Restaurant in Miami, United States
Doggi's Arepa Bar
150Pearl PointsCasual Venezuelan on Biscayne. Easy yes.

About Doggi's Arepa Bar
Doggi's Arepa Bar is one of Miami's clearest value-dining decisions: a 4.8 Google rating across 7,500-plus reviews and three consecutive Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats placements (most recently #275 in 2025) back up what the price point promises. Chef Carlos Estevez runs a focused Venezuelan menu on Biscayne Blvd, walk-ins are easy, and the arepa format travels reasonably well for takeout.
The Verdict
For a casual meal on Biscayne Boulevard, Doggi's Arepa Bar is one of the clearest yes-book decisions in Miami's affordable dining options. The price point sits in the budget-friendly range, the Google rating of 4.8 across more than 7,500 reviews signals consistent execution rather than a one-off spike, and Opinionated About Dining has ranked it in its Cheap Eats in North America list three consecutive years (2023, 2024, and 2025, most recently at #275). That kind of sustained recognition at this price tier is rare. If Venezuelan food is what you want in Miami, this is where you should go.
About Doggi's Arepa Bar
Doggi's Arepa Bar sits at 7281 Biscayne Blvd in Miami's MiMo district, chef Carlos Estevez running a focused Venezuelan menu built around arepas — the cornmeal rounds that function as the backbone of Venezuelan street and home cooking. If you've been once and ordered something safe, the return visit is the moment to go wider. Arepas are the format to understand here: the fillings, the texture of the masa, and how the whole thing holds together are what the kitchen has spent years calibrating.
Three consecutive years on Opinionated About Dining's Cheap Eats list matters in practical terms. OAD's cheap eats rankings are crowd-sourced from serious diners rather than generated by a single critic, which means the consistency reflected in that ranking is real and cross-verified. A 4.8 on Google across 7,533 reviews supports the same conclusion. This is not a place that peaked on one viral moment — the numbers suggest steady, repeatable quality.
Takeout and Delivery: Does It Travel?
For takeout, Doggi's Arepa Bar is a sensible choice with one caveat: arepas are at their leading when the exterior still has some structural integrity and the filling is warm. If you're ordering for delivery, eat quickly. The format holds better than, say, a dressed salad or a delicate fish dish, but it's not immune to transit time. Picking up directly from the Biscayne Blvd location is the better move if you're within reasonable distance. Off-premise is worth it for a casual weeknight meal; for a first visit, eating in gives you a better read on the kitchen's output at its intended standard.
If you're planning a group order for the office or a gathering, the price point makes Doggi's one of the more practical options in Miami for feeding several people without a significant spend. The format , individual arepas with distinct fillings , also travels reasonably well for group situations where people have different preferences.
Booking and Logistics
Booking difficulty here is easy. This is not a reservation-dependent operation in the way that Boia De or Cote Miami require weeks of advance planning. Walk-in is the standard approach. The address is 7281 Biscayne Blvd, Miami, FL 33138. Hours are not confirmed in our current data, so check before you go, particularly if you're planning an off-peak visit.
Dress code is casual , this is a neighbourhood arepa bar on Biscayne, not a dining room that requires any particular presentation. Come as you are.
Quick reference: 7281 Biscayne Blvd, Miami, FL 33138 | Walk-in friendly | Booking: easy | Dress: casual | OAD Cheap Eats #275 (2025) | Google 4.8 (7,533 reviews).
How It Compares
Doggi's Arepa Bar occupies a completely different price bracket from most of Miami's critically recognised restaurants. Ariete and Stubborn Seed are both $$$$-tier progressive kitchens where a meal for two will run well over $150 before wine. Los Fuegos by Francis Mallmann is a destination splurge. None of those are the right comparison for what Doggi's is doing, and that's the point: if budget matters, or if you want Venezuelan food specifically, there is no meaningful substitute at this price level in Miami with this level of third-party validation.
Among the mid-tier options, Boia De ($$$) and Cote Miami ($$$) are both worth the step up in spend if the occasion calls for a full sit-down dinner with wine and service. For Venezuelan food specifically, Valencia Luncheria in Norwalk is a useful national-level reference point for what the cuisine can do when executed well. Doggi's holds its own in that conversation, which is what three consecutive OAD placements confirm.
