Restaurant in San Francisco, United States
Gary Danko
2,035Pearl PointsCall ahead. Dress up. Worth it.

About Gary Danko
Gary Danko is San Francisco's most complete tableside fine dining experience, with caviar service, a cheese cart, and flambéed desserts delivered by dark-suited servers in a formal Fisherman's Wharf room open since 1999. Book by phone up to two months out — demand is consistent and phone reservations get priority. Elegant attire is required; the prix-fixe runs three to five courses.
Book the Phone Line First — That's the Whole Strategy
If you're planning a first visit to Gary Danko, the single most useful thing to know is this: phone reservations get priority. The restaurant opens its phone lines Monday through Friday from 10 a.m. to 11 p.m., and Saturday and Sunday from 2 to 10 p.m. Tables open up to two months in advance, and at a $$$$ price point with AAA 5 Diamond and La Liste recognition, demand is consistent. Call on the day your two-month window opens, early in the morning shift, and you'll have the leading shot at a prime Friday or Saturday table. Online reservations exist but are treated as secondary. For a first-timer who wants the full room experience — suited servers, cheese trolley arriving tableside, the works, phone is the move.
What to Expect When You Walk In
Gary Danko opened at 800 North Point Street in San Francisco's Fisherman's Wharf in 1999, and twenty-six years in, the dining room still operates with a formality that's increasingly rare at this price tier. Servers wear dark suits. The room is warm and composed. The dress code is enforced: elegant attire is expected, which means jackets or suits for men, and trousers, skirts, or dresses for women. If you show up underdressed, you'll feel it immediately, this is not a room that softens its expectations for anyone.
The format is prix-fixe, three to five courses, with enough options across appetizer, seafood, meat, and dessert categories that the menu rarely feels constraining. Diners who don't want to choose can hand the meal over to the chef's tasting menu. The visual anchors of the experience are theatrical: caviar service is presented tableside, there's a cheese cart that rolls to your table with serious selection depth, and flambéed desserts are finished in the room. For a first-timer, this is the version of fine dining where the production value is part of what you're paying for, and it's executed with enough consistency to justify the cost.
The wine program is substantial. Wine Director Aaron Babcock oversees a list of approximately 2,900 selections with 15,000 bottles in inventory, with particular depth in Burgundy, California, Bordeaux, Rhône, Italy, Champagne, Germany, and Austria. Pricing is in the $$$ tier, many bottles above $100, and corkage runs $100 if you bring your own. This is not a list you scroll through quickly; budget time to engage with it or ask Sommelier Carson Pavek or Robert Vinograd for direction.
The Verdict on Value
Gary Danko holds a Michelin Plate (2025), 80 points on La Liste's 2026 ranking (up from 85 in 2025, note the directional shift), and Opinionated About Dining placed it at #301 in North America for 2025, down from #186 in 2024. It also carries a World of Fine Wine 3-Star Accreditation and a Google rating of 4.6 across more than 2,000 reviews. The awards picture is strong but not at the level of three-Michelin-star peers in the city. What Gary Danko offers instead is consistency, a complete tableside experience, and a room that still feels like an occasion rather than a transaction. For a first-timer to San Francisco's fine dining scene, it's one of the most legible introductions to the format, the service is warm and explained, the menu is readable, and nothing feels arbitrary or conceptually demanding.
For context against comparable California peers: The French Laundry in Napa sits at a higher Michelin tier and a higher price point, with a more demanding booking window. Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg leans harder into agricultural provenance and is a different kind of commitment. Gary Danko sits comfortably between those experiences and a standard $$$$ city restaurant, more theatrical than most, less conceptually rigorous than either of those two.
If you're considering Gary Danko alongside other San Francisco options at the same price tier, note that Lazy Bear runs a communal-table format that's a fundamentally different experience. Gary Danko is for the reader who wants a private table, formal service, and a classic structure. For guests who want something more forward-thinking in its cooking approach, Sorrel or Sons & Daughters are worth considering at a slightly lower price point.
Practical Details for Your Visit
Gary Danko serves dinner only, Thursday through Monday, 5 to 10 p.m. (closed Tuesday and Wednesday). It is located at Fisherman's Wharf, which is a tourist-dense part of the city, so plan your arrival accordingly, rideshare drop-off is direct, but parking and foot traffic in the area can add time. The restaurant is a Relais & Châteaux member, which gives it a hotel-adjacent level of service culture that translates into attentive pacing and staff who are trained to read the table. General Manager Greg Lopez oversees the floor. If you have specific dietary requirements or a special occasion, note it when you book, the kitchen is experienced with accommodating both.
