Restaurant in Los Angeles, United States
Dave's Hot Chicken
150Pearl PointsCritically ranked fast-casual. No reservation needed.

About Dave's Hot Chicken
Dave's Hot Chicken at 131 S Central Ave has earned three consecutive years of Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats recognition and a 4.8 Google rating across nearly 1,000 reviews. No reservation needed, open late on weekends, and priced accessibly — this is the credible fast-casual call in Los Angeles. For spice-tolerant food explorers, it delivers more than its format suggests.
The Verdict
Dave's Hot Chicken is one of the few fast-casual spots in Los Angeles that has earned genuine critical recognition — not just social media attention. Ranked #413 on Opinionated About Dining's Cheap Eats in North America list for 2025 (and consecutively recognised since 2023), it delivers a level of quality that most restaurants at this price tier don't come close to matching. If you're in Los Angeles and want a meal that costs very little, takes almost no planning, and still has something credible behind it, this is where to go. For a deeper look at what else the city has to offer, see our full Los Angeles restaurants guide.
About Dave's Hot Chicken
The window for getting a seat without a long wait is smaller than you'd think for a counter-service spot. The Central Ave location in downtown Los Angeles operates seven days a week — opening at 10 am daily, running until 11 pm Sunday through Thursday, and until midnight on Friday and Saturday. That Friday and Saturday midnight close is a genuine asset if you're eating late after a show or a night out and want something substantial. The extended weekend hours are one of the more practical features of this location, and worth factoring into your evening plans. For where to stay nearby, our full Los Angeles hotels guide has you covered.
Chef Dave Kopushyan built the concept around Nashville-style hot chicken, a format with deep roots in Southern cooking. The tradition , spiced paste applied to fried chicken at varying heat levels , originated in Nashville and has been adopted across the country, but Dave's iteration is what put Los Angeles firmly on that map. For context on the original sources, Prince's Hot Chicken Shack in Knoxville and Bolton's Spicy Chicken and Fish in Nashville represent the format's heritage. Dave's is not trying to replicate those , it has its own approach, refined enough to earn three consecutive years of Opinionated About Dining recognition, which is a harder credential to earn in the cheap eats category than most people assume.
The heat-level system is the key decision you'll make when ordering. The range typically runs from no spice through to a reaper-level option that is genuinely punishing for most diners. Pick your level honestly rather than aspirationally , the chicken itself is the point, and the spice should amplify it, not obscure it. This is a format where the quality of the fry matters as much as the heat, and Dave's has consistently been recognised for getting that balance right. For food-forward travellers planning a broader Los Angeles itinerary, pairing this with something like Holbox or Kato gives you a useful spread across price points and cuisines.
The Google rating of 4.8 across 960 reviews is a supporting signal worth noting. That's a high average on a meaningful sample size, and it holds up across the time period that covers the OAD recognitions. For a counter-service operation, that kind of sustained rating is harder to maintain than at a sit-down restaurant where service recovery is easier. It tells you the consistency is real, not just a launch-period spike.
Booking is not required , this is a walk-in format. The ease of access is a feature, not a compromise. You don't need a reservation, a confirmation email, or a credit card hold. You show up, you order, you eat. That makes it a strong call for solo diners, spontaneous plans, or anyone who finds the reservation-heavy side of Los Angeles dining exhausting. For those who want the opposite experience , planned, multi-course, high-touch , venues like Providence, Somni, or Osteria Mozza occupy the other end of the spectrum. Dave's sits at the fast-casual end but with credentials that most casual spots don't have.
If you're building a broader food trip and want to compare across cities, the calibre of Dave's OAD recognition puts it in a different conversation than most quick-service options. That's not to overstate it , this is fried chicken, not a tasting menu , but within its category, it performs at a level that justifies the trip from anywhere in the city. Explorers planning across the West Coast should also consider Lazy Bear in San Francisco or Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg for contrast. And if your trip extends east, Le Bernardin in New York City, Smyth in Chicago, or Emeril's in New Orleans are worth the detour. Closer to home, The French Laundry in Napa represents the ceiling of California fine dining if that's where your itinerary ends up. For everything else in the city, browse our Los Angeles bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide to round out your trip.
Ratings and Recognition
- Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats North America , #413 (2025)
- Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats North America , #418 (2024)
- Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats North America , Recommended (2023)
- Google: 4.8 / 5 (960 reviews)
Booking and Practical Details
No reservation needed. Walk in at 131 S Central Ave, Los Angeles, CA 90012. Open Monday through Thursday and Sunday 10 am to 11 pm; Friday and Saturday 10 am to midnight. The late-night weekend hours make it a reliable option when other kitchens have closed. No dress code applies. The format suits solo diners, pairs, and small groups equally well.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Dave's Hot Chicken good for a special occasion?
