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Best Instagram Worthy Restaurants in Miami

34 hand-picked restaurants, critic-reviewed and ranked

Last Updated: February 2026

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Our Top Pick
Mister O1 Extraordinary Pizza - Brickell
Founded by O1 Visa-certified pizza chef Renato Viola, featuring signature star-shaped pizzas with 72-hour fermented dough and ricotta-filled crust points.

Notable Picks

$$ Brickell Pizza
Two-time Pizza World Champion Renato Viola opened this 2014 concept after earning an O-1 'extraordinary ability' visa—a rare achievement for a pizza chef—and has since grown it to 20-plus locations. The signature move is the 72-hour fermented dough that yields a delicate, crackly thin crust, best showcased in the star-shaped pies with ricotta-stuffed points. The Brickell outpost is larger and more polished than the original South Beach spot, with solid outdoor seating and a scene-y energy that skews date night over family dinner. Service can feel rushed when the room fills up, and some purists find the style too thin for their taste. Best for pizza nerds who appreciate technique and don't mind paying a premium for it.
Must-Try Dishes: Star Luca, Coffee Paolo, Ginger Lilliam
What Makes it Special: Founded by O1 Visa-certified pizza chef Renato Viola, featuring signature star-shaped pizzas with 72-hour fermented dough and ricotta-filled crust points.
8.7
$$$$ Wynwood Japanese
The undulating wood-slat ceiling frames what may be Miami's most refined Japanese dining room, where Chef Masa Komatsu applies kikubari—anticipating guest needs before they arise. Diners who have eaten extensively in New York and Los Angeles rank this among their top omakase experiences. The $180-250 price point delivers comparable quality to pricier competitors with more thoughtful hospitality.
Must-Try Dishes: Sakana Kara Age, Rosemary Lamb Chops, Ebi Tempura
What Makes it Special: A stunning architectural space with undulating wood slats where Master Chef Masa Komatsu prepares no more than 50 meals nightly using kikubari—the Japanese art of anticipating guests' needs.
$$$ Brickell Breakfast
Born from a 2016 partnership between world-renowned pastry chef Antonio Bachour and chef Henry Hané, this Brickell stalwart has outlived the split and cemented itself as the neighborhood's definitive brunch destination. The guava-cream cheese pancakes and circular filled croissants draw lines that snake onto the sidewalk on weekends, and the truffle bun has developed its own cult following. The covered patio feels like an escape from Brickell's glass towers, though service can stretch thin when the wait hits peak hours. Pastry execution remains razor-sharp—expect occasional savory inconsistencies—but for Miami brunch with genuine pastry pedigree and a World's Best 50 nod, this is where you go.
Must-Try Dishes: Pastelito Pancakes, Truffle Bun, Mexican Avocado Toast
What Makes it Special: Award-winning bakery featured in 'World's Best 50' that brings Miami-inspired twists to classic brunch with dishes like guava-cream cheese pancakes.
$$ Brickell Wings
Alexander Ringleb and his wife Fernanda launched this gourmet burger concept in 2018 with a straightforward promise—never-frozen beef, halal chicken, brioche-potato buns baked daily—and the 4,300+ reviews at a 4.8 clip suggest they've delivered. The La Latina with spicy pineapple and raclette and the truffle-loaded BM Deluxe justify the 'size matters' motto, with portions large enough to split. Counter service in a compact space keeps the experience casual and quick, and the vegan Impossible option actually earns repeat customers. Parking is the main friction point, and don't expect ambiance beyond functional—you're here for what's between the buns, and that part they nail consistently.
Must-Try Dishes: La Latina, Smokehouse, The Meltdown
What Makes it Special: Massive, flavor-packed gourmet burgers made with never-frozen prime beef and halal chicken, featuring creative toppings like spicy pineapple and raclette cheese.
$$$$ Brickell Breakfast
David Yeo's Hong Kong-born, Michelin-starred Northern Chinese concept landed in Brickell as its second U.S. location in 2019, bringing 35,000 hand-chiseled antique grey bricks transported from a 1930s Chinese building to line the soaring walls. The flaming Peking duck—air-dried for 36 hours—provides the theatrical centerpiece that justifies the $$$$, while the red lantern soft-shell crab and ma la chili prawns deliver on the promise of elevated Northern Chinese technique. The dramatic interior design alone makes it Instagram-worthy, but the food backs it up. Platform ratings diverge notably—some praise it as Miami's best Chinese, others note prices that sting. Worth the splurge for special occasions if you're prepared for the check.