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FAQ
What should I wear to Doggi's Arepa Bar?
- Casual clothes are the norm here. Doggi's is a neighbourhood arepa bar on Biscayne Blvd, not a dining room with dress expectations. Jeans and a t-shirt are perfectly appropriate. This is one area where Doggi's differs sharply from Miami's higher-end options like Ariete or L'Atelier de Joël Robuchon, where smart casual is the expectation.
Can Doggi's Arepa Bar accommodate groups?
- Yes, and the format works well for groups. The individual arepa structure means everyone orders what suits them, and the budget price point makes a group meal here very manageable. Seat count is not confirmed in our current data, so for larger parties of six or more, it's worth calling ahead or arriving early to secure space together.
How far ahead should I book Doggi's Arepa Bar?
- You don't need to book ahead. Doggi's operates as a walk-in venue, which puts it in a different category from Miami's reservation-heavy restaurants. Even with a 4.8 Google rating and OAD recognition, this is accessible dining without the planning overhead of spots like Boia De or Atomix in New York. Peak meal times may mean a short wait, but advance booking is not required.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I wear to Doggi's Arepa Bar?
Come as you are. Doggi's on Biscayne Blvd is a casual arepa counter, not a dress-code operation. Jeans, sneakers, whatever you wore to the beach — all fine. This is OAD-ranked cheap eats territory, not a white-tablecloth room.
Can Doggi's Arepa Bar accommodate groups?
Small to mid-size groups should have no trouble at a casual counter-style spot like this. For larger parties of six or more, arrive early or check directly with the venue, since counter seating can limit flexibility. Groups looking for a private dining setup should consider somewhere like Cote Miami or Boia De instead.
How far ahead should I book Doggi's Arepa Bar?
You don't need to book far ahead — this is a walk-in-friendly spot, not a reservation-dependent room like Boia De. Showing up without a reservation is the standard approach. If you're going at peak weekend hours, arriving early or off-peak is the only real planning required.
What is Doggi's Arepa Bar known for?
Doggi's Arepa Bar is primarily known for Venezualen in Miami.
Location
7281 Biscayne Blvd, Miami, FL 33138
Miami, United States
Compare Doggi's Arepa Bar
| Venue | Price |
|---|---|
| Doggi's Arepa Bar | |
| Cote Miami | $$$ |
| Ariete | $$$$ |
| Boia De | $$$ |
| Stubborn Seed | $$$$ |
| Los Fuegos by Francis Mallmann | $$$$ |
What to weigh when choosing between Doggi's Arepa Bar and alternatives.
Also Consider
- Cote Miami, Korean Steakhouse, Korean, $$$
- Ariete, Modern American, Contemporary, $$$$
- Boia De, Italian, Contemporary, $$$
- Stubborn Seed, Progressive American, Contemporary, $$$$
- Los Fuegos by Francis Mallmann, Argentinian, $$$$
Doggi's Arepa Bar doesn't compete with Miami's $$$$-tier restaurants on price, and that's not a weakness, it's the point. Ariete and Stubborn Seed are both serious progressive kitchens worth the spend for a special-occasion dinner, but they're answering a different question. Los Fuegos by Francis Mallmann is a destination meal at destination prices. If the occasion calls for a splurge with full service and a wine list, those are the rooms to book. Doggi's is the answer when the question is: where can I eat well in Miami without spending $100 per person?
Among the mid-tier set, Boia De ($$$) and Cote Miami ($$$) are both worth the step up in spend if you want a full dinner experience with drinks and service depth. Boia De in particular requires booking weeks out and rewards the effort. Cote Miami is the right call for a group that wants Korean barbecue and a wider drinks programme. Neither overlaps with what Doggi's does. If you want Venezuelan food with genuine third-party validation at a price that doesn't require planning, Doggi's is the only practical answer in Miami at this level.
The decision tree is simple: for a budget meal with OAD-recognised quality, book Doggi's. For a mid-range dinner with wine, look at Boia De or Cote Miami. For a special occasion with serious spend, Ariete or Los Fuegos are the right rooms. Doggi's isn't trying to compete with any of them, and three consecutive OAD Cheap Eats placements confirm it's succeeding on its own terms.
Recognized By
Explore Miami
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