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Best Date Night Restaurants in Miami Design District

6 hand-picked restaurants, critic-reviewed and ranked

Last Updated: February 2026

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Our Top Pick
Jass Kitchen
Chef Jass brings her family's Turkish recipes to Miami in a bohemian space with live jazz, world, and Turkish music every single night.

Notable Picks

$$$ Miami Design District Seafood
Chef Yasemin Karadas opened this owner-operated Turkish restaurant in 2022 on a residential street just north of the Design District, bringing family recipes she learned from her mother alongside live jazz, world, and Turkish music every single night—a $20 per person music fee applies. The clay lamb draws repeat visitors willing to navigate the tricky residential parking, and the manti dumplings and baked feta hold their own against any Aegean spot in town. Service feels genuinely warm rather than performative, with Karadas often greeting tables herself. The candlelit brick-walled room delivers on romance without trying too hard, though plan your visit around the music schedule if conversation matters more than ambiance.
Must-Try Dishes: Clay Lamb, Adana Kebab, Manti Dumplings
What Makes it Special: Chef Jass brings her family's Turkish recipes to Miami in a bohemian space with live jazz, world, and Turkish music every single night.
$$$ Miami Design District Seafood
Husband-and-wife team Ahmet Erkaya and Anastasia Koutsioukis opened this converted 1940s bungalow in December 2009, and fifteen years later the garden courtyard remains one of Miami's most transportive dining settings—twinkling lights, whitewashed walls, the whole Aegean fantasy. The kitchen delivers honest Greek-Turkish mezze that rarely misses: lamb meatballs, charred octopus, and baked feta with peppers are reliable standbys. Service can feel stretched during peak weekend hours, especially in the courtyard where tables pile up, but regulars like Sandro and Lorena earn consistent name-drops in reviews. This is the spot for a date night where the setting does half the work, though lunch may be the better bet if you want attentive pacing.
Must-Try Dishes: Spicy Mandolin Kebab, Mantı Dumplings, Baked Feta with Turkish Peppers
What Makes it Special: A restored 1940s home with one of Miami's most enchanting garden courtyards, serving authentic Aegean mezze in a transportive setting that feels like a Greek island escape.
$$$$ Miami Design District Korean
A Korean-steakhouse hybrid that leans hard into the theater of tableside grilling—trained staff cook USDA Prime and American Wagyu over smokeless charcoal built into every table, backed by an in-house 45-day dry-aging program and a 1,200-label wine program that has earned its own national recognition. The Butcher's Feast offers a structured way through the concept at a price point that punches below its Michelin weight. Expect a loud, neon-soaked room that favors energy over intimacy—this is a celebratory night out, not a quiet date.
Must-Try Dishes: Butcher's Feast, Steak & Eggs (Hand-Cut Filet Mignon Tartare with Kaluga Royal Hybrid Caviar, Milk Toast), Korean Bacon (House-Smoked Crispy Heritage Pork Belly)
What Makes it Special: America's only Michelin-starred Korean steakhouse, featuring smokeless tabletop grills at every table, an in-house dry-aging program for USDA Prime beef, and a 1,200+ label wine list.
8.3
$$$ Miami Design District Japanese
The Takarada family—who've been feeding Miami since opening Toni's Sushi Bar on South Beach in 1987—runs this pan-Asian spot in Buena Vista with the confidence that comes from 37 years in the game. The menu sprawls across sushi, tonkotsu ramen, Korean BBQ, and Vietnamese pho, and somehow the kitchen lands most of it without the usual fusion-restaurant identity crisis. The covered patio works beautifully for the neighborhood-restaurant vibe they're cultivating, and servers like Lorena get called out by name for attentive, genuine hospitality. Takeout popularity occasionally pulls attention from dine-in guests, and some ramen bowls have run saltier than ideal. This is a reliable Buena Vista anchor for anyone who can't agree on a single cuisine.
Must-Try Dishes: Blue Crab Roll, Crispy Tuna Rice, Tonkotsu Ramen
What Makes it Special: Pan-Asian comfort food spanning sushi, ramen, and Korean dishes from the team behind a 30-year Miami institution, steps from the Design District.
$$$ Miami Design District Seafood
Chef Dena Marino opened this light-filled Design District Italian spot in late 2012 alongside partner Brandy Coletta, drawing on her years under Michael Chiarello at Tra Vigne—and though Marino has since moved on to cook privately for LeBron James, the kitchen maintains her standard for handmade pastas and wood-roasted proteins. The paccheri with sausage and garganelli bolognese remain the moves, and the fries pull consistent praise from regulars. The dining room runs loud when full, and cocktails at $26 feel steep for what arrives. Works well for a polished business lunch or date night where you want Italian comfort without traveling to South Beach.
Must-Try Dishes: Paccheri with Italian Sausage, Fiocchi Di Formaggio e Pera, Burrata with Prosciutto
What Makes it Special: Chef Dena Marino's handmade pastas and wood-fired dishes feel like Italian Sunday dinner, but with Design District polish and locally-sourced Miami ingredients.
$$$$ Miami Design District Seafood
Major Food Group brought their signature excess to the Design District in 2021 with this Japanese-leaning members club, featuring a 16-seat omakase counter, wagyu selection that rivals anywhere in the country, and fish sourced directly from Tokyo. The wagyu katsu sando and yellowtail crispy rice deliver on the hype, but recent reviews suggest service consistency has slipped and prices feel extractive even by MFG standards. Lunch is the move here—no membership required, same kitchen, and you skip the scenesters. The private club mystique works for some, though the actual dining experience doesn't always justify the premium over other Design District options.
Must-Try Dishes: Wagyu Katsu Sando with Truffles, Yellowtail Crispy Rice, Lobster Dumplings
What Makes it Special: Major Food Group brings their signature excess to Japanese cuisine, with America's largest wagyu selection, Tokyo-sourced fish, and a members-club mystique accessible at lunch.