Must-Try Dishes: Flaming Peking Duck, Red Lantern Crispy Soft-Shell Crab, Ma La Chilli Prawns
What Makes it Special: A globally acclaimed Northern Chinese destination offering Miami's most theatrical Peking duck, air-dried for 36 hours and served flaming.
$$$ 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.
8.5
$$$$ Wynwood Asian Smokehouse, Japanese
Chef Raheem Sealey's debut after leading KYU to James Beard recognition opened in March 2025, fusing Caribbean soul with Japanese technique and Texas wood-fire smoking in ways that feel genuinely original—the smoked oxtail gunkan and short rib with DIY handroll materials exist nowhere else in Miami. The graffiti-tagged rooftop space overlooking Wynwood captures that early-2010s neighborhood energy before everything became an Italian restaurant or taco shop. Service has been inconsistent since opening, with multiple reports of glacial pacing and inattentive staff, and the automatic 20% gratuity removes incentive for improvement. Best for adventurous eaters who prioritize culinary ambition over polished hospitality.
Must-Try Dishes: Oxtail Gunkan (Smoked BBQ Oxtail with Pickle Relish), Shiso Chicken Please (Cornish Hen Two Ways), Smoked Sticky Ribs with Puff Rice Furikake
What Makes it Special: Chef Raheem Sealey (formerly of KYU) fuses Caribbean soul with Japanese precision and Texas-style wood-fire smoking, creating dishes like smoked oxtail gunkan that exist nowhere else.
$$$ Brickell Mexican
A sultry Brickell lounge where Mexican meets Mediterranean, Alma Rosa has carved out a following since opening for its tableside guacamole with crispy ribeye and the crowd-pleasing ossobuco ravioli. The space leans into moody lighting and plush textures that feel distinctly nightclub-adjacent—fitting, since there's an actual club attached for post-dinner revelry. Service gets high marks for attentiveness, though a few diners note it can feel performance-driven. Pricing runs steep for the neighborhood, and surprise fees have caught some guests off guard. Best for date nights where atmosphere matters as much as the plate, or happy hour when the drink specials soften the bill.
Must-Try Dishes: Guacamole con Ribeye Frito, Costra de Picanha, Pulpo Crujiente
What Makes it Special: Contemporary Mexican cuisine with Mediterranean influences in a sultry lounge atmosphere, featuring tableside preparations and an on-site nightclub.
8.4
$$ Brickell Breakfast
Elisa Marshall and Benjamin Sormonte's 2014 NYC café phenomenon landed in Brickell in 2025, bringing their Oprah-endorsed nutty chocolate chip cookie and South of France aesthetic to the financial district's largest Maman location. The vintage Parisian interiors—antique touches, soft florals, sun-drenched seating—create genuine warmth in an area starved for it, and the flat whites get consistent praise as Brickell's best. The salmon bun croissant and farmhouse granola parfait deliver on the French-American comfort promise. Still early days for this outpost with limited review volume, but the mother ship's $47 million annual revenue suggests they know what they're doing.
Must-Try Dishes: Nutty Chocolate Chip Cookie, Salmon Bun Croissant, Elisa's Breakfast Bowl
What Makes it Special: NYC's beloved French-American café brings its cult-status cookie and South of France charm to Brickell's largest location.
$$$$ Miami Design District Italian
Two-time James Beard nominee Evan Funke brought his LA pasta temple to Miami's Design District in October 2024, complete with a walk-through pasta lab and Martin Brudnizki interiors dripping with Murano glass and Italian terrazzo. The tonnarelli cacio e pepe showcases Funke's obsessive technique—peppery, emulsified, texturally perfect—while the mortazza (mortadella mousse on focaccia) has already become a signature. Execution can be uneven across the broader menu, and at $100-200 per person, you're paying scene tax alongside your rigatoni. This is where you go when you want to feel like you're somewhere important, with pasta that mostly delivers on the promise.
