Restaurant in Washington DC, United States
BlackSalt
190ptsReliable seafood with Michelin recognition. Book it.

About BlackSalt
A 2024 Michelin Plate recipient with a 4.6 Google rating from over 1,000 reviews, BlackSalt is one of Washington, D.C.'s most consistent seafood destinations at the $$$ tier. The market-and-restaurant format means the kitchen is built around daily catch, and the range — from shellfish to Mediterranean-inflected stews — earns its price point. Book in advance for weekends; midweek tables are easier to secure.
The Verdict
With a 4.6 Google rating across more than 1,000 reviews and a 2024 Michelin Plate, BlackSalt at 4883 MacArthur Blvd NW is one of the more reliable seafood destinations in Washington, D.C. At $$$ per head, it sits at a price point where it has to earn its place — and for the most part, it does. If you want serious shellfish and a kitchen that ranges confidently from coastal American to Mediterranean without losing focus, book here. If your priority is cutting-edge tasting menus or a downtown location, look elsewhere.
What You're Booking
BlackSalt operates as both market and restaurant, which tells you something useful about its DNA: this is a place where sourcing is the point. The Michelin guide's own notes single out the Addie's mussels in a well-balanced broth and a saffron-tinged Provençal market stew that draws from the day's catch — mussels, shrimp, swordfish , as the anchors of a menu that moves between approachable and genuinely interesting without tipping into either casual or pretentious. That's a harder balance to strike than it sounds in a city that tends to go hard in one direction or the other.
The menu draws coast-to-continent for its inspiration, which means you'll find shellfish preparations alongside warmer, braise-adjacent dishes. Finish with the key lime pie , blueberry compote, freshly whipped cream, sesame seed tuille , which the Michelin notes describe as a rich and deliberate close to the meal. That dessert alone signals that the kitchen is paying attention through the final course, not just the first.
For food and travel enthusiasts who track where serious seafood kitchens operate in the American Northeast corridor, BlackSalt occupies a specific and useful category: it's the kind of restaurant that rewards repeat visits rather than single-occasion splurges. Compare that positioning to something like Le Bernardin in New York City, which operates at a different scale and price tier entirely, or Gambero Rosso in Marina di Gioiosa Ionica and Alici Restaurant on the Amalfi Coast for how European seafood restaurants at a comparable commitment level operate. BlackSalt's range , approachable to technically considered , puts it closer to the neighborhood-anchor model than the destination-dining model.
Does the Food Travel? A Note on Takeout
Given that BlackSalt runs a fish market alongside its dining room, the off-premise question matters here more than at most D.C. restaurants. Market-and-restaurant hybrids tend to be better positioned for takeout than straight dining-room operations: the kitchen is built around product rotation, portion control, and speed of service that pure destination restaurants aren't optimized for.
For BlackSalt specifically, the dishes the Michelin notes highlight give a reasonable read on what travels and what doesn't. A broth-based mussel dish like the Addie's mussels is the kind of preparation that degrades fast off-premise , the broth pools, the shells cool, the texture shifts. If you're ordering for delivery or collecting to eat at home, the more strong preparations (a market stew with swordfish and shrimp, for example) will hold better than delicate shellfish in broth. The key lime pie travels well by any standard. As a general principle for a $$$ seafood restaurant at this level, eating in is worth the reservation , you get the full dish as the kitchen intended it.
If you're in Washington, D.C. and looking at the seafood category for takeout specifically, Hank's Oyster Bar and Ivy City Smokehouse are worth checking against your criteria. For a full map of the D.C. dining scene, see our full Washington, D.C. restaurants guide.
Ratings & Recognition
- Michelin Plate (2024) , Michelin's recognition for restaurants serving food of good quality; not a star, but a meaningful credentialing signal in a competitive city
- Google Rating: 4.6 from 1,030 reviews , a volume and score combination that's harder to sustain than a high score from fewer reviews; indicates consistent execution over time
Booking
Booking difficulty at BlackSalt is moderate. This is not a restaurant where you need to set a three-week calendar reminder the way you would for Rose's Luxury or a tasting-menu room like Causa, but same-week weekend reservations will be tight. Midweek and early-week tables are more accessible. If you're flexible on timing, you shouldn't have trouble booking within a week or two. The MacArthur Blvd NW address puts it in the Palisades neighborhood , not a downtown or Hill location , so factor travel time if you're coming from central D.C.
For more on what's happening across the city right now, see our Washington, D.C. bars guide, hotels guide, and experiences guide. If you want to explore beyond seafood in the same neighborhood tier, Estuary is worth a look, as is Albi for a strong Middle Eastern-inflected alternative at the $$$$ tier.
Practical Details
| Detail | BlackSalt | Hank's Oyster Bar | Estuary |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cuisine | Seafood | Seafood | Contemporary / Seafood |
| Price Range | $$$ | $$ | $$$ |
| Michelin Recognition | Plate (2024) | Not listed | Check listing |
| Google Rating | 4.6 (1,030 reviews) | Check listing | Check listing |
| Booking Difficulty | Moderate | Lower | Moderate |
| Location | Palisades (NW) | Multiple D.C. locations | Downtown |
| Leading For | Serious seafood, dinner | Casual oysters, lunch | Special occasions |
FAQ
Is BlackSalt worth the price?
- At $$$, BlackSalt delivers Michelin Plate-recognized seafood in a format that works for both casual and considered dining occasions. The combination of a 4.6 Google score across 1,000+ reviews and 2024 Michelin recognition makes it one of the stronger value propositions in D.C.'s mid-to-upper seafood tier. For comparison, Hank's Oyster Bar costs less but trades range for accessibility. BlackSalt is worth it if you want depth in both the shellfish and the kitchen's broader repertoire.
