Restaurant in New York City, United States
Chavela’s
250ptsBib Gourmand Mexican at a fair price.

About Chavela’s
Chavela's in Crown Heights earns its Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024) with a creative, ingredient-driven Mexican menu — smoked trout guacamole, crab taquitos, pork short rib tamales — at a $$ price point that makes it one of Brooklyn's stronger arguments for eating well without spending big. With a 4.5 Google rating across nearly 3,000 reviews, the consistency is there. Book it.
The Verdict
If your mental benchmark for Brooklyn Mexican is a solid margarita and decent tacos, Chavela's will reframe your expectations. This Crown Heights spot earns its Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024) not by chasing trends but by executing a creative, ingredient-led Mexican menu at a price point that still qualifies as a genuine deal. At $$, it sits in sharp contrast to the $$$$ omakase-and-tasting-menu circuit that dominates New York City's award-recognized dining. For food-focused diners who want to eat well without spending $200 a head, Chavela's is one of the stronger arguments in the borough. Book it.
Portrait
Walk up to 736 Franklin Ave and the wrought-iron entrance door signals that the interior takes its visual identity seriously. Inside, Mexican tiles ring the bar in dense, saturated color, and a wall of ceramic butterflies anchors the room with the kind of considered decoration that reads less as a set-piece and more as a sustained point of view. The room is the first evidence that Chavela's has thought carefully about what it wants to be: a neighborhood restaurant with enough personality to reward diners who travel specifically for it.
The kitchen is led by Mexico City native Chef Arturo Leonar, whose approach to the menu is where the real argument for booking gets made. The guacamole here is the clearest illustration of the kitchen's instincts: instead of the tableside standard, what arrives is a riff built around smoked trout, pico de gallo, and morita chile salsa. The smoke and heat sit against the fat of the avocado in a way that makes the conventional version feel like a missed opportunity. It is the kind of dish that sets expectations for everything that follows.
Taquitos de cangrejo arrive with sweet crabmeat cut through by spicy salsa verde, and tamales come filled with pork short rib paired with hoja santa and green mole Oaxaqueño sauce. These are not safe choices dressed up with a single flourish — the combinations are genuinely considered, built on the logic of regional Mexican cooking rather than a fusion shortcut. For diners who track what is happening at restaurants like Pujol in Mexico City or follow the ambitious regional Mexican cooking at Alma Fonda Fina in Denver, Chavela's positions itself in a similar creative register at a fraction of the price.
The menu does not abandon familiarity entirely. A subtly sweet mole coats both chicken and enchiladas, and it works because the kitchen treats traditional preparations with the same attention it brings to the more inventive plates. Traditionalists and explorers are both served, which is part of what makes the menu read as coherent rather than scattered.
Seasonal Rotation and When to Visit
Chef Leonar's menu has the kind of ingredient-specificity — smoked trout, crabmeat, fresh hoja santa , that tends to shift with what is available. Hoja santa, the aromatic herb central to the tamale preparation, is at its most expressive in warmer months, and crab quality tracks seasonal availability. This is not a menu that will look identical in January and in June. For explorers who want to eat the kitchen at its most current, visiting in late spring through early fall is the safer bet, when the ingredient sourcing for dishes like the crab taquitos is likely at its peak. If you are planning a specific visit around a dish you have seen online, it is worth checking current menu availability before you go , the kitchen's creativity means the menu moves.
Crown Heights itself has changed significantly over the past decade, and Chavela's has operated through that shift. Franklin Avenue now carries a broader dining corridor than it did when the restaurant first established itself, which means the neighborhood rewards an extended evening. Pair Chavela's with a drink at one of the nearby bars and the trip from Manhattan justifies itself fully. For a broader picture of where to eat and drink around it, our full New York City restaurants guide, bars guide, and hotels guide are useful companions.
How It Sits in the NYC Mexican Field
New York City's Mexican restaurant field runs from the straightforwardly casual to the genuinely ambitious. Oxomoco in Greenpoint operates with more kitchen ambition and a higher price tag. Atla in NoHo pitches at a stylish, lighter daytime crowd. ABC Cocina leans into a fusion-influenced register that reads differently from Chavela's more Mexico-rooted approach. Alta Calidad in Boerum Hill offers a useful Brooklyn-adjacent comparison, though the two kitchens have distinct personalities. For pure, fast birria with no pretension, Birria Landia occupies an entirely different lane. Chavela's sits in the middle of that field , more creative than casual, more accessible than high-end , which is exactly where a Bib Gourmand recognition makes sense. It is the restaurant that earns its place on a serious NYC eating itinerary without requiring a credit card justification.
For context on what Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition means in practice: it identifies restaurants that offer notably good cooking at moderate prices, typically under a defined per-head threshold. Alongside destinations like Emeril's in New Orleans, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Alinea in Chicago, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, The French Laundry in Napa, and Providence in Los Angeles, award-recognized dining in the US covers a wide range of formats and price points. Chavela's Bib Gourmand is a signal that the kitchen delivers at a level above its price, not simply that it is popular.
Google reviews back this up: 4.5 across 2,961 ratings is a volume-tested score that suggests consistent execution rather than a spike driven by novelty. At $$, the risk of a disappointing meal is low and the ceiling is genuinely high.
Know Before You Go
Know Before You Go
- Address: 736 Franklin Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11238
- Cuisine: Mexican
- Price range: $$ (moderate)
- Awards: Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024)
- Google rating: 4.5 / 5 (2,961 reviews)
- Booking difficulty: Easy , walk-ins are possible, but booking ahead on weekends is sensible
- Leading for: Creative Mexican cooking, neighborhood dinners, groups wanting value, solo diners at the bar
- Seasonal note: Menu rotates with ingredient availability; late spring through early fall typically offers the strongest seasonal dishes
- Getting there: Crown Heights, Brooklyn , accessible via the 2/3/4/5 subway lines at Franklin Ave or Eastern Parkway
- More NYC dining: Full NYC restaurants guide | NYC wineries | NYC experiences
Compare Chavela’s
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chavela’s | Mexican | $$ | Ordering guacamole may be a reflex for many, but at Chavela’s, what lands on the table is far from the norm. Mexico City native Chef Arturo Leonar is the brains behind this exceptional riff, which mixes smoked trout, pico de gallo, and morita chile salsa to thrilling effect. His creativity even extends to other dishes, like taquitos de cangrego with sweet crabmeat and spicy salsa verde, as well as tamales with pork short rib and hoja santa with green mole Oaxaqueño sauce. Traditionalists may rest easy, as the subtly sweet mole coating chicken and enchiladas alike is bound to delight. Featuring a wrought-iron entrance door, the décor here is an absolute riot of color thanks to vibrant Mexican tiles surrounding the bar and artistic touches like that wall of ceramic butterflies.; Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024) | Easy | — |
| Le Bernardin | French, Seafood | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Atomix | Modern Korean, Korean | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Eleven Madison Park | French, Vegan | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Masa | Sushi, Japanese | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Per Se | French, Contemporary | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
Comparing your options in New York City for this tier.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Chavela's worth the price?
Yes, clearly. At $$, Chavela's holds a 2024 Michelin Bib Gourmand — the guide's marker for quality cooking at accessible prices. You're getting menu-driven creativity like smoked trout guacamole and crabmeat taquitos at a price point that most comparable Brooklyn spots can't match on ambition.
Can Chavela's accommodate groups?
The colorful, tile-heavy interior at 736 Franklin Ave reads as a festive setting that suits groups, but specific private dining or large-table policies are not confirmed in available data. For parties of six or more, call ahead to check capacity before assuming walk-in availability.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Chavela's?
Chavela's is not a tasting-menu format restaurant — it runs an à la carte menu with dishes like tamales with pork short rib and taquitos de cangrejo. If a set-course progression is what you want, Oxomoco in Greenpoint operates closer to that register. Chavela's is the pick if you want to order around a table.
What should I wear to Chavela's?
Chavela's is a $$ Crown Heights neighborhood restaurant with a decorative, spirited interior. Casual dress is appropriate — this is not a white-tablecloth room. Come as you would to any relaxed Brooklyn dinner, not a formal occasion.
Recognized By
More restaurants in New York City
- Le BernardinLe Bernardin is one of the most consistently awarded seafood restaurants in the world — three Michelin stars, 99.5 points from La Liste, and four New York Times stars held for over 30 years. At $157 for four courses at dinner ($225 for the tasting menu), it is the right call for a formal occasion or a serious seafood meal in Midtown Manhattan, provided you book well in advance.
- AtomixAtomix is the No. 1 restaurant in North America (50 Best, 2025) and one of the hardest reservations in New York: 14 seats, one seating per night, three Michelin stars. Junghyun and Ellia Park's Korean tasting menu pairs precision-sourced ingredients with Korean culinary heritage, explained course by course through hand-designed cards. Book months ahead or plan around a cancellation.
- Eleven Madison ParkEleven Madison Park is the definitive case for plant-based fine dining in New York City: three Michelin stars, a 22,000-bottle wine cellar, and an eight-to-ten course tasting menu in a landmark Art Deco room. Book it for a special occasion with a plant-forward appetite and three hours to spare. Reservations open on the 1st of each month and go within hours.
- Jungsik New YorkJungsik is the restaurant that put progressive Korean fine dining on the New York map, and over a decade in, it still holds that position. With two Michelin stars, a 2025 James Beard Award for Outstanding Chef, and a seasonally rotating nine-course tasting menu in a quietly formal Tribeca room, it earns its $$$$ price point for special occasions and serious dining. Book well in advance.
- DanielDaniel is the benchmark for classic French fine dining in New York: three Michelin stars, a 10,000-bottle cellar, and formal Upper East Side service that has stayed consistent for over 30 years. Book four to six weeks out minimum. At $$$$, it is a genuine special-occasion restaurant, but the wine program alone — 2,000 selections with particular depth in Burgundy and Bordeaux — makes it the strongest wine-and-food pairing destination in its category.
- Per SePer Se is one of New York's two or three most complete special-occasion restaurants: three Michelin stars, Central Park views, and two nine-course tasting menus that change daily at $425 per person. Book exactly one month out — the window fills fast. The salon accepts walk-ins for à la carte if you miss the main dining room.
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