Must-Try Dishes: Tonnarelli Cacio e Pepe, Rigatoni All'Amatriciana, La Mortazza
What Makes it Special: James Beard-nominated Chef Evan Funke's East Coast debut, featuring a walk-through pasta lab and dogmatic Roman cooking techniques.
8.3
$$$ Brickell Japanese, Sushi
Opened in 2022 and Michelin-recognized, Kaori marries serious Pan-Asian cooking with a genuine Hi-Fi listening bar concept—130,000 vinyl records, Danley Sound Labs speakers, and rotating DJs Thursday through Saturday. Executive Chef Seth Fatah's menu runs from wagyu-foie gras gyoza to dry-aged duck, and the kitchen executes with more precision than the nightlife-forward vibe might suggest. The 6,000-square-foot two-story space lets you choose between refined upstairs dining or a more casual first-floor bar experience. Prices run high and portions can feel precious, which draws occasional grumbles. Best for dates or groups who want excellent food without sacrificing atmosphere, and who appreciate that the music isn't just background noise.
Must-Try Dishes: Wagyu and Foie Gras Gyoza, Shiro Ponzu Crudo, Miyazaki A5 Beef
What Makes it Special: A restaurant meets Hi-Fi listening bar where Michelin-recognized modern Asian cuisine pairs with curated vinyl and live DJs for a sensory experience.
$$ Wynwood Pizza
Michelin-recommended pizzeria where chef Renato Viola's signature star-shaped pies with ricotta-filled points deliver both visual appeal and 72-hour fermented dough quality. The thin, crisp crust and imported Italian ingredients consistently earn praise, with the Coffee Paolo offering an unexpected standout. Service runs notably attentive for a casual pizza spot.
Must-Try Dishes: Star Luca, The Fabio, Coffee Paolo
What Makes it Special: Award-winning chef Renato Viola creates signature star-shaped pizzas with ricotta-filled points, using 72-hour fermented dough and imported Italian ingredients.
$$$ Wynwood French
James Beard winners Keith McNally and Stephen Starr recreated the legendary Meatpacking District brasserie piece by piece when it opened in Wynwood in April 2023—tobacco-stained ceilings, curved zinc bar, red banquettes, the whole production. The steak frites consistently earns its reputation as some of the best in Miami, and the profiteroles with tableside chocolate sauce close the meal right. The outdoor garden courtyard works better than the noisy interior when the weather cooperates. Service is the weak link: hosts and food runners get praised by name while primary servers occasionally read as transactional. This is for when you want to feel transported to a buzzy Parisian metro station full of stylish people—just book the patio and plan ahead for weekend reservations.
Must-Try Dishes: Steak Frites, Crispy Artichokes, Escargots
What Makes it Special: The legendary NYC Meatpacking brasserie transported to Wynwood with the same tobacco-stained ceilings, zinc bar, and obsessively sourced French comfort food.
$$$$ Brickell Steakhouse
Major Food Group's 2022 Brickell arrival brings the theatrical energy that made Carbone a Miami institution—zebra chairs, mirrored surfaces, disco-room seating, and a late-70s cocaine-dinner-party aesthetic that photographs exceptionally well. The menu from Chef Rich Torrisi sources prime cuts and seafood with genuine care, and when the kitchen is on, the hanger steak and lobster ravioli deliver. Recent reviews reveal inconsistency though: some diners report oxidized steaks and servers unfamiliar with the menu, while others rave about tender, properly charred beef. The $95 corkage fee and entrees pushing $150+ mean you're paying luxury prices even when execution wavers—best suited for those who want MFG's scene-y glamour and can absorb the occasional miss.
Must-Try Dishes: Hanger Steak with Herbed Butter, Lobster Ravioli with Sauce Nantua, Black Truffle Tortellini
What Makes it Special: Major Food Group's glamorous steakhouse combines Parisian elegance with bold American cuts in a disco-era-inspired setting with multiple distinct dining rooms.
$$ Wynwood Breakfast
A 2009 Wynwood original that relocated to a restored landmark purple house in Allapattah, Morgan's built its reputation on elevated comfort food brunch before the neighborhood had a name. The kitchen executes crowd-pleasers like pillow-light French toast and chicken and waffles with enough care to justify the weekend wait, though portion-to-price ratio draws occasional side-eye from locals. Servers like Theseus get called out by name for attentive, personalized hospitality in the charming two-story Victorian setting. Recent reviews show occasional inconsistency in execution that keeps it from running away with the score, but the 15-year track record and outdoor patio make it a dependable Allapattah anchor for groups who want brunch with character.
