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    Restaurant in San Francisco, United States

    Alexander’s Steakhouse

    100Pearl Points

    Serious steakhouse, no tasting-menu commitment.

    Alexander’s Steakhouse, Restaurant in San Francisco

    About Alexander’s Steakhouse

    Alexander's Steakhouse brings OAD-recognised precision to San Francisco's Union Square, open Tuesday through Saturday for dinner only. Booking is easy by city standards, making it a practical choice for food-focused travellers who want a serious steakhouse without tasting-menu ceremony. Eat in the room — the experience doesn't translate off-premise.

    Verdict: A serious steakhouse that earns its third-floor address

    Getting a table at Alexander's Steakhouse is easier than you might expect for a venue carrying OAD recognition two years running. Reservations are available most evenings Tuesday through Saturday, and booking difficulty is low by San Francisco fine-dining standards. If you've been putting this off, there's no logistical reason to wait — the real question is whether a steakhouse on the third floor of a Union Square building, closed Sundays and Mondays, fits your current window. It does, if you're in the city Tuesday through Saturday and want a focused, meat-forward dinner without the booking gymnastics required at the city's tasting-menu circuit.

    What you're walking into

    Alexander's Steakhouse sits on the third floor of 165 O'Farrell Street, which puts it above the Union Square foot traffic and gives the room a degree of remove from the street energy below. The atmosphere here runs quieter and more deliberate than a loud downtown steakhouse — this is a room built for conversation and a long dinner, not the kind of place where the energy overtakes the food. If you're coming in after 8 PM expecting a buzzy late-night scene, recalibrate: the kitchen closes at 9 PM every night it's open, which makes this a destination for early-evening diners rather than a late-night option.

    The OAD Casual North America ranking (#709 in 2024, Recommended in 2023) signals consistent quality without pretension. OAD's casual list tends to reward places that do one thing well and repeat it reliably , that's a useful frame for Alexander's. This is a steakhouse with enough technical seriousness to draw repeat visits from people who know the category, without the ceremony of a prix-fixe evening.

    A 4.5 Google rating across 1,077 reviews is a meaningful data point here. That's a high-volume sample with a high average , it suggests the kitchen delivers consistently across a broad range of guests, not just on special occasions. For the food-focused traveller who reads reviews sceptically, that volume matters more than the number itself.

    Does the food travel? A note on takeout

    Given the editorial angle here: Alexander's is a steakhouse, and steakhouse food is among the hardest to translate off-premise. A properly rested, seared cut of beef loses its edge quickly once it leaves the kitchen , the crust softens, the temperature drops, and the precision that justifies a higher price point fades in transit. If you're considering delivery or takeout from Alexander's, the honest answer is that the experience is not equivalent to dining in the room. Sides, sauces, and any non-steak dishes are more forgiving. But if your goal is to taste why this venue earned OAD recognition, eat it there. The third-floor setting and the controlled kitchen environment are part of what you're paying for.

    For those exploring San Francisco's steakhouse options with an eye on the full meal experience, Miller & Lux and Epic Steak are worth comparing on atmosphere and price point before you commit.

    Booking and practical details

    Hours run Tuesday through Saturday, 5:30–9 PM. Monday and Sunday are closed , plan accordingly if your San Francisco trip falls on a weekend-only window. The early close at 9 PM means you should aim to arrive by 7 PM at the latest if you want a full, unrushed dinner. Booking difficulty is low, which is a genuine advantage over much of what San Francisco's upper tier requires in lead time. Confirm your reservation as you approach the date.

    Logistics at a glance

    VenueBooking difficultyHours (dinner)Price tierAwards
    Alexander's SteakhouseEasyTue–Sat, 5:30–9 PMNot listedOAD Casual NA #709 (2024)
    Miller & LuxModerateCheck venue$$$,
    Epic SteakEasyCheck venue$$$,
    Lazy BearHardCheck venue$$$$OAD, Michelin

    Who should book

    Alexander's makes most sense for the food-focused traveller who wants a serious steakhouse dinner without committing to a tasting menu evening. If you're already planning a San Francisco trip that includes Benu or Atelier Crenn for a multi-course night, Alexander's works well as the counterpoint , a focused, protein-forward meal with less ceremony. It's also a strong choice for small groups who want a shared dinner with room for conversation. The easy booking makes it the kind of place you can add to a trip without restructuring your itinerary around it.

