Top 10 Places to Dine in Honolulu

Top 10 Places to Dine in Honolulu
*Published June 23, 2026 · Updated June 23, 2026*
If you only book one table in Honolulu, make it The Pig and the Lady in Kaimuki — Chef Andrew Le's James Beard-nominated Vietnamese kitchen is the clearest, most consistent expression of what modern O'ahu dining can be, which makes it our 🏆 Best Overall pick. For travelers and locals who want a genuine Hawaiian plate without the resort markup, Helena's Hawaiian Food in Kalihi is the 💎 Best Value choice: a James Beard America's Classics winner serving pipikaula short ribs and kalua pig since 1946 at honest prices.
The ten restaurants below are all real, currently-operating Honolulu kitchens, open and bookable in 2026-2027, drawn from The Infatuation, Honolulu Magazine's Hale 'Aina Awards, Eater, and the restaurants' own pages. The list spans fine dining (Senia, Merriman's), neighborhood izakaya (Sushi Izakaya Gaku), old-school Hawaiian (Helena's), and counter-service poke (Maguro Brothers), so there is a fit for any budget and any occasion.
1. The Pig and the Lady 🏆 BEST OVERALL
Cuisine/Type: Modern Vietnamese | Price: $$$ (entrees roughly $18-$34) | Location: Kaimuki (3650 Waialae Ave) | Best for: the single best all-around meal in Honolulu
Chef Andrew Le, his mother "Mama Le," and brother Alex relocated the restaurant from its long-time Chinatown home to a Kaimuki space with outdoor seating that channels the energy of a Vietnamese street stall. The food bridges family recipes and chef-driven technique: the pho French dip, served at lunch, is the dish everyone photographs, but the dinner menu of laksa, grilled meats, and bright herb-forward plates is where the kitchen shows its full range.
Multiple James Beard nominations have followed Le for good reason.
Pros:
- Signature dish: the pho French dip is genuinely worth a special trip.
- Range: strong at both casual lunch and a more composed dinner.
- Pedigree: repeat James Beard semifinalist recognition.
Cons:
- Reservations for dinner go fast; book ahead.
- The Kaimuki move means it is no longer a Chinatown walk-in.
Verdict: The most reliable great meal on the island, full stop.
2. Helena's Hawaiian Food 💎 BEST VALUE
Cuisine/Type: Traditional Hawaiian | Price: $ (plates roughly $4-$12, sides a la carte) | Location: Kalihi (1240 N School St) | Best for: an authentic, affordable Hawaiian plate
Open since 1946 and a James Beard Foundation America's Classics honoree, Helena's is the benchmark for old-school Hawaiian cooking. The pipikaula short ribs, hung and dried in-house then fried, are the must-order, alongside kalua pig, lomi salmon, squid luau, and poi. Prices are genuinely modest, which is rare for food this storied.
Pros:
- Heritage: an America's Classics award winner with nearly 80 years of history.
- Value: a full Hawaiian spread for a fraction of resort pricing.
- Specialty: the pipikaula is a true bucket-list bite.
Cons:
- Limited hours (Tuesday-Friday) and frequent closures around holidays.
- Cash-friendly, no-frills room with potential waits.
Verdict: The Hawaiian plate every visitor should eat at least once.
3. Senia
Cuisine/Type: New American / fine dining | Price: $$$$ (tasting menu $150+) | Location: Chinatown (75 N King St) | Best for: a refined chef's-counter occasion
Opened in 2016 by British chef Anthony Rush — who trained at three-Michelin-star kitchens including Per Se — Senia pairs a casual a la carte dining room with an award-winning tasting menu at the Chefs' Counter. The cooking is precise and produce-driven, leaning on Hawai'i ingredients with European technique.
It is regularly cited among the state's top fine-dining rooms.
Pros:
- Technique: three-Michelin-star pedigree behind the pass.
- Flexibility: book the casual room or the splurge counter.
- Acclaim: a fixture on Hawai'i best-restaurant lists.
Cons:
- The Chefs' Counter tasting is a significant splurge.
- Counter seats are limited and book out early.
Verdict: Honolulu's most polished special-occasion table.