Must-Try Dishes: Chicken & Waffles, Pillow Light French Toast, Housemade Sticky Buns
What Makes it Special: A 2009 Wynwood original that moved to a restored landmark purple house in Allapattah, serving elevated comfort food with a loyal neighborhood following.
#16 Amal
8
$$$ Coconut Grove Lebanese
A design-forward Lebanese restaurant in Coconut Grove where a Beirut-trained chef works through contemporary mezze, skewer platters, and a Lebanese wine list with over three dozen bottles. It draws a social crowd for shareable spreads and weekend live entertainment, though midweek seatings deliver a quieter pace and more attentive service. The room is built around natural oak, terracotta, and handcrafted light fixtures that set a tone distinct from typical Middle Eastern dining in Miami.
Must-Try Dishes: Truffle Rakakat, Amal's Hummus, Pistachio Kabab
What Makes it Special: Modern Lebanese cuisine from a Beirut-trained chef served inside a 5,000 sq ft arabesque-inspired dining room with resident DJs and live entertainment in the heart of Coconut Grove.
8
$$ Coral Way Sandwiches
A gourmet cheese house that builds each sandwich around imported, competition-grade cheeses and small-producer charcuterie on artisanal European breads—La Italiana and El Padrón are the most requested for good reason. The operation leans into a curated boutique experience where ingredient sourcing does the heavy lifting, with a Burnt Basque Cheesecake that pulls its own weight as a standalone draw. Expect premium pricing for portion sizes calibrated to ingredient cost, not appetite—this is a flavor-density play, not a volume one.
Must-Try Dishes: La Italiana, El Padrón, The Frenchman
What Makes it Special: A gourmet cheese house turned cult sandwich shop, stuffing artisanal European breads with world-champion cheeses and imported charcuterie you won't find anywhere else in Miami.
$$$$ Brickell Italian
The Venice dynasty behind Harry's Bar brings 90+ years of Italian hospitality heritage to Miami's waterfront, serving the original Bellini and carpaccio in a Florentine-designed space with Murano chandeliers and bay views. The imported pasta and classic preparations justify special occasion splurges, though service inconsistencies and aggressive pricing draw criticism from those expecting Harry's Bar-level refinement.
Must-Try Dishes: Carpaccio Alla Cipriani, Baked Green Tagliolini with Praga Ham, Homemade Potato Gnocchi al Pomodoro
What Makes it Special: Venice's legendary Harry's Bar dynasty brought to Miami's waterfront, serving the original Bellini and carpaccio in a nautical-chic Florentine-designed space.
$$ Brickell Ice Cream
Naples-rooted franchise dating to 1911 that landed in Brickell with late-night hours stretching to 3am on weekends—a legitimate differentiator in a neighborhood where most dessert spots close early. The pistachio and passion fruit sorbetto get the most praise, and the sugar-free dark chocolate surprises people who expect diet versions to taste like cardboard. The compact space with four small tables isn't built for lingering, and the $12 cone price point draws consistent grumbles even from reviewers who liked the product. Some customers note a slightly artificial aftertaste on certain flavors, suggesting quality control varies by batch. Best for: the post-club crowd who wants actual gelato instead of a bodega pint at 2am.
Must-Try Dishes: Pistachio, Stracciatella, Passion Fruit Yogurt
What Makes it Special: Italian gelato tradition since 1911 with late-night hours until 3am on weekends, serving the post-club Brickell crowd.
$$$ Wynwood Indian
A full-sensory Indian dining concept from a 15-year-old Chilean-Indian restaurant group, where the experience begins at the door with a bindi greeting and ends with a cinnamon-cardamom hand-washing ritual after the meal. The kitchen, staffed by chefs recruited directly from India, delivers North Indian dishes across four customizable spice levels—the mattar paneer in its punchy, pea-laden sauce is the standout order. Best approached as an event-style dinner where the theatrics and cultural programming carry equal weight with the plates.