    For broader context on where Alexander's sits within the city's dining options, see our full San Francisco restaurants guide. If you're planning around a hotel stay, our San Francisco hotels guide covers the leading options near Union Square and beyond. You can also explore bars, wineries, and experiences across the city.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can Alexander's Steakhouse accommodate groups?

    Alexander's is a reasonable call for small groups of four to six looking for a steakhouse format rather than a tasting menu. The third-floor address at 165 O'Farrell means a degree of separation from street-level noise, which helps for group dinners. For larger parties, check the venue's official channels to confirm private or semi-private arrangements before committing. Midweek evenings Tuesday through Thursday offer the most flexibility.

    What should I order at Alexander's Steakhouse?

    Alexander's holds OAD recognition two years running in the North America Casual category, which signals consistency rather than novelty — so the core steakhouse offering is the reason to come. Focus on the beef; this is not a venue where the sides or starters are the draw. Specific menu details are not published here, so check the current menu directly with the restaurant before your visit.

    Is Alexander's Steakhouse good for solo dining?

    Solo diners at a steakhouse in this format typically do better at the bar or counter if one is available. Alexander's OAD Casual designation suggests an approachable room rather than a stiff tasting-menu environment, which works in a solo diner's favour. If you want a more interactive solo experience in San Francisco fine dining, Benu or Saison offer counter or chef's-table formats that suit one person more naturally.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Alexander's Steakhouse?

    Dinner only. Alexander's operates Tuesday through Saturday from 5:30–9 PM with no lunch service, so the question is settled by the schedule. Plan any San Francisco itinerary around the Tuesday-to-Saturday window; Monday and Sunday are closed.

    Location

    165 O'Farrell St 3rd Floor, San Francisco, CA 94102

    San Francisco, United States

    Compare Alexander’s Steakhouse

    How Easy to Book: Alexander’s Steakhouse vs. Peers
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    Alexander’s SteakhouseSteakhouseEasy
    Lazy BearProgressive American, Contemporary$$$$Unknown
    Atelier CrennModern French, Contemporary$$$$Unknown
    BenuFrench - Chinese, Asian$$$$Unknown
    QuinceItalian, Contemporary$$$$Unknown
    SaisonProgressive American, Californian$$$$Unknown

    Comparing your options in San Francisco for this tier.

    Also Consider

    • Lazy Bear, Progressive American, Contemporary, $$$$
    • Atelier Crenn, Modern French, Contemporary, $$$$
    • Benu, French - Chinese, Asian, $$$$
    • Quince, Italian, Contemporary, $$$$
    • Saison, Progressive American, Californian, $$$$

    Alexander's Steakhouse and San Francisco's top-tier tasting-menu restaurants are solving different problems. Lazy Bear, Atelier Crenn, Benu, Quince, and Saison are all operating at the $$$$ tier with multi-course formats, hard-to-secure reservations, and evenings that run two hours or more by design. If that's what you want, any of those five deliver it at a high level. But if you want a focused dinner built around serious beef, with easy booking and a room that doesn't require a tasting-menu commitment, Alexander's is the cleaner choice.

    On booking difficulty alone, Alexander's has a clear practical edge over this peer group. Lazy Bear and Benu in particular require significant lead time and often sell out weeks in advance. Atelier Crenn and Saison operate similarly. Alexander's easy availability means it's the venue you can add to a trip without restructuring your itinerary, that's a real differentiator when you're coordinating multiple nights in the city.

    For value comparison: the $$$$ venues listed above are delivering longer, more elaborate experiences that justify their price points in a different way than a steakhouse does. Alexander's OAD Casual North America ranking positions it as a venue that earns its reputation through consistent execution rather than conceptual ambition. If your priority for one night in San Francisco is technical steakhouse quality over tasting-menu theatre, Alexander's is the booking to make. If you want the full progressive American or modern French experience the city is known for internationally, Lazy Bear and Atelier Crenn remain the stronger choices for that specific brief.

    Hours

    Monday
    Closed
    Tuesday
    5:30–9 pm
    Wednesday
    5:30–9 pm
    Thursday
    5:30–9 pm
    Friday
    5:30–9 pm
    Saturday
    5:30–9 pm
    Sunday
    Closed

    Recognized By

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