Best Restaurants in Washington DC
Where to eat in DC like you actually live there — not like you Googled “restaurants near the Mall.”
Washington DC has quietly become one of the best food cities in the country — and visitors who do their homework eat extraordinarily well. The ones who don’t end up with a $22 sad sandwich near the Mall.
This list pulls from real meals and real recommendations. No sponsored content, no tourist traps — just the places that actually delivered.
RPM Italian
RPM Italian is one of those restaurants that gets recommended constantly in DC food circles — and for good reason. The room sets the tone immediately: dark and sleek with dramatic pendant lighting, it has the kind of electric energy that makes an ordinary Tuesday feel like an occasion. It’s the spot DC insiders take people they want to impress, and it works every time.
What to order:
- Prosciutto Tortelloni — Rosemary, Parmigiano brodo. Reviewers call it phenomenal, and they’re not wrong.
- Wild Mushroom Risotto — Black truffle, parmesan. This is the one. Order it.
- Truffled Garlic Bread — Part of the bread service, a recipe dating to 1963. It sounds simple. It is not simple.
- Wood Oven Pizzettes — Perfect starter to share. The Charred Pepperoni ($15) is a crowd pleaser, but the Bianco — buffalo mozzarella and truffle ($16) — is the move.
RPM Italian is the answer when someone asks where to go for a truly memorable DC dinner. Celebratory without being stuffy, impressive without being inaccessible.
Reserve a Table at RPM Italian →Jojo’s Restaurant and Bar
Live jazz, a packed bar that doesn’t feel touristy, and food that punches well above its price point. The bruschetta is a genuine standout — don’t skip it — and the short rib ravioli is the kind of dish you’re still thinking about two days later.
Go on a weeknight if you want to feel like you’ve stumbled into a neighborhood spot, because you basically have.
Old Ebbitt Grill
One of DC’s most historic restaurants, and one of the few that earns every bit of its reputation. The room is stunning — dark wood, gas lamps, old-school DC energy. The food is classic American done right.
Make a reservation, dress up a little, and enjoy it. This is a DC institution for a reason.
Teaism
Quick, unfussy, and genuinely delicious. The bento boxes are the move — mix and match, share if you have light eaters, and prepare to want to come back every single day. Multiple locations around the city. Find one. Go.
Western Market
If you’re near Foggy Bottom, this is your lunch. A proper food hall with real variety — not a tourist trap version, but the kind of place where you spend ten minutes debating between stalls and end up happy no matter what you choose. Go hungry. Share things.
Chercher
Small, warm, and easy to get a table at even without a reservation. If you’ve never had Ethiopian food, this is a great introduction. If you have, you’ll appreciate that Chercher does it right.
The kind of dinner that reminds you DC’s food scene goes well beyond steak and power lunches.
Tatte
Multiple DC locations, and every one is worth the stop. The food is beautiful and filling — share if you’re a light eater, because portions are generous. Go for the pastries, stay for the atmosphere.
A perfect way to fuel up before a full day on the Mall. If you’re looking for a spot to work remotely, check our guide to the best coffee shops in DC for remote work.
Baked & Wired
After a morning of shopping and walking Georgetown’s hills, Baked & Wired is the reward. The cupcakes are exceptional — not precious, not overpriced, just really, really good.
Get one. Get coffee. Sit down. You’ve earned it.