Must-Try Dishes: Mattar Paneer, Butter Chicken, Mathan Roghan Josh
What Makes it Special: A kaleidoscopic, multi-sensory Indian dining experience—from the bindi greeting at the door to the cinnamon-cardamom hand-washing ritual at meal's end—brought to Miami by a 15-year-old Chilean-Indian restaurant group with chefs recruited directly from India.

Worthy Picks

7.9
$$ Brickell Sushi Bars
A Thai-owned Brickell staple since 2012 that leans into home-style curries and shareable plates—the red curry in coconut milk and the gyoza are the reliable anchors, with the crispy duck salad pulling repeat visitors on its own. The lunch specials and happy hour deals make it an unusually strong value play for the neighborhood, and the compact, cozy room with outdoor seating works better for weeknight dates and casual group dinners than it does for a full-production evening out.
Must-Try Dishes: Gyoza, Red Curry, Pad See Ew
What Makes it Special: Thai-owned since 2012 with Thai chefs cooking authentic home-style Thai and a cult-favorite housemade passionfruit sake, tucked steps from Brickell City Centre.
$$$$ Miami Design District Italian
Major Food Group opened this Lake Como-inspired two-story restaurant in 2022 with dramatic design accents and Northern Italian ambitions, and reservations are surprisingly easier to snag than their other Miami properties. The spicy lobster capellini is the move—regulars order it every visit—and the lamb chops land well, but across the broader menu you're paying location tax for food that doesn't always justify the bill. Downstairs gets loud enough that upstairs or patio seating is worth requesting in cooler months. It's more successful as a scene than a serious Italian destination, which is fine if that's what you're looking for on a Design District evening.
Must-Try Dishes: Spicy Lobster Capellini, Tonnato Crudo, Lamb Chops
What Makes it Special: Major Food Group's Lake Como-inspired glamour destination with two-story seating, dramatic design, and Northern Italian elegance.
7.9
$$$$ Brickell Japanese
David Grutman and Bad Bunny's Japanese steakhouse trades heavily on celebrity cachet and dimly-lit opulence—gold dragons, hot-stone wagyu, and a crowd dressed for the 'gram. The A5 beef cooked tableside and the lobster dumplings genuinely deliver, but service reviews are sharply divided: some servers earn praise by name, while others rush tables or disappear entirely. At these prices, inconsistency stings, and the host stand has developed a reputation for rigidity that borders on unwelcoming. Best approached as a birthday spectacle or nightlife-adjacent flex rather than a pure food pilgrimage.
Must-Try Dishes: Wagyu Crispy Rice, Lobster Dumplings, A5 Hot Stone Wagyu
What Makes it Special: A Japanese steakhouse-meets-nightclub from David Grutman and Bad Bunny, where you cook A5 wagyu on hot stones with Japanese whisky while gold-plated dragons watch.
$$$$ Brickell Steakhouse
The original U.S. outpost from Turkish butcher-turned-Instagram-phenomenon Nusret Gökçe, who learned his craft as a childhood apprentice in Istanbul before training across Argentina and the States. The tableside theater—Salt Bae's signature forearm-roll seasoning, gold-leaf tomahawks, meat carved with surgical flair—draws a crowd that's here as much for content as cuisine. When the Wagyu hits right, it's legitimately excellent beef, and servers maintain attentive energy despite the chaos. The math gets brutal quickly: $200+ for a single steak marketed as serving two rarely does, and the club-volume DJ makes conversation difficult. This is dinner-as-spectacle for birthdays, bachelor parties, and tourists with expense accounts who want the viral moment over a quiet meal.
Must-Try Dishes: Saltbae Tomahawk, Nusr-Et Special, Meat Sushi
What Makes it Special: The iconic Salt Bae experience features theatrical tableside steak preparation with his signature seasoning sprinkle and premium Wagyu cuts.
7.9
$$$$ Brickell Japanese, Sushi
David Grutman's three-story Brickell spectacle grosses $41 million annually—the top-earning restaurant in America according to Restaurant Business—and those numbers tell you exactly what you're walking into: a see-and-be-seen celebration factory where the floating bird's nest seating and Instagram moments matter as much as the food. The Peking Duck and Lobster Dynamite are legitimately good, but reviews consistently note that service struggles to keep pace with the crowds and reservations don't always mean much. Expect bottle service energy, steep prices ($115 average check), and a fashionable crowd dressed for the moment. This is where you go for birthday spectacle or impressing out-of-towners who want the full Miami experience—not for a quiet Tuesday dinner.
