Restaurant in Chicago, United States
Tzuco
365Pearl PointsCreative Mexican that earns its OAD ranking.

About Tzuco
Tzuco delivers technically serious Mexican cooking at a $$ price point that's hard to match in Chicago. Carlos Gaytán — the first Mexican-born Michelin-starred chef in the US — runs a warm, ceramics-filled room on N State St where the chef's counter is the seat to request. OAD-ranked #304 in North America's casual category for 2025, it's an easy yes for a return visit.
Verdict
Tzuco is the right call for Mexican cooking that operates at a higher technical register than most of what Chicago offers at the $$ price point. Carlos Gaytán — the first Mexican-born chef to earn a Michelin star in the United States — runs a room on N State St that draws consistent crowds for good reason: the food is precise, the space is considered, the value is hard to argue. If you've eaten here once and liked it, come back and sit at the chef's counter. That's where the kitchen shows you what it can actually do.
About Tzuco
The room itself does a lot of work before the food arrives. Earth tones, ceramics imported from Mexico, generous seating capacity create a space that feels warm without being casual in the dismissive sense. It's the kind of dining room that handles a date night and a larger group with equal ease, because the layout gives you options: a main floor that accommodates volume without sacrificing comfort, a chef's counter that puts you directly in the action. If you're returning, the counter is the upgrade worth requesting. Gaytán runs his team from there, the cooking you see plated in front of you reads differently than the same dish arriving from across the room.
The culinary case for Tzuco sits in how the kitchen handles Mexican technique without flattening it into something familiar and safe. The OAD guide, which ranked Tzuco #304 in North America's casual category for 2025, up from #496 in 2024, singles out specific dishes that illustrate this: hamachi in cactus aguachile, tinga de pollo with fried masa and black beans, grilled octopus tacos with puffed chicharron, horchata tres leches for dessert. These are not fusion detours. They are dishes that understand their source material and apply technique to sharpen it. The aguachile format, for instance, is traditionally aggressive and acidic; using cactus as the base liquid requires a kitchen that knows what it's doing with acidity and balance. That's a detail that separates Tzuco from the broader field of upscale-leaning Mexican restaurants in Chicago.
For context on where Tzuco sits in the wider conversation about serious Mexican cooking, Pujol in Mexico City is the reference point that most chefs in this tradition measure themselves against. Gaytán is doing something different, more approachable, less ceremonial, but the technical seriousness is comparable in terms of ambition. Domestically, Alma Fonda Fina in Denver is the closest analogue in terms of price tier and creative direction. In Chicago specifically, Topolobampo operates at a higher price point and with more formal service, while Cariño and Chilam Balam pitch themselves differently in terms of format and scale. Big Star and Birrieria Zaragoza are excellent but operating in a different register entirely. Tzuco occupies a specific middle ground: more technically ambitious than casual taquerias, more accessible in price and atmosphere than Topolobampo.
The Michelin Plate designation (2024) is the floor, not the ceiling. The OAD ranking jump from #496 to #304 in a single year suggests the kitchen is moving in the right direction, not coasting. For a $$ restaurant in a city with no shortage of options at every price tier, that trajectory matters when you're deciding where to spend a Friday or Saturday evening.
Saturday and Sunday brunch (10am–2pm) opens a second window into the kitchen that most diners skip. If you've only been for dinner, brunch is worth exploring as a lower-pressure way to revisit the counter and see how the team handles a different service rhythm. Weekday dinners run Monday through Thursday until 10pm, with Friday and Saturday extending to 11pm, which gives you flexibility if you're coming from the theatre district or fitting this into a longer evening.
For anyone building a broader Chicago itinerary around food and hospitality, see our full Chicago restaurants guide, hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide. If you're benchmarking serious American restaurant cooking more broadly, Le Bernardin in New York, The French Laundry in Napa, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, Providence in Los Angeles, and Emeril's in New Orleans give you the wider field.
Know Before You Go
- Address: 720 N State St, Chicago, IL 60654
- Cuisine: Mexican
- Price range: $$
- Hours: Mon–Thu 4–10pm; Fri 4–11pm; Sat 10am–2pm and 4–11pm; Sun 10am–2pm and 4–9pm
- Booking difficulty: Easy
- Leading seat: Chef's counter (request when booking)
- Awards: Michelin Plate (2024); OAD Casual North America #304 (2025)
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Tzuco good for solo dining?
Yes, the chef's counter is specifically the seat to request. Opinionated About Dining calls it the best perch in the house, where Chef Carlos Gaytán leads his team directly. Solo diners get full visibility into the kitchen and a natural focal point without needing a companion to carry the experience.
Can Tzuco accommodate groups?
Seating capacity is described as ample, so larger parties are manageable here. That said, the chef's counter is a finite resource, so groups who want that experience should book early and confirm counter availability. The main dining room handles groups without issue at the $$ price point.
What should I wear to Tzuco?
The room runs warm and energetic rather than formal, with earth tones and imported ceramics setting a relaxed tone. There's no documented dress code, so clean casual to smart casual fits the space. Given the $$ price point, this is not a jacket-required situation.
Is Tzuco good for a special occasion?
It works well for occasions where you want a genuine chef-driven meal without the four-figure bill. Carlos Gaytán is actively present on the line, which adds weight to the evening. If you need private dining or a more ceremonial format, consider whether the open dining room fits your occasion.
What are alternatives to Tzuco in Chicago?
Kasama is the most direct comparison for chef-driven cooking at an accessible price point, though its format skews more café-to-tasting-menu. For a step up in formality and price, Boka covers New American in the same River North area. Alinea and Smyth are in a different tier entirely, both in price and format.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Tzuco?
The venue database does not document a formal tasting menu at Tzuco. The format appears to be à la carte, with dishes like hamachi aguachile and grilled octopus tacos highlighted by OAD reviewers. At $$, the à la carte approach offers flexibility without committing to a set price.
Is lunch or dinner better at Tzuco?
Dinner runs five nights a week and is the core experience. Saturday and Sunday lunch (10 am–2 pm) extends the option on weekends, but the OAD recognition and chef's counter dynamic are oriented around the dinner service. If your goal is the full Gaytán-led kitchen experience, dinner is the right call.
Location
720 N State St, Chicago, IL 60654
Chicago, United States
Compare Tzuco
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tzuco | Mexican | $$ | Easy |
| Alinea | Progressive American, Creative | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Smyth | Progressive American, Contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Kasama | Filipino | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Next Restaurant | American Cuisine | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Boka | New American, Contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown |
Comparing your options in Chicago for this tier.
Also Consider
- Alinea, Progressive American, Creative, $$$$
- Smyth, Progressive American, Contemporary, $$$$
- Kasama, Filipino, $$$$
- Next Restaurant, American Cuisine, $$$$
- Boka, New American, Contemporary, $$$$
Most of Tzuco's direct comparison set in Chicago sits at $$$$, which makes the value equation straightforward: Tzuco delivers a chef-driven, award-tracked dining experience at half the price of Alinea, Smyth, Next Restaurant, and Boka. If your priority is spending the least to eat at a kitchen with genuine culinary credentials in Chicago, Tzuco is the answer. Alinea is the city's most technically ambitious room, but it requires significant pre-commitment in both price and format. Smyth and Boka offer contemporary American cooking with strong seasonal programs, but neither competes on value at the $$ level.
Kasama is the most interesting lateral comparison: a Filipino-American tasting menu at $$$$ with serious critical recognition, operating at a different cuisine tradition but with a similar chef-driven identity. If you're deciding between the two, the question is format, Kasama locks you into a full tasting experience, Tzuco gives you flexibility to order around the counter. For a first visit to either city neighbourhood, Tzuco is the lower-friction entry. Kasama rewards the commitment if you're willing to plan ahead and spend more.
Within Mexican specifically, Topolobampo is the obvious peer conversation: Rick Bayless's fine-dining Mexican room operates at a higher price point with more formal service. If the occasion calls for ceremony, Topolobampo is the choice. If you want technical cooking without the formality tax, Tzuco wins on value. For readers who've already done both and want to range wider in Chicago, our full Chicago restaurants guide covers the broader field.
Hours
- Monday
- 4–10 pm
- Tuesday
- 4–10 pm
- Wednesday
- 4–10 pm
- Thursday
- 4–10 pm
- Friday
- 4–11 pm
- Saturday
- 10 am–2 pm, 4–11 pm
- Sunday
- 10 am–2 pm, 4–9 pm
Recognized By
Explore Chicago
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