4. Merriman's Honolulu
Cuisine/Type: Hawai'i Regional / farm-to-table | Price: $$$$ (entrees roughly $40-$65) | Location: Ward Village / Kaka'ako (1108 Auahi St) | Best for: a polished farm-to-table dinner
Peter Merriman is a founding father of the Hawai'i Regional Cuisine movement, and his Ward Village location brings that produce-first philosophy to a sleek Kaka'ako dining room. Expect island-sourced fish, Kahua Ranch beef, and a menu that names its farms. It is a dependable choice for a sophisticated lunch or a celebratory dinner near the water.
Pros:
- Sourcing: a pioneer of farm-to-table cooking in Hawai'i.
- Setting: modern, comfortable Ward Village room.
- Consistency: a long track record of awards.
Cons:
- Pricing sits at the high end.
- Popular with visitors, so it can feel busy.
Verdict: The safe, excellent bet for farm-to-table in town.
5. Mud Hen Water
Cuisine/Type: Modern Hawaiian small plates | Price: $$$ (small plates roughly $14-$30) | Location: Kaimuki (3452 Waialae Ave) | Best for: inventive local cooking and cocktails
Chef-restaurateur Ed Kenney named this Kaimuki gem after Waialae Avenue itself (wai = water, alae = mud hen). The menu reimagines Hawaiian and local-style ingredients as shareable small plates, paired with a serious cocktail program. It is a laid-back neighborhood spot with real creativity behind the kitchen.
Pros:
- Creativity: thoughtful, modern takes on Hawaiian flavors.
- Drinks: a standout cocktail list.
- Vibe: relaxed and genuinely local.
Cons:
- Small-plate format can add up if you over-order.
- The intimate room fills quickly on weekends.
Verdict: Where to eat creative local food without the white tablecloth.
6. Sushi Izakaya Gaku
Cuisine/Type: Japanese izakaya | Price: $$$ | Location: Mo'ili'ili (1329 S King St) | Best for: a long, convivial Japanese dinner
A near-20-year institution, Gaku does the classics beautifully — silky dashimaki tamago, homemade tofu dressed with ikura and shoyu jelly — alongside fresh sushi and seasonal specials. It is the kind of izakaya locals guard closely, which is why reservations are essentially mandatory.
Pros:
- Authenticity: genuine izakaya breadth, not a sushi-only menu.
- Execution: the egg, tofu, and sashimi are reference-quality.
- Longevity: two decades of loyal regulars.
Cons:
- Extremely hard to book without planning ahead.
- Closed Sundays with limited dinner-only hours.
Verdict: The izakaya to plan your trip around.
7. Tonkatsu Tamafuji
Cuisine/Type: Japanese tonkatsu | Price: $$ (sets roughly $20-$35) | Location: Kapahulu | Best for: the best fried pork cutlet in the state
A Sapporo import, Tamafuji fries some of the most precise tonkatsu in Hawai'i — kurobuta and premium pork cutlets with a shatter-crisp crust over juicy meat, served as full sets with rice and shredded cabbage. Demand is famously intense; The Infatuation notes reservations can run months out.
Pros:
- Quality: premium kurobuta pork done expertly.
- Sets: generous, satisfying teishoku-style meals.
- Reputation: widely rated the island's top katsu.
Cons:
- Reservations can be booked months in advance.
- A focused menu — go for the katsu, not variety.
Verdict: Worth the wait for fried-pork devotees.
8. Mitch's Fish Market and Sushi Bar
Cuisine/Type: Sushi / seafood | Price: $$$$ | Location: near Daniel K. Inouye Airport (524 Ohohia St) | Best for: ultra-fresh fish on the way in or out of town
Tucked beside a fish market near the airport, Mitch's serves some of the freshest seafood in Honolulu — ahi, hamachi, salmon, plus specialties like engawa and kinmedai, and famous lobster preparations. It is a tiny, BYOB-friendly room that regulars treat as a ritual arrival-or-departure meal.
Pros:
- Freshness: fish straight from the adjoining market.
- Specialties: engawa, kinmedai, and lobster shine.
- Location logic: ideal first or last meal near the airport.
