Restaurant in Greenwood, United States
90-year Delta institution. Book if passing through.

Lusco's has anchored Greenwood's dining scene since 1933, making it one of Mississippi's longest-running restaurants. The private curtained booths and Gulf South seafood menu — pompano, shrimp, crab — are best experienced in person; this is not a takeout destination. Book it for a special occasion or when you want regional Delta cooking with genuine historical weight behind it.
Lusco's is one of the most historically significant restaurants in the Mississippi Delta, and if you're passing through Greenwood, it earns a booking — especially for a special occasion or a meal that puts regional Southern cooking in its proper context. The experience leans heavily on atmosphere and legacy rather than contemporary refinement, which means your enjoyment depends on what you're looking for. If you want cutting-edge technique, look elsewhere. If you want a genuine Delta institution that has outlasted generations of diners, this is a rare find.
Lusco's has been operating on Carrollton Avenue since 1933, making it one of the longest-running restaurants in Mississippi and a fixture of Greenwood's food identity for nearly a century. That longevity alone tells you something about its hold on the community. The restaurant is known for its private curtained booths, a layout that gives each table a degree of seclusion that's become part of the Lusco's experience itself — not a gimmick, but a design that has persisted because diners genuinely value it.
The cooking is rooted in Gulf South seafood and Italian-influenced Delta cuisine, a combination that reflects the immigrant history of the Mississippi Delta more accurately than most restaurants in the region. Pompano, shrimp, and crab have historically anchored the menu, prepared in ways that prioritize the ingredient rather than elaborate presentation. This is not destination dining in the tasting-menu sense, but it is the kind of place where the food and the setting together create something that can't be replicated in a larger city.
On the question of takeout: Lusco's is not the kind of restaurant where off-premise dining captures the full value. The curtained booths, the pacing, and the atmosphere are central to why people make the trip. If you're considering takeout as a practical option, it's worth knowing that the seafood dishes that define the menu are leading experienced fresh and in the room. The food may travel adequately, but the rationale for going to Lusco's is the full sit-down experience. Plan accordingly.
Greenwood itself is worth building a trip around. See our full Greenwood restaurants guide, our full Greenwood hotels guide, our full Greenwood bars guide, our full Greenwood wineries guide, and our full Greenwood experiences guide to plan the full visit.
Quick reference: 722 Carrollton Ave, Greenwood, MS 38930. Booking difficulty: Easy. Leading experienced as a sit-down dinner, not takeout.
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lusco's | — | ||
| Le Bernardin | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
| Lazy Bear | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
| Atomix | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
| Per Se | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
| Masa | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
How Lusco's stacks up against the competition.
Greenwood has a small but serious dining scene. Giardina's on Howard Street is the closest peer in terms of history and occasion-dining weight. For a more casual Delta meal, Leflore Restaurant draws locals. If you're willing to drive, Oxford's Square offers significantly more options, but Lusco's on Carrollton Ave remains the destination with the deepest roots in the city.
Lusco's is structured around private curtained booths rather than open seating, which is central to its character as a venue. Bar seating in the conventional sense is not a feature of the Lusco's format. If you want a counter or bar experience, this isn't the right call — book a booth or skip it.
Lusco's is historically associated with Gulf seafood and its house-made Lusco's Pompano Sauce, which has been sold commercially and is the dish detail most consistently tied to the restaurant's identity. Beyond that, specific current menu items are not documented here — call ahead or check with the restaurant directly before visiting.
Lusco's is a long-established Delta dining institution that draws a mix of locals and out-of-towners for special occasions, so smart-casual is a reasonable baseline. The private booth format means you won't be seen by much of the room, but this is not a jeans-and-sneakers venue given its context and history in Greenwood.
Yes — the private curtained booth format makes it one of the better-suited venues in Mississippi for an intimate dinner where you don't want to be on display. It has operated since 1933 on Carrollton Ave, which gives it genuine occasion weight without requiring a flight to a major city. Call ahead to confirm hours and availability before planning around it.
It's workable but not the natural fit. The booth structure at Lusco's is designed for groups and couples, and a solo diner in a curtained booth may feel the format working against them. If you're solo and passing through Greenwood specifically to eat here, it's still worth going — but manage expectations around the solitary booth experience.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.