For those exploring San Francisco's wider dining and hospitality options, Pearl's full San Francisco restaurants guide covers the breadth of the city's current scene, alongside guides for hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences. If you're comparing Gary Danko against fine dining options in other cities, Le Bernardin in New York City, Providence in Los Angeles, and Alinea in Chicago each represent a different point on the spectrum of what $$$$ fine dining delivers in the US. Gary Danko's closest analogue in spirit, classic technique, formal room, theatrical service touches, is probably Le Bernardin, though the cuisine styles differ.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Gary Danko good for solo dining?
Yes, though you should request bar seating when you book. The prix-fixe format — three to five courses — works well solo because the pacing is controlled and the room is formal enough that dining alone doesn't feel awkward. At $$$$ per head with a 15,000-bottle wine inventory, it's one of the more considered solo splurges in San Francisco, but Quince or Benu are stronger picks if you want a more chef-driven tasting experience rather than tableside theatre.
What should I wear to Gary Danko?
The dress code is explicitly elegant: jackets or suits for men, trousers, skirts, or dresses for women. This is one of the few San Francisco restaurants where showing up in anything less will likely get you noticed for the wrong reasons. Don't treat this as a technicality — the room runs dark suits on the floor staff, and the overall format matches the formality.
Can I eat at the bar at Gary Danko?
Bar seating is available and offers the same prix-fixe menu as the main dining room. It's a practical option for solo diners or last-minute visits, since bar spots can be easier to secure than a main room reservation. That said, if your priority is the full tableside experience — cheese cart, caviar service, flambéed desserts — the dining room is where that plays out properly.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Gary Danko?
If you want the kitchen to decide, the chef's tasting menu is the cleaner choice over building your own three-to-five course prix-fixe. Gary Danko holds a Michelin Plate (2025), 80 La Liste points (2026), and AAA 5 Diamond recognition — credentials that support the $$$$ price, though the format skews celebratory rather than cutting-edge. For more ambitious tasting menu cooking at a comparable price point, Benu or Atelier Crenn will push further; Gary Danko rewards you with polish, tableside ritual, and a 2,900-label wine list instead.
Location
800 North Point St, San Francisco, CA 94109
San Francisco, United States
Compare Gary Danko
| Venue | Awards | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Gary Danko | $$$$ | |
| Lazy Bear | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ |
| Atelier Crenn | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ |
| Benu | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ |
| Quince | Michelin 3 Star | $$$$ |
| Saison | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ |
What to weigh when choosing between Gary Danko and alternatives.
Also Consider
- Lazy Bear, Progressive American, Contemporary, $$$$
- Atelier Crenn, Modern French, Contemporary, $$$$
- Benu, French - Chinese, Asian, $$$$
- Quince, Italian, Contemporary, $$$$
- Saison, Progressive American, Californian, $$$$
At San Francisco's $$$$ tier, Gary Danko is the clearest choice if you want formal, French-rooted cooking with theatrical tableside service and a room that reads as a special occasion for any guest, regardless of their fine dining experience. It's more legible and less conceptually demanding than Atelier Crenn, which runs a poetic tasting menu format that rewards guests already comfortable with avant-garde French cooking. Benu sits at a higher Michelin tier (three stars) and delivers a more technically precise and conceptually specific experience, if Michelin standing and cutting-edge technique are your priorities, Benu is the stronger pick, though it's a harder booking and a more demanding experience.
Quince is the closest peer to Gary Danko in terms of classical technique and formal room atmosphere, with an Italian rather than French foundation. If you're deciding between the two, Quince edges ahead on Michelin recognition; Gary Danko counters with more theatrical service moments and a wine list with greater depth and breadth. Saison and Lazy Bear are both progressive in approach, Saison around live-fire Californian cooking, Lazy Bear around a communal table format, and are better suited to diners who want something less conventional. Gary Danko is the right call if you want a private table, formal pacing, and a menu structure you can navigate without prior briefing.
On booking difficulty, all five venues are hard, but Gary Danko's two-month window with phone priority gives it a slight edge in accessibility over Benu and Saison, which often fill faster for their more limited seatings. For guests newer to San Francisco's fine dining scene or celebrating a milestone, Gary Danko offers the most reliable return on the investment: the experience is consistent, the service is warm without being stiff, and the production value, cheese cart, caviar, flambéed finishes, is visible and memorable in a way that abstract tasting menus often are not. For guests who've already worked through the city's top tier and want something more progressive, Protégé or The Morris offer strong alternatives at a slightly different price and format.
Hours
- Monday
- 5–10 pm
- Tuesday
- Closed
- Wednesday
- Closed
- Thursday
- 5–10 pm
- Friday
- 5–10 pm
- Saturday
- 5–10 pm
- Sunday
- 5–10 pm
Recognized By
Explore San Francisco
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