Cons:
- Pricey for the casual setting.
- Very small; reservations strongly advised.
Verdict: A fish-lover's pilgrimage by the runway.
9. Fete
Cuisine/Type: New American / brasserie | Price: $$$ | Location: Chinatown (2 N Hotel St) | Best for: a Chinatown date night
Chef Robynne Maii — the first Native Hawaiian woman to win a James Beard Award — runs Fete, where brasserie comfort food gets island twists using local ingredients. Open from lunch through dinner, it anchors Chinatown's dining scene with a warm room and a menu that rewards both casual lunches and celebratory evenings.
Pros:
- Accolades: James Beard Award-winning chef.
- Versatility: strong at lunch and dinner alike.
- Sourcing: local ingredients across the menu.
Cons:
- Chinatown parking can be a hassle at night.
- Prime dinner slots book up on weekends.
Verdict: Chinatown's most reliable sit-down dinner.
10. Maguro Brothers
Cuisine/Type: Poke / donburi counter | Price: $ (bowls roughly $11-$18) | Location: Chinatown (Kekaulike Market) and Waikiki | Best for: a fast, excellent poke bowl
Run by brothers Junichiro and Ryojiro Tsuchiya, both alumni of Tokyo's old Tsukiji Fish Market, Maguro Brothers serves some of the best poke and sashimi donburi in town from the back of a Chinatown market. The Waikiki outpost adds a few extra ahi options; the Chinatown stall is the locals' pick and the better value.
Pros:
- Freshness: Tsukiji-trained owners and pristine ahi.
- Value: generous, affordable bowls.
- Speed: ideal quick, high-quality lunch.
Cons:
- Counter service with minimal seating.
- Closed Sundays; Chinatown closes mid-afternoon.
Verdict: The poke bowl that out-punches its price.
How to Choose
Match the restaurant to the moment. For a once-in-a-trip splurge, Senia and Merriman's deliver the polish. For a meal you will tell friends about without breaking the budget, The Pig and the Lady and Mud Hen Water are the sweet spot.
And when you simply want great food fast, Helena's and Maguro Brothers prove Honolulu's best bites are not always its priciest.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best restaurant in Honolulu overall? The Pig and the Lady in Kaimuki earns our top pick for its James Beard-nominated modern Vietnamese cooking, signature pho French dip, and consistent excellence across lunch and dinner.
What is the best-value place to eat in Honolulu? Helena's Hawaiian Food in Kalihi offers a James Beard America's Classics-honored Hawaiian spread — pipikaula, kalua pig, lomi salmon — at modest, a la carte prices.
Where should I go for fine dining in Honolulu? Senia in Chinatown and Merriman's in Ward Village are the standout fine-dining rooms, with Senia's Chefs' Counter tasting menu running about $150 and up per person.
Which Honolulu restaurants need reservations far in advance? Sushi Izakaya Gaku and Tonkatsu Tamafuji are the hardest tables to land; Tamafuji's bookings can fill months out, so plan before you arrive.
Where can I get the best poke in Honolulu? Maguro Brothers, run by former Tsukiji Fish Market fishmongers, serves outstanding ahi poke and sashimi donburi bowls from its Chinatown and Waikiki counters.
Are these Honolulu restaurants open in 2026-2027? Yes — every restaurant on this list is currently operating and bookable in 2026-2027, verified against The Infatuation, Honolulu Magazine, and the restaurants' own pages.
Related on PULSE
- See the matching Top 10 Places to Stay in Honolulu hotel and dining guides for trip planning.
- Compare with our Top 10 Restaurants in other destinations dine pillar entries.
- Use the Pulse Tools hub to budget your trip dining and plan reservations.
Bottom Line
Honolulu's dining strength is its range: a 1946 Hawaiian institution and a Tsukiji-trained poke counter sit comfortably alongside Michelin-pedigree tasting menus, all within a short drive. The Pig and the Lady is the meal to build a trip around, Helena's Hawaiian Food is the affordable plate every visitor should try, and the eight tables between them cover every cuisine, budget, and occasion you are likely to want — all real, all currently open, and all bookable through 2026-2027.










