Restaurant in Los Angeles, United States
Leo's Tacos Truck
200Pearl PointsLate-night tacos, no reservation needed.

About Leo's Tacos Truck
Leo's Tacos Truck on La Brea is one of LA's most consistently recognised street-food operations, ranked on Opinionated About Dining's Cheap Eats list three years running and rated 4.5 stars across nearly 6,000 Google reviews. Open until 2am most nights (3am on weekends), it works as a standalone visit or a late-night addition to a bigger evening. Walk up, no reservation needed.
Verdict: Come back. Then come back again.
If you've already visited Leo's Tacos Truck on La Brea, you already know the baseline: fast, affordable al pastor tacos with a loyal following and a late-night window that most sit-down restaurants can't match. The question on a return visit isn't whether it's worth it — it is — but how to use it smarter. Leo's has earned back-to-back recognition on Opinionated About Dining's Cheap Eats in North America list (ranked #400 in 2024, #417 in 2025, and Recommended in 2023), which puts it in a narrow category of street-food operations that hold up to serious scrutiny. With a 4.5 Google rating across nearly 6,000 reviews, the consistency is documented, not assumed.
Portrait
Leo's operates from a truck at 1515 S La Brea Ave , a fixed location, open seven days a week from 10am, with Friday and Saturday service running until 3am. That late-night availability is genuinely useful context for how to plan around this place. The energy shifts depending on when you arrive. Midday on a weekday is the easiest version: shorter queues, a steadier pace, the kind of ambient street-food hum you'd expect from a busy LA corner. Come back on a Friday or Saturday night after 11pm and the atmosphere is a different proposition entirely , louder, more compressed, the smell of the trompo more concentrated, the line a social event in itself. Both visits deliver the same food, but they're distinct experiences. Know which one you're signing up for.
For a first-time return visitor, the move is to be more deliberate than on your initial visit. Most people default to whatever is simplest to order under mild queue pressure. Give yourself the latitude to slow down slightly, watch what comes off the spit, and time your order to get the crispier outer cut of the al pastor rather than a mid-rotation slice. This is the kind of detail that makes the difference between a good taco and a great one , and it's the reason regulars develop opinions about Leo's rather than just fond memories of it.
For a third visit, think about timing as the variable. Tuesday through Thursday evenings hit a useful middle ground: the truck is open until 2am, the crowd is present but not overwhelming, and you're not competing with the full weekend volume. If you want a quieter, more focused experience , eating without the late-night energy pressing in around you , a weekday lunch visit between 11am and 1pm is the way to go. The food is identical; the conditions are calmer.
Leo's doesn't have table service, a dress code, or a reservation system. Walk up, order, eat at the window or find a nearby spot. Booking difficulty is as low as it gets. For anyone exploring the broader LA taco scene across multiple visits, it's worth pairing Leo's with El Ruso or Loqui for a useful point of comparison across different taco styles and formats. Tacos Y Birria La Unica and Ditroit are worth adding to the rotation if you're building out a serious LA street-food itinerary. For a broader picture of where to eat and drink across the city, our full Los Angeles restaurants guide covers the range , from trucks like this to tasting-menu rooms.
At the price point Leo's operates (cash-friendly, street