Bar in New York City, United States
San Carlo Osteria Piemonte
100ptsNorthern Italian in SoHo, easier than most.

About San Carlo Osteria Piemonte
San Carlo Osteria Piemonte on Thompson Street brings Piedmontese cooking to SoHo with one practical advantage over most of its neighbours: it is an easy table to book. Best suited to dates and small celebrations, it rewards early evening arrivals before the compact room gets loud. A clear choice when regional Northern Italian food matters more than scene.
Quick Verdict
San Carlo Osteria Piemonte at 90 Thompson Street in SoHo is a specific kind of booking: a Northern Italian restaurant in a neighbourhood that leans heavily toward trend-driven dining. If you want Piedmontese cooking rather than another pan-Italian crowd-pleaser, this address is worth your attention. Booking here is easy by Manhattan standards, which makes it a reliable option for occasions when you need a confirmed table without a three-week wait.
The Space
The Thompson Street address puts San Carlo in the quieter western edge of SoHo, away from the foot traffic of Spring and Prince. That physical remove matters for how the evening feels. The room is compact by design, which works in favour of a date or a small celebration but limits it as a group dining option. Expect the kind of close-set seating that defines Italian neighbourhood restaurants in New York: intimate without being cramped, and quiet enough earlier in the evening to hold a real conversation. As the night deepens, that changes. SoHo restaurants at this scale tend to get louder after 9 PM as later sittings fill in and the bar trade picks up nearby. If a late dinner is your plan, arriving before 8 PM gives you the better version of the room.
Late-Night Viability
For a special occasion dinner, San Carlo is better suited to a 7 PM booking than a 9:30 PM one. The Piedmontese format, focused on slower, richer preparations typical of Northern Italy, rewards unhurried eating. A late arrival compresses that experience and puts you in a noisier room. If you are planning a birthday dinner or a date night and want the full arc of the meal, book early. For a late-night option in the neighbourhood after the main event, Attaboy NYC on Eldridge Street is worth considering, or cross downtown to Amor y Amargo for a bitters-focused drink program that pairs well with a heavy Italian meal. Broader late-night options across the city are covered in our full New York City bars guide.
Who Should Book
San Carlo works leading for two people on a date or a small group of three to four marking a low-key occasion. The easy booking difficulty means you can confirm a table closer to the date than most comparable SoHo options, which is a practical advantage for last-minute celebrations. It is less suited to large group dinners or anyone looking for the kind of room that generates a social media moment. The draw here is the food format itself: Piedmontese cooking is less represented in New York than Neapolitan or Roman traditions, which gives San Carlo a clearer reason to exist in a crowded market.
Practical Details
| Detail | San Carlo Osteria Piemonte | Typical SoHo Comparable |
|---|---|---|
| Booking difficulty | Easy | Moderate to hard |
| Leading arrival time | 7–8 PM | Varies |
| Ideal group size | 2–4 | 2–6 |
| Late-night noise | Increases after 9 PM | Increases after 9 PM |
| Occasion fit | Date, small celebration | Varies by venue |
For a broader view of where San Carlo sits among New York's dining options, see our full New York City restaurants guide. If you are planning the full trip, our New York City hotels guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide cover the rest of your stay.
How It Compares
Against the SoHo and downtown field, San Carlo's main advantage is availability. Dirty French on Ludlow operates at a higher energy level and requires more advance planning; it is the better pick if you want a buzzy room and French bistro food, but it is a harder table to get on short notice. San Carlo is the more practical choice when the occasion matters more than the scene.
For cocktails before or after, the comparison set depends on what you want. Angel's Share in the East Village is quieter and more deliberate; a good match if the dinner conversation is going well and you want to continue it. Superbueno in the West Village runs louder and later and works better as a standalone night out than as a post-dinner cap. The Long Island Bar in Brooklyn is worth the trip on a different night but is not a logical pairing with a SoHo dinner unless you are already planning to cross the bridge.
If you are comparing San Carlo against other Northern Italian options in Manhattan, the honest position is that Piedmontese-specific restaurants are a short list in New York. That scarcity is its own argument for booking. For the same price tier and occasion type, most alternatives default to a broader Italian-American format that does not deliver the same regional specificity. San Carlo earns the booking for that reason alone, provided your timing is right and you arrive before the room fills and gets loud.
Compare San Carlo Osteria Piemonte
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| San Carlo Osteria Piemonte | Easy | — | |
| The Long Island Bar | Unknown | — | |
| Dirty French | Unknown | — | |
| Superbueno | Unknown | — | |
| Amor y Amargo | Unknown | — | |
| Angel's Share | Unknown | — |
Comparing your options in New York City for this tier.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is San Carlo Osteria Piemonte known for?
San Carlo Osteria Piemonte is primarily known for its core concept and execution in New York City.
Where is San Carlo Osteria Piemonte located?
San Carlo Osteria Piemonte is located in New York City, at 90 Thompson St, New York, NY 10012.
How can I contact San Carlo Osteria Piemonte?
You can reach San Carlo Osteria Piemonte via the venue's official channels.
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