Is BlackSalt good for solo dining?
- Yes. A market-and-restaurant format with a strong counter or bar culture tends to suit solo diners well, and at $$$ the per-head spend is manageable for a solo meal. D.C.'s Palisades neighborhood is quieter than Penn Quarter or Capitol Hill, which makes it a better fit for a focused solo dinner than a high-energy downtown room. If solo dining in a livelier environment matters to you, Rooster & Owl at the same price tier may suit better.
Can BlackSalt accommodate groups?
- Phone contact details are not currently listed in our database, so call ahead directly or book through the restaurant's website to confirm group capacity and any private dining arrangements. As a neighborhood restaurant with a market component, it's more likely built for tables of two to six than for large group events. For larger groups in D.C., venues with dedicated private dining rooms , such as Albi at $$$$ , are worth checking as an alternative.
Is the tasting menu worth it at BlackSalt?
- BlackSalt's format as described in Michelin guidance is à la carte rather than tasting-menu driven. If a structured tasting menu is your priority for a seafood occasion in D.C., Causa at $$$$ or Rooster & Owl at $$$ are better-matched options. BlackSalt's value is in a well-executed, flexible à la carte menu anchored by daily market catch , not in a multi-course tasting progression.
Does BlackSalt handle dietary restrictions?
- With a seafood-focused menu that ranges from shellfish to fin fish preparations, BlackSalt is a strong option for pescatarians. Specific allergen and dietary accommodation policies are not confirmed in our current data , contact the restaurant directly before booking if you have strict requirements. For a strong plant-forward alternative at the same price tier, Oyster Oyster is worth considering, especially for guests who want sustainable, vegetable-driven cooking.
Pearl Picks Nearby
- Estuary , Contemporary seafood in D.C., strong for special occasions
- Hank's Oyster Bar , Lower price point, good for casual oyster sessions
- Ivy City Smokehouse , Smoked fish and market format, different register from BlackSalt
- Albi , Strong alternative if you want Middle Eastern-influenced cooking at $$$$
- Causa , Peruvian tasting menu format at $$$$ for a more structured evening
- Washington, D.C. wineries guide , If you want to extend the evening with a wine stop
Compare BlackSalt
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BlackSalt | Seafood | $$$ | It may be part market, but there’s nothing remotely pedestrian about BlackSalt. This lively restaurant’s menu manages to be both approachable and interesting, with sublime shellfish and a concise selection trawling coast to continent for inspiration. Begin with Addie’s mussels bathed in a well-balanced broth—you’ll be sopping up every last drop. Then move on to the ever-warming, saffron-tinged Provençal market stew bobbing with the day’s finest catch, which may include juicy mussels, tender shrimp and flaky swordfish, among others. Finish this aquatic feast with a slice of their tart key lime pie. Served with blueberry compote and freshly whipped cream along with a sesame seed tuille, it is a rich and delicious way to clinch the meal.; Michelin Plate (2024) | Moderate | — |
| Oyster Oyster | New American, Vegetarian, Vegetarian (Sustainable) | $$$ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Albi | United States, Middle Eastern | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Causa | Peruvian | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Rooster & Owl | Contemporary | $$$ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Rose’s Luxury | New American, Contemporary | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
Comparing your options in Washington, D.C. for this tier.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is BlackSalt worth the price?
At $$$, BlackSalt earns its price point through sourcing quality and Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 — a credential that signals consistent kitchen execution, not just hype. The shellfish and market-driven stews are the strongest value plays on the menu. If you want straightforward high-quality seafood without the tasting-menu commitment, this is a better spend than a comparable price tag at a more theatrical spot like Causa.
Is BlackSalt good for solo dining?
Yes. The market-restaurant format and approachable menu make BlackSalt less awkward for solo diners than a destination tasting-menu room would be. You can eat well without committing to a long, multi-course format. Arrive at off-peak times to secure a seat without advance planning.
Can BlackSalt accommodate groups?
BlackSalt works for small groups of four to six, where the menu's range — shellfish, stews, a la carte mains — gives the table enough variety. Larger parties should check the venue's official channels to confirm capacity and reservation options, as the space has limits typical of a neighbourhood dining room rather than a banquet venue.
Is the tasting menu worth it at BlackSalt?
The venue data does not confirm a tasting menu format at BlackSalt. The menu is described as concise and a la carte in style, with the kitchen drawing from daily market catch. For a structured multi-course seafood progression, Causa offers a more deliberate tasting format; BlackSalt is the better call if you want to order freely from fresh-market-driven dishes.
Does BlackSalt handle dietary restrictions?
As a seafood-focused restaurant with a market component, BlackSalt is a poor fit for guests who avoid fish and shellfish entirely — the menu's identity is built around them. The kitchen's market-driven approach suggests flexibility for pescatarians and those avoiding red meat. Guests with specific allergies should call ahead, as the kitchen works with live shellfish and daily-changing catch.
Recognized By
More restaurants in Washington DC
- JôntWashington D.C.'s most credentialed tasting counter: two Michelin stars, a No. 13 OAD North America ranking, and a 360-selection wine program led by Wine Director Gabriel Corbett. The open-kitchen counter format and Japanese luxury ingredient focus make it the strongest special-occasion booking in the city — but reserve months in advance.
- minibarminibar holds two Michelin stars, a La Liste score of 92, and the #8 ranking in Opinionated About Dining's North America list for 2025. The counter-only tasting menu runs Tuesday through Saturday evenings only, and reservations are among the hardest to secure in Washington, D.C. Book as far ahead as possible and opt into the beverage pairing — the format is built for it.
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