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    Restaurant in Austin, United States

    Jeffrey's

    1,405Pearl Points

    Austin's toughest book for good reason.

    Jeffrey's, Restaurant in Austin

    About Jeffrey's

    Jeffrey's is Austin's strongest case for French-influenced steak dining at the $$$$ tier, with a Michelin Plate, a World of Fine Wine 3-Star wine list of 700 selections, and a restored Clarksville cottage setting built for special occasions. Booking is genuinely hard — plan three weeks out minimum. If wine depth and old-world service are priorities, nothing in Austin competes at this price point.

    Jeffrey's, Austin: The Verdict

    Securing a table at Jeffrey's is genuinely difficult — this is one of Austin's hardest bookings at the $$$$ price tier, and for good reason. Open exclusively for dinner (4:30–11 pm, seven days a week), the Clarksville cottage fills fast, particularly Thursday through Saturday. Book at least three weeks out. If you land a reservation, you are getting a Michelin Plate-recognized restaurant with a 4.7 Google rating across over 1,000 reviews, a wine list carrying World of Fine Wine 3-Star Accreditation, and a kitchen that has held its position as Austin's benchmark for French-influenced steak dining since its reimagining in 2013. Jeffrey's is worth the effort for a special occasion dinner. For anything more casual or budget-conscious, it is not the right call.

    The Space

    Jeffrey's occupies a restored 1930s cottage on West Lynn Street in Clarksville, and the physical room is a significant part of the case for booking. Dark wood panelling, plush velvet banquettes, and low golden lighting create a setting that feels genuinely intimate rather than performatively so. The restaurant runs across multiple dining rooms plus a bar and a wine cellar, which gives it more flexibility than a single open-plan room — useful if you are choosing between a corner banquette for two or a larger configuration for a group. For a date or a milestone dinner, the atmosphere holds up well: it reads as serious without being stiff. The spatial design is closer to a classic American steakhouse filtered through a French lens than it is to the kind of minimalist fine dining room you find at, say, Craft Omakase. That distinction matters when you are deciding what kind of evening you want.

    The Wine Program: The Real Reason to Book

    Jeffrey's holds a World of Fine Wine 3-Star Accreditation , a credential that puts it in rare company for Austin. Wine Director Austin Farina leads a list of approximately 700 selections across a 4,000-bottle inventory, with particular depth in France (Bordeaux, Burgundy, Champagne) and California, plus strong Italian coverage. Wine pricing sits at the $$$ tier: expect many bottles over $100, which is consistent with the overall $$$$ price positioning of the meal. The sommelier team , Kole Ray and Serena Quintana-Patterson , is described as intuitive and gracious rather than performative, which at this price point is exactly what you want. If you are building a dinner around a serious bottle, Jeffrey's wine list is materially better than anything comparable in Austin at this tier. For reference, the depth here rivals what you find at destination dining rooms like The French Laundry in Napa or Le Bernardin in New York City , though the food ambition operates at a different register. The practical implication: if wine is central to why you are spending this much on dinner, Jeffrey's justifies the price more convincingly than any other Austin option in the category. If wine is incidental, the calculus is different.

    The Food

    The kitchen operates under Chef Mark McCain with a French-American framework built around an oak-fired grill and in-house dry-aged beef. Proteins are sourced from USDA Prime and American Wagyu programmes, with dry aging as the primary method. The result is a steak programme that sits at the leading of Austin's market , if you are specifically here for beef cooked over oak fire with classical French technique applied to sourcing and finishing, this is the right room. Jeffrey's is listed on OpenTable's Top 100 Restaurants for 2025 and holds a Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025, which validates the kitchen's consistency over time. The wider menu extends into French-American classics beyond the grill, and the Opinionated About Dining ranking at #599 in North America (2024) positions it as a serious regional institution rather than a national top-tier destination. That is an honest framing: Jeffrey's is the strongest option in its specific category in Austin, not a contender against Alinea or Atomix.

    Who Should Book Jeffrey's

    Jeffrey's earns its place as the go-to for anniversary dinners, significant business meals, and milestone celebrations in Austin. The combination of a serious wine list, polished old-world service, and a kitchen with a consistent track record across multiple award cycles makes it the most defensible choice at the $$$$ tier in the city for that specific purpose. The multi-room layout means it works for two or for a small group with a private space arrangement. If you are coming to Austin for a food-focused trip and want one serious dinner, Jeffrey's is a stronger case than Hestia for those who prioritize wine depth and French technique over live-fire American cooking, and a more conventional choice than Barley Swine if you want a recognizable fine dining format. Solo diners should note that the bar area exists as an option , the formal dining rooms here are geared toward parties of two or more.