Must-Try Dishes: Half Peking Duck, Lobster Dynamite, Miso Chilean Seabass
What Makes it Special: A three-story indoor/outdoor spectacle with floating bird's nest seating that's become Miami's ultimate see-and-be-seen celebration destination.
$$$ Miami Design District Seafood
The NYC temaki specialists landed in Miami with Pharrell's backing in 2023, bringing their open-style hand rolls designed to be eaten immediately while the nori stays crisp—a smart technical move that distinguishes them from standard sushi bars. The space channels coastal Japanese minimalism with sandy browns and cream tones, and the furikake fries have become an Instagram fixture. Reviews flag underseasoning on some rolls and portions that leave heavier eaters wanting more, plus service can feel rushed during turnover-focused dinner shifts. Best as a light lunch or pre-shopping bite rather than a destination dinner, especially at these prices.
Must-Try Dishes: X.O. Scallop Hand Roll, Spicy Crab Dynamite Roll, Tuna Poke Hand Roll
What Makes it Special: NYC's beloved temaki temple arrives in Miami with Pharrell's backing, serving open-style hand rolls designed to be eaten immediately while the nori stays crisp.
7.9
$$ Brickell Mexican
Established in 2016 as a mercado-style taqueria on the fourth floor of Brickell City Centre, Tacology sources its corn directly from Mexico to make 26 different tacos in-house. The birria and lobster tacos earn repeat visitors, though the iPad ordering system and auto-gratuity feel transactional rather than hospitable. It's loud, it's busy, and dishes arrive whenever they're ready—not necessarily together. Works well for a post-shopping pit stop with friends who don't need hand-holding, but don't expect a relaxed meal. The Taco Tuesday half-off deal makes it genuinely worthwhile on the right night.
Must-Try Dishes: Taco de Birria, Lobster Taco, Queso Fundido con Huitlacoche
What Makes it Special: Mercado-style taqueria with 26 different tacos made from scratch using corn sourced directly from Mexico, all ordered via tablet at your table.
7.8
$$ Brickell Breakfast
Jeanet 'Nané' Hanze grew Biscuits by Nané from a weekend hobby into a five-location Ecuadorian brand before bringing this bistro to Brickell's Maizon in 2025 with husband and business partner Christian Stagg. The tigrillo and bolon de queso offer authentic Ecuadorian green plantain preparations rarely found in Miami, and the jipijapa ceviche brings coastal Ecuador flavors to a neighborhood saturated with generic brunch. The pastel-toned interior with custom floral murals inspired by Ecuadorian flora creates an Instagram-ready backdrop. Early reviews are mixed—some praise the eggs Benedict and fresh s'mores cookies, while others note Ecuadorian specials arrive bland and service has shown growing pains. Worth watching as they settle in.
Must-Try Dishes: Eggs Benedict, Tigrillo, Bolon de Queso
What Makes it Special: An Ecuadorian-born bistro bringing traditional green plantain dishes and freshly baked artisan cookies to Brickell.
$$$$ Brickell Italian
This 18,000-square-foot Italian food hall delivers genuinely fresh, flavorful dishes across 12 culinary stations inside Saks. The buzzy, sophisticated atmosphere draws a Brickell crowd seeking upscale casual dining, though service can feel disjointed during busy periods and the automatic 18% service charge catches some diners off guard.
Must-Try Dishes: Tagliolini Alla Carbonara, Black Truffle Tagliolini, Cacio e Pepe
What Makes it Special: An 18,000 sq ft Italian food hall with 12 distinct culinary stations inside Saks, combining upscale ingredients with a buzzy, casual atmosphere.
$$$$ Brickell Mexican
Major Food Group's first Mexican fine-dining concept occupies a 1931 Martin L. Hampton-designed chateau that spent 50 years as the Murrel family residence before becoming a historic landmark. The building itself is the star—the bar stocked with over 1,000 tequilas and mezcals, the theatrical tableside guacamole, the scene-y Brickell crowd. The spicy tuna and wagyu truffle tostadas deliver, but the kitchen doesn't consistently match the setting's promise; some dishes arrive bland despite premium pricing. Service can feel rehearsed rather than warm. Come for the architecture and cocktails, temper expectations for the food, and accept that you're paying a significant premium for the Major Food Group nameplate.
