Restaurant in Buenos Aires, Argentina
Two Michelin nods, $ prices. Book it.

Caseros holds back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand awards (2024 and 2025) at a single-dollar price point in San Telmo — making it one of Buenos Aires's clearest value propositions for traditional Argentine cooking. Easy to book and anchored in one of the city's most characterful neighbourhoods, it is the right call when you want Michelin-verified quality without the spend of <a href="https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/don-julio-buenos-aires-restaurant">Don Julio</a> or <a href="https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/aramburu-buenos-aires-restaurant">Aramburu</a>.
Caseros earns two consecutive Michelin Bib Gourmand awards (2024 and 2025) while staying firmly in the $ price tier — that combination is rare enough to make it one of the clearest value decisions in Buenos Aires dining right now. If you want traditional Argentine cooking executed at a level that Michelin's inspectors have returned to verify twice, and you want to spend a fraction of what Don Julio or Aramburu will cost you, book Caseros. Booking difficulty is rated Easy, so there is no reason to overthink the timing.
Caseros sits on Avenida Caseros in the San Telmo district, one of Buenos Aires's oldest and most densely characterful barrios. The address alone signals something: this is a neighbourhood restaurant in the truest sense, a place that serves the people who live nearby as much as the visitors who seek it out. San Telmo is the part of the city where the colonial street grid is still legible, where the Feria de San Telmo spills antique furniture and leather goods onto the cobblestones each Sunday, and where the restaurants that last tend to do so because the locals keep returning rather than because the tourist circuit sustains them. Caseros belongs to that tradition.
The physical address — Av. Caseros 486 , puts the restaurant close to Parque Lezama, a green anchor at the southern edge of San Telmo that gives the immediate block a slightly quieter residential quality compared to the louder, more trafficked stretches closer to Defensa. For a special occasion or a deliberate dinner rather than a casual drop-in, that spatial setting matters: the surroundings do not agitate the experience before you have even sat down. The room itself carries the spatial logic typical of Buenos Aires neighbourhood dining , expect a scale that prioritises intimacy over volume, the kind of layout where a table for two feels considered rather than crammed, and where the noise level stays at a level that allows conversation. For a date or a celebratory meal with a small group, that environment works in your favour.
The cuisine classification is Traditional Cuisine, which in the Buenos Aires context means the kitchen is working with the Argentine culinary canon rather than reimagining it. This is a meaningful distinction when you are deciding where to book. Trescha or Crizia will take you somewhere more conceptually ambitious; Caseros will feed you well in the register that Buenos Aires has been refining for generations. The Bib Gourmand, which Michelin specifically awards to restaurants offering good food at moderate prices, confirms that the kitchen is not simply coasting on tradition , the execution justifies the recognition.
Two consecutive Bib Gourmands matter beyond the badge. Michelin's inspectors revisit. The 2025 award, following the 2024, means the kitchen held its level across a full year of service. That kind of consistency at a single-dollar price point is the practical trust signal here: you are not gambling on a one-season flash of form. At a Google rating of 4.3 across 1,660 reviews, the volume of feedback also suggests this is not a place that polarises , the score reflects a broad, repeated customer base returning with positive results.
For a special occasion in this price tier, Caseros occupies a position that few Buenos Aires restaurants can match. A Bib Gourmand dinner at these prices means you can allocate the budget saved toward accommodation, wine, or another meal entirely. If you are planning a trip that includes both a high-end steakhouse experience and a more grounded local dinner, Caseros is the obvious candidate for the latter slot. Consider pairing it with a night at one of the properties in our Buenos Aires hotels guide, and rounding the visit with the broader dining context in our full Buenos Aires restaurants guide.
San Telmo's food and drink scene extends well beyond dinner. The Buenos Aires bars guide covers the neighbourhood's late-night options if you want to extend the evening. And if Caseros prompts an interest in where traditional Argentine cooking sits in the broader national picture, the restaurants at Azafrán in Mendoza and La Bamba de Areco offer useful regional comparisons for a longer Argentina itinerary. For wine context beyond the city, the Buenos Aires wineries guide and Cavas Wine Lodge in Alto Agrelo are worth consulting. Those planning a wider Argentina trip can also look at Awasi Iguazu, El Colibri in Santa Catalina, and EOLO in El Calafate for dining beyond the capital. For those interested in how traditional cuisine earns Michelin recognition in other contexts, Cave à Vin & à Manger in Narbonne and Auberge Grand'Maison in Mûr-de-Bretagne offer instructive European parallels.
The neighbourhood anchor dimension of Caseros is worth taking seriously when you decide how to frame the booking. This is not a restaurant that performs for tourists; it is a restaurant that has earned its Michelin recognition while remaining oriented toward the people of San Telmo. That is a different kind of confidence from a place that has optimised for the reservation-app crowd. Come in that spirit and the experience will read correctly.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Caseros | Traditional Cuisine | $ | Michelin Bib Gourmand (2025); Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024) | Easy | — |
| Don Julio | Argentinian Steakhouse | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Aramburu | Modern Argentinian, Creative | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| El Preferido de Palermo | Argentinian, Traditional Cuisine | $$ | Unknown | — | |
| Elena | South American, Steakhouse | $$$ | Unknown | — | |
| La Carniceria | Argentinian Steakhouse, Meats and Grills | $$ | Unknown | — |
A quick look at how Caseros measures up.
For grilled meat at a higher price point, Don Julio is the go-to comparison and consistently draws longer queues. El Preferido de Palermo offers a similar traditional-cuisine register at comparable value. La Carniceria suits groups who want a focused, carnivore-forward format. Caseros is the call if back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition at $ pricing is the deciding factor.
No dietary information is documented in the venue record. Given the traditional Argentine cuisine format, meat-heavy preparation is standard in this category. Vegetarians and those with serious allergies should check the venue's official channels before booking — the address is Av. Caseros 486, San Telmo, but no phone or website is currently listed in the public record.
Caseros sits at Av. Caseros 486 in San Telmo, one of Buenos Aires's oldest barrios, so factor in neighbourhood foot traffic and arrive with a reservation if possible. The $ price tier makes it one of the most accessible Michelin Bib Gourmand addresses in the city — two consecutive awards (2024, 2025) confirm consistency, not a one-season fluke. Come expecting a traditional format, not a tasting-menu or fusion experience.
No tasting menu format is confirmed in the venue data, and assuming one exists at a $ price-tier traditional Argentine restaurant would be misleading. Caseros's Bib Gourmand recognition is specifically awarded for quality at accessible prices, which typically signals a shorter, à la carte or set-menu format rather than a multi-course progression. If a tasting menu is your priority, Aramburu is the Buenos Aires address built around that format.
Specific dishes are not documented in the venue record, so any menu recommendation here would be fabricated. What is confirmed: Caseros serves traditional cuisine, holds back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition (2024 and 2025), and prices at $. That award specifically flags dishes that represent strong value, so ordering from whatever the kitchen signals as the day's focus is the practical approach.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.