    Practical Details

    Jeffrey's is at 1204 W Lynn St, Austin, TX 78703, in the Clarksville neighbourhood. Dinner runs 4:30–11 pm Monday through Sunday , there is no lunch service, so the only timing decision is how early in the evening you arrive. Earlier sittings (4:30–6 pm) are easier to secure on short notice and give you the room before the full evening energy builds; Thursday through Saturday from 7 pm onward is the hardest window to book. The price range is $$$$ across cuisine and the wine list adds a $$$ premium on leading , budget accordingly for a full dinner with wine. The ownership group (Larry McGuire, Thomas Moorman, Liz Lambert) runs a number of Austin properties, which means Jeffrey's benefits from the operational depth of an experienced hospitality group. Bookings are hard-rated: plan ahead or expect to wait. For the broader Austin dining picture, see our full Austin restaurants guide, and explore hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences in the city to round out your trip.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can Jeffrey's accommodate groups?

    Jeffrey's can handle groups, but the format rewards smaller parties more than large ones. The restored 1930s cottage has multiple dining rooms, which helps, but at $$$$ per head with a serious wine program, groups of 2–4 get the most out of the experience. Larger parties should check the venue's official channels and ask about private dining options — the wine cellar is a strong candidate for special occasions.

    Is Jeffrey's good for a special occasion?

    Yes, and it's one of the stronger cases in Austin for exactly that use. The combination of a Michelin Plate, a World of Fine Wine 3-Star Accreditation, and a polished service team makes it a credible choice for anniversaries, milestone dinners, and significant business meals. At $$$$ with a 700-selection wine list, the price matches the occasion.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Jeffrey's?

    The venue data doesn't confirm a tasting menu format at Jeffrey's — the kitchen operates as a French-American à la carte steakhouse anchored by an oak-fired grill and in-house dry-aged beef. If a prix fixe option exists, verify directly before booking. For the full experience, budget for a starter, a prime steak, sides, and a bottle from the French or California selections on the $$$-priced wine list.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Jeffrey's?

    Dinner is the only option. Jeffrey's opens at 4:30 pm Monday through Sunday with no lunch service, so there's no comparison to make. Evening bookings are harder to secure — this is one of Austin's more competitive reservations at the $$$$ tier — so plan ahead.

    Is Jeffrey's good for solo dining?

    Solo dining is possible, and the bar is the practical route. A single seat at the bar sidesteps the table reservation pressure and still puts you in front of the full menu and a sommelier team that manages a 4,000-bottle inventory. For solo diners who want to work through the wine list without committing to a full table, that's the right call.

    Can I eat at the bar at Jeffrey's?

    Yes. Jeffrey's has a bar, and it functions as a genuine alternative to a table reservation rather than just an overflow option. Given how difficult table bookings are at peak times, the bar is worth considering on its own terms — particularly if you want to focus on the wine program under Austin Farina's team without the full formality of a dining room seat.

    Location

    1204 W Lynn St, Austin, TX 78703

    Austin, United States

    Compare Jeffrey's

    Value Check: Jeffrey's and Peers
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    Jeffrey's$$$$Hard
    Barley Swine$$$$Unknown
    la Barbecue$$Unknown
    Olamaie$$$Unknown
    Kemuri Tatsu-ya$$Unknown
    Odd Duck$$$Unknown

    What to weigh when choosing between Jeffrey's and alternatives.

    Also Consider

    How Jeffrey's Compares in Austin

    At the $$$$ tier, Jeffrey's has no direct competitor in Austin that combines a serious wine list with French-influenced steak dining in a formal setting. Barley Swine is the other $$$$ option on this list and runs a more inventive New American tasting format — it is the better choice if you want chef-driven creativity over classical execution, and arguably easier to justify for a single diner or a food-focused couple less interested in the wine program. Jeffrey's wins on wine depth and occasion formality; Barley Swine wins on culinary ambition and format novelty.

    Olamaie and Odd Duck operate at $$$ and offer meaningfully better value for a dinner that still takes food seriously. Odd Duck is the easier booking and the more flexible group option; Olamaie is the stronger choice for Southern-focused cooking with genuine technique. Neither competes with Jeffrey's on wine or steak, but both represent better value per dollar spent if the full Jeffrey's experience (wine, formal service, aged beef) is more than your occasion requires.

    Kemuri Tatsu-ya and la Barbecue are $$ options that serve entirely different purposes — both are worth knowing about for a multi-day Austin trip, but neither is a substitute for Jeffrey's occasion-dining format. If your visit is short and you can only make one reservation, Jeffrey's is the call for a celebration dinner; la Barbecue is the call if you want Austin's strongest smoked meat at a fraction of the price with no booking required.

    Hours

    Monday
    4:30–11 pm
    Tuesday
    4:30–11 pm
    Wednesday
    4:30–11 pm
    Thursday
    4:30–11 pm
    Friday
    4:30–11 pm
    Saturday
    4:30–11 pm
    Sunday
    4:30–11 pm

    Recognized By

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