Must-Try Dishes: Spicy Tuna Tostada, Wagyu & Truffle Tostada, Michelada Oysters
What Makes it Special: Major Food Group's first Mexican fine-dining concept housed in a 1931 historic chateau, featuring over 1,000 tequilas and mezcals and theatrical tableside guacamole.
$$$ Miami Design District Seafood
Hospitality impresario Paolo Domeneghetti and Martino de Rosa of La Filiale fame—the Neapolitan pizzeria featured on Chef's Table—opened this European Riviera concept in February 2024 with Stefano Ferrara wood-fired ovens and gelato from Italian master Simone Bonini. The garden setting evokes coastal Saint-Tropez, and the Neapolitan pizzas with 36-hour dough deliver what you'd expect from the La Filiale pedigree. Reviews flag inconsistency as the kitchen finds its footing, with some dishes landing underseasoned and service pacing uneven during busy nights. Early days still, but the bones are strong—give it another year to see if execution catches up to the ambition and Instagram-ready courtyard.
Must-Try Dishes: Burrata with Pistachios, Tagliolini al Limone, Neapolitan Margherita Pizza
What Makes it Special: European Riviera dining comes to Miami with wood-fired Neapolitan pizzas, coastal Mediterranean dishes, and world-class gelato from Italian master Simone Bonini.
$$$$ Brickell Japanese
A London import that doubles as an art installation—Damien Hirst sculptures, Frank Gehry fish lamps, and a crowd that treats dinner as a runway show. The caramelized black cod and robata-grilled items hold their own, but portions run small for the price, and quality can swing between excellent sushi and forgettable cooked plates. Reviews consistently rate the atmosphere five stars and the food closer to 3.5, which tells you exactly who this place is for. Dress code enforcement is inconsistent enough to frustrate, and table placement can make or break the experience—request the main room or risk being banished to a lesser section.
Must-Try Dishes: Caramelized Black Cod with Spicy Miso, King Crab and Bone Marrow, Crispy Duck Salad
What Makes it Special: A London import with Damien Hirst art and Frank Gehry fish sculptures, where Asian-inspired seafood meets Miami nightlife glamour.
$$ Wynwood Mexican, Tex-Mex
A Colombian-founded Tex-Mex chain making its U.S. debut in Wynwood, leaning hard into festive production value—colorful immersive decor, tableside guacamole, and live mariachi on Thursday and Friday nights that turn dinner into an event. The shareable platters and loaded nachos land well for groups, and the margarita program pulls its weight. Service, however, is the weak link: multiple reports of slow response times and inattentive waitstaff undercut the otherwise polished experience, and the Miami location's limited track record means consistency hasn't been fully proven yet.
Must-Try Dishes: Nachos Benito Juárez, Tacos Al Pastor, Burrito Regalo de Dios
What Makes it Special: Colombian-founded Tex-Mex chain (12 locations in Colombia) making its U.S. debut in Wynwood, with live mariachi on Thursday and Friday nights, tableside guacamole, and a chef-driven menu by Karen Bohorquez that blends Colombian hospitality with Tex-Mex indulgence.
$$ Brickell Bakery
An Italian bakery chain that bakes everything behind glass walls, anchored by a focaccia program with a genuine Ligurian pedigree — the Focaccia di Recco with Crescenza cheese is a regional specialty rare outside Miami. The pistachio croissant and espresso pull steady foot traffic, though service during peak hours can be disorganized and reviews are notably split. Works best as a grab-and-go pastry stop rather than a full sit-down breakfast.
Must-Try Dishes: Pistachio Croissant, Focaccia di Recco, Prosciutto di Parma Croissant Sandwich
What Makes it Special: An authentic Italian bakery chain that imports its baking DNA from Liguria — the Focaccia di Recco with fresh Crescenza cheese is a regional specialty almost impossible to find elsewhere in Miami, and everything is baked on-site with traditional Italian methods.