Restaurant in New York City, United States
Hamburger America
405Pearl PointsThe fried onion burger worth the detour.

About Hamburger America
George Motz's SoHo burger restaurant earns its Opinionated About Dining 2025 Cheap Eats recognition with a focused menu built around the Oklahoma fried onion burger: crisp-edged patty, layered onions, American cheese, squishy bun. Easy to book and casually priced, it is the best argument in New York for treating a single regional burger style as a serious culinary subject.
The Verdict
Hamburger America earns a place on your SoHo itinerary if you care about American burger history done with intention. George Motz's West Houston Street spot has been recognized by Opinionated About Dining's 2025 Cheap Eats in North America list, which puts it in company that demands attention. The fried onion burger — a staple from Oklahoma's diner tradition — is the thing to order, and it delivers: a crisp-edged patty, a squishy bun, American cheese, and a layered pile of onions ranging from raw to caramelized to frizzled. Book it casually; this is an easy reservation. But don't skip it because it looks simple on paper.
Portrait
The fried onion burger progression at Hamburger America is the closest thing this restaurant has to a tasting menu arc, and it works because each element in the burger builds on the last. The patty arrives with a deeply seared crust that gives way to a beefy, yielding center. The onions are the real technical decision here: raw for bite and sharpness, caramelized for sweetness and body, frizzled for texture and intensity. American cheese is not an afterthought , it melts into the patty rather than sitting on leading of it. The bun absorbs the fat without collapsing. That sequence of flavors and textures is deliberate, not accidental, and it reflects Motz's years of research into regional American burger traditions.
The room reinforces the point. Vinyl floor tiles, yellow stools, and black-and-white photographs of famous American burger shops line the walls , not as decoration but as argument. Motz spent years documenting burger culture across the United States before opening this restaurant, and the interior reads like the physical conclusion of that research. For a food enthusiast interested in American culinary history, the context adds genuine depth to the meal. You are eating a specific regional burger style, presented with the precision of someone who understands exactly why that style matters.
SoHo location makes Hamburger America accessible without being a tourist trap. It sits at 155 W Houston St, a block from the neighbourhood's retail core but distinct from it. The retro atmosphere does not feel performative in the way that many nostalgia-driven dining rooms do , it has a specific thesis, and the food delivers on it. If you are coming from further afield in Manhattan, pair the visit with exploration across the broader city: see our full New York City restaurants guide, bars guide, and hotels guide for a full picture.
In the context of New York's burger scene, Hamburger America occupies a position that burger joint and Shake Shack do not: it is organized around a specific American regional tradition rather than a general burger format or a scalable brand. 7th Street Burger and 5 Napkin Burger offer their own takes on the format, but neither carries the same documentary specificity that Motz brings to the fried onion burger. DuMont Burger in Williamsburg is worth knowing as an alternative if you are on the other side of the river, but for this particular style, Hamburger America is the place to go.
For those interested in how serious burger culture translates internationally, Aldebaran and Atami in Tokyo represent the Japanese take on American burger precision , a useful comparison point for food enthusiasts tracking the form across borders. Closer to home, Motz's approach to a specific regional American food tradition sits in interesting conversation with destination-driven American restaurants like Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Smyth in Chicago, and Emeril's in New Orleans , all of which build their menus around a strong regional point of view. The scale and price point are wildly different, but the commitment to a specific culinary argument is comparable.
Ratings & Recognition
- Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats in North America (2025) , listed with a two-star designation
- Google rating: 4.5 from 2,243 reviews
Practical Details
Address: 155 W Houston St, New York, NY 10012, SoHo, Manhattan. Reservations: Easy to book; walk-ins are viable given the format. Booking difficulty: Low , this is not a hard table to get. Dress: Casual; no dress code applies. Budget: Price range not published, but the Cheap Eats designation from OAD signals approachable spend per head , budget accordingly for a counter-service or casual sit-down experience. Cuisine: American hamburgers with a regional focus on the fried onion burger tradition. Neighbourhood: SoHo, Manhattan. Check our New York City experiences guide and New York City wineries guide for what to pair with your visit to the area.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should a first-timer know about Hamburger America?
