, and tourists with expense accounts who want the viral moment over a quiet meal.
Must-Try Dishes: Saltbae Tomahawk, Nusr-Et Special, Meat Sushi
What Makes it Special: The iconic Salt Bae experience features theatrical tableside steak preparation with his signature seasoning sprinkle and premium Wagyu cuts.
7.9
$$$$ Brickell Japanese
David Grutman and Bad Bunny's Japanese steakhouse trades heavily on celebrity cachet and dimly-lit opulence—gold dragons, hot-stone wagyu, and a crowd dressed for the 'gram. The A5 beef cooked tableside and the lobster dumplings genuinely deliver, but service reviews are sharply divided: some servers earn praise by name, while others rush tables or disappear entirely. At these prices, inconsistency stings, and the host stand has developed a reputation for rigidity that borders on unwelcoming. Best approached as a birthday spectacle or nightlife-adjacent flex rather than a pure food pilgrimage.
Must-Try Dishes: Wagyu Crispy Rice, Lobster Dumplings, A5 Hot Stone Wagyu
What Makes it Special: A Japanese steakhouse-meets-nightclub from David Grutman and Bad Bunny, where you cook A5 wagyu on hot stones with Japanese whisky while gold-plated dragons watch.
$$$$ Brickell Mexican
Major Food Group's first Mexican fine-dining concept occupies a 1931 Martin L. Hampton-designed chateau that spent 50 years as the Murrel family residence before becoming a historic landmark. The building itself is the star—the bar stocked with over 1,000 tequilas and mezcals, the theatrical tableside guacamole, the scene-y Brickell crowd. The spicy tuna and wagyu truffle tostadas deliver, but the kitchen doesn't consistently match the setting's promise; some dishes arrive bland despite premium pricing. Service can feel rehearsed rather than warm. Come for the architecture and cocktails, temper expectations for the food, and accept that you're paying a significant premium for the Major Food Group nameplate.
Must-Try Dishes: Spicy Tuna Tostada, Wagyu & Truffle Tostada, Michelada Oysters
What Makes it Special: Major Food Group's first Mexican fine-dining concept housed in a 1931 historic chateau, featuring over 1,000 tequilas and mezcals and theatrical tableside guacamole.