Restaurant in San Francisco, United States
1300 on Fillmore
100Pearl PointsSouthern Transit Kitchen

About 1300 on Fillmore
Located in SFO Terminal G, this outpost operates under airport dining conditions — useful if you are airside with time to sit, but limited in scope compared to the city's full restaurant options. Booking is easy and walk-ins are the norm. For a proper San Francisco meal, the city's dining scene offers significantly more range.
Quick Verdict
There is a wrinkle here worth knowing before you search for a table: the address on record for 1300 on Fillmore places it inside San Francisco International Airport's Terminal G — not the Fillmore District location that earned the restaurant its reputation. If you are heading to SFO and need a meal airside, that context changes the calculus entirely. Airport dining has hard limits on atmosphere, timing, and choice, and knowing that upfront saves frustration.
With no current menu data, pricing, or hours confirmed in our database, we cannot give you a precise per-head cost or a firm booking window. What we can tell you is that airport terminal restaurants operate under scarcity conditions that most city dining rooms do not: your window is defined by your flight, not your appetite, and the energy of the room shifts sharply depending on the hour.
Lunch vs. Dinner at an Airport Venue
This is where the lunch-versus-dinner question matters most in an airport setting. Midday service at a terminal restaurant tends to be calmer — fewer delayed flights stacking up, more business travelers on predictable schedules, and a room that has not yet hit the noise ceiling that evening departures bring. If your flight departs between noon and 3 PM, a sit-down lunch here is a reasonable use of your time. Evening travel is a different proposition: the room fills faster, turnover pressure is higher, and the ambient noise level climbs with the departure board. If you are connecting through SFO after 5 PM and want a proper meal rather than something grabbed at speed, factor that energy in before you commit to a table.
Booking and Practical Logistics
Booking difficulty is rated Easy, which tracks with how airport restaurants typically operate , walk-in traffic is the default, and reservations, if available at all, are rarely necessary more than a day out. That said, peak travel periods around holidays compress availability at every Terminal G option, so earlier is always safer if you are planning around a specific flight. No dress code data is on record; airport dining across San Francisco's terminals runs casual by default.
For solo diners, airport restaurants generally work well , counter seating or small tables for one are standard, and the pace of service suits travelers eating alone. Groups are harder: coordinating a table for four or more around departure times adds logistical friction that a city restaurant does not impose. If you are traveling with a group, confirm ahead whether the venue can seat you together without a long wait.
On dietary restrictions: without confirmed menu data, we cannot tell you which specific needs this kitchen can accommodate. Contact the venue directly through the airport's dining directory before your trip if this is a deciding factor.
For context on what San Francisco's dining scene looks like beyond the airport, our full San Francisco restaurants guide covers the city's leading tables. If you have time before or after your flight, the Fillmore District and broader SF dining options give you far more range than any terminal can. See also our San Francisco hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide for planning around your trip.
How It Compares
Comparing 1300 on Fillmore at SFO Terminal G against San Francisco's serious restaurant tier is not a like-for-like exercise, but it is worth framing clearly. Lazy Bear, Atelier Crenn, Benu, Quince, and Saison are all $$$$ city restaurants with Michelin recognition and booking windows that require planning weeks in advance. None of them are options if you are airside at SFO with a departure in two hours.
For travelers with a longer pre-flight window and a car or rideshare, the calculus shifts: San Francisco's top tier is worth the trip if you can manage the timing. The French Laundry in Napa and Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg are relevant comparisons if you are building a Northern California trip around dining, rather than eating around a flight schedule.
Pearl Picks Nearby
- Lazy Bear , Progressive American, leading for a special-occasion dinner in the city
- Atelier Crenn , Modern French, the right pick if tasting menus are your format
- Benu , French-Chinese, three Michelin stars and one of SF's most technically precise kitchens
- Quince , Italian-leaning contemporary, strong for groups who want a full evening
- Saison , Californian progressive, worth it if hearth-driven cooking interests you
- Providence in Los Angeles , relevant comparison if you are routing through SoCal
- Le Bernardin in New York City , benchmark for seafood-forward fine dining on the East Coast
FAQ
Is 1300 on Fillmore good for solo dining?
- Airport restaurants generally handle solo diners well , counter or small table seating is usually available without a wait.
- The terminal setting suits a quick, self-contained meal between flights.
- If solo dining in a proper restaurant environment is the goal, the city's dining options give you significantly more to work with. See our San Francisco restaurants guide.
Can I eat at the bar at 1300 on Fillmore?
- Bar seating is not confirmed in our current data for this location.
- Airport venues vary widely on bar configuration , some have full bar counters, others do not. Check with the venue or the SFO dining directory before arriving.
What should a first-timer know about 1300 on Fillmore?
- The address on record places this venue in SFO Terminal G, not the original Fillmore District location. Confirm you are going to the right place before you plan around it.
- No menu or pricing data is currently confirmed , check the airport's dining listings for current hours and offerings.
- Timing relative to your flight is the dominant practical factor here, more so than at a city restaurant.
Can 1300 on Fillmore accommodate groups?
- Group dining in airport terminals is logistically harder than in city restaurants , departure times, staggered arrivals, and table availability all add friction.
- No confirmed seat count or private dining data is in our records. Contact the venue through the SFO dining directory if you are planning for four or more.
- For groups with flexibility on timing, a city restaurant like Quince or Lazy Bear will give you a better experience.
Does 1300 on Fillmore handle dietary restrictions?
- No menu data is confirmed in our database, so we cannot verify which dietary needs this kitchen can accommodate.
- Contact the venue directly through the airport's dining directory before your trip if dietary restrictions are a deciding factor.
- For city restaurants with documented flexibility on dietary needs, our San Francisco restaurants guide is a better starting point.
What should I wear to 1300 on Fillmore?
- No dress code is confirmed in our data. Airport dining across SFO runs casual by default , travel clothes are fine.
- If you are connecting from or to a formal event and want to dress accordingly, that is unlikely to be out of place, but it is not required.
Quick reference: Terminal G, SFO | Booking: walk-in, Easy | Dress: casual | Leading timing: midday over evening for a calmer room.
Location
780 S. AIRPORT BLVD TERMINAL G, San Francisco, CA 94128
San Francisco, United States
Compare 1300 on Fillmore
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1300 on Fillmore | Easy | ||
| Lazy Bear | Progressive American, Contemporary | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown |
| Atelier Crenn | Modern French, Contemporary | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown |
| Benu | French - Chinese, Asian | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown |
| Quince | Italian, Contemporary | Michelin 3 Star | Unknown |
| Saison | Progressive American, Californian | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Also Consider
- Lazy Bear, Progressive American, Contemporary, $$$$
- Atelier Crenn, Modern French, Contemporary, $$$$
- Benu, French - Chinese, Asian, $$$$
- Quince, Italian, Contemporary, $$$$
- Saison, Progressive American, Californian, $$$$
Putting 1300 on Fillmore (Terminal G, SFO) alongside Lazy Bear, Atelier Crenn, Benu, Quince, and Saison is useful only as a framing exercise. All five city venues sit at $$$$ with Michelin stars and booking windows measured in weeks. They are the right answer when you are planning a San Francisco trip around dining. The airport location is the right answer when your flight schedule is the constraint and you need a sit-down meal airside.
Among the city venues, Benu is the most technically precise of the group, three Michelin stars and a French-Chinese tasting menu format that rewards diners who want structure and depth. Atelier Crenn is the better pick if the chef's artistic framing appeals to you. Lazy Bear is the most accessible of the $$$$ set in terms of atmosphere, and Quince works well for groups who want a full evening rather than a counter-format meal. Saison is worth the price if hearth-driven Californian cooking is your focus.
If you are transiting through SFO and have two to three hours before departure, none of the city venues are practical. The terminal location fills that gap by default. If you have half a day or more and can get into the city, book one of the above instead, the gap in experience between airport dining and SF's serious restaurant tier is significant enough to make the trip worthwhile.
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