Order the fried onion burger — it's the reason to come. Chef George Motz built his reputation as a hamburger historian before opening this place, and the menu reflects that focus: this is not a smash-burger trend play, it's a specific regional American tradition executed with care. Opinionated About Dining named it a 2025 Cheap Eats pick in North America, so the credibility is documented. Come hungry and keep it simple.
Can Hamburger America accommodate groups?
The retro counter format with vinyl stools is better suited to pairs and small groups of three or four than to large parties. If you're planning a group visit, arrive together and expect to sit along the counter rather than at a large table. It's a casual, high-turnover setup, so groups looking for a sit-down dinner with space and pacing should manage expectations accordingly.
How far ahead should I book Hamburger America?
Booking difficulty is low and walk-ins are a viable option given the counter format. You don't need to plan weeks out the way you would for an omakase or tasting-menu restaurant. That said, showing up at peak lunch or dinner hours on a weekend without a plan can mean a short wait, so a same-day or next-day reservation is a reasonable precaution if your schedule is fixed.
Is Hamburger America good for a special occasion?
It depends on what the occasion calls for. If the person you're celebrating genuinely loves American burger culture and would appreciate eating the fried onion burger at the hands of the country's foremost burger scholar, yes. If the occasion calls for a private room, a wine list, or a tasting menu format, look elsewhere — this is a retro counter restaurant in SoHo, not a fine-dining venue.
What are alternatives to Hamburger America in New York City?
For a completely different price point and format, J.G. Melon on the Upper East Side offers a classic New York bar burger with a long track record. If you want to stay in the serious-burger category but prefer a smash-burger style, Corner Bistro in the West Village is the perennial reference point. Hamburger America is the stronger choice if regional American burger history and chef-driven focus matter to you — it's the only place in the city where that specific Oklahoma fried onion tradition is the main event.
Location
155 W Houston St, New York, NY 10012
New York City, United States
Compare Hamburger America
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hamburger America | Hamburgers | Easy | ||
| Le Bernardin | French, Seafood | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown |
| Atomix | Modern Korean, Korean | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown |
| Per Se | French, Contemporary | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown |
| Masa | Sushi, Japanese | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown |
| Eleven Madison Park | French, Vegan | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Also Consider
- Le Bernardin, French, Seafood, $$$$
- Atomix, Modern Korean, Korean, $$$$
- Per Se, French, Contemporary, $$$$
- Masa, Sushi, Japanese, $$$$
- Eleven Madison Park, French, Vegan, $$$$
Hamburger America and the comparison venues listed here, Le Bernardin, Atomix, Per Se, Masa, and Eleven Madison Park, are not competing for the same booking. All five comparison venues operate at the $$$$ tier with multi-course tasting menus, weeks-out reservation windows, and four-figure per-head spend. Hamburger America is a casual, OAD-recognized cheap eats destination in SoHo. The decision between them is not a close call on quality grounds; it is a decision about what kind of meal you want.
If your New York dining budget is allocated to one serious tasting menu, Per Se and Le Bernardin represent the highest-polish French fine dining options, while Atomix delivers the most distinctive modern Korean progression in the city. Masa is the choice if omakase sushi is your format and you are prepared for the spend. Eleven Madison Park is the plant-based option at the top of the market. None of these venues scratch the same itch as Hamburger America, which is doing something categorically different: making the case for a specific regional American food tradition at an accessible price point.
Book Hamburger America when you want a meal with genuine research behind it and no pretension around it. Book the $$$$ venues when the occasion calls for a multi-hour progression, wine pairings, and a room that matches the spend. For food enthusiasts visiting New York who want to cover both ends of the seriousness spectrum, there is no conflict, Hamburger America at lunch and a tasting menu reservation in the evening is a coherent plan. See our full New York City restaurants guide for help sequencing both.
Recognized By
Explore New York City
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