Not if you need a sit-down dinner format. Dave's is counter-service with no reservations, so it doesn't fit a traditional celebratory meal. That said, it has earned consecutive OAD Cheap Eats rankings (2023, 2024, and #413 in 2025), which makes it a credible destination for a casual food-focused outing with someone who takes regional cooking seriously.
What should I order at Dave's Hot Chicken?
The menu centers on hot chicken in varying heat levels — that's the core format here. Chef Dave Kopushyan built the concept around spice-level selection, so committing to a heat level that actually challenges you is the point. Going too mild undersells the experience; going too hot on a first visit is a common mistake.
Is Dave's Hot Chicken good for solo dining?
Yes, and it's one of the better solo options at this price tier. Counter-service means no awkward table-for-one dynamics, and the Central Ave location at 131 S Central Ave is accessible without a group. OAD's repeated recognition confirms this isn't just a novelty stop — it holds up as a solo meal worth making.
How far ahead should I book Dave's Hot Chicken?
No booking required or available. Walk in at 131 S Central Ave, Los Angeles. The practical question is timing: arriving closer to opening at 10 am or just after a peak lunch rush will reduce your wait. Friday and Saturday are open until midnight, giving you more flexibility than most comparable spots.
What are alternatives to Dave's Hot Chicken in Los Angeles?
For hot chicken specifically, this is one of the few LA spots with documented critical recognition at the OAD level. If you want a step up in format and price, Holbox (also OAD-recognized) offers a different regional American tradition — seafood rather than chicken — and is a fair comparison for serious cheap-eats dining. For something completely different at the high end, Kato or Sushi Kaneyoshi serve a different purpose entirely.
Is lunch or dinner better at Dave's Hot Chicken?
Lunch on a weekday is the practical call if you want a shorter wait. The kitchen is consistent across service periods given the counter format, so food quality isn't the variable — crowd volume is. Friday and Saturday dinner runs until midnight, which makes it a viable late option when most kitchens in the area have closed.
Can I eat at the bar at Dave's Hot Chicken?
There is no bar at Dave's Hot Chicken. This is a counter-service fast-casual operation — you order at the counter, then eat at available seating. The format is closer to a walk-up window than a sit-down restaurant, which is part of what the OAD Cheap Eats ranking reflects.
Location
131 S Central Ave, Los Angeles, CA 90012
Los Angeles, United States
Compare Dave's Hot Chicken
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dave's Hot Chicken | Hot Chicken | Easy | ||
| Kato | New Taiwanese, Asian | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown |
| Hayato | Japanese | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown |
| Vespertine | Progressive, Contemporary | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown |
| Holbox | Mexican Seafood, Mexican | $$ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown |
| Sushi Kaneyoshi | Sushi, Japanese | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Also Consider
- Kato, New Taiwanese, Asian, $$$$
- Hayato, Japanese, $$$$
- Vespertine, Progressive, Contemporary, $$$$
- Holbox, Mexican Seafood, Mexican, $$
- Sushi Kaneyoshi, Sushi, Japanese, $$$$
Dave's Hot Chicken operates at a fundamentally different price point than most of the recognised restaurants in Los Angeles, and that's the starting comparison to make. Kato, Hayato, Vespertine, and Sushi Kaneyoshi are all $$$$ operations requiring advance booking, significant spend, and a different kind of planning. Dave's requires none of that. If your question is where to spend a serious dinner budget in Los Angeles, those are the venues to assess. If your question is where to eat something genuinely well-made without a reservation or a high spend, Dave's is a stronger answer than anything in that fine-dining tier.
The closest peer comparison in the casual tier is Holbox, which sits at $$ and has its own critical following for Mexican seafood. Holbox and Dave's serve entirely different cuisines, but both make the case that the most interesting eating in Los Angeles doesn't require a four-figure dinner bill. Between the two, Holbox suits diners who want a broader menu and a sit-down pace; Dave's suits diners who want speed, heat, and a focused format. Neither requires booking, which puts both above most casual competitors on accessibility alone.
For the food-focused traveller trying to build an itinerary across price points, the practical recommendation is this: use Dave's as your casual anchor and build up from there. It's easy to book (no booking required), low cost, and has the OAD credentials to justify the trip. Pair it with one of the $$$$ options, Kato for tasting-menu precision, Vespertine for a conceptual experience, Hayato or Sushi Kaneyoshi for Japanese formality, and you get a meaningful range across your visit without doubling up on similar experiences.
Hours
- Monday
- 10 am–11 pm
- Tuesday
- 10 am–11 pm
- Wednesday
- 10 am–11 pm
- Thursday
- 10 am–11 pm
- Friday
- 10 am–12 am
- Saturday
- 10 am–12 am
- Sunday
- 10 am–11 pm
Recognized By
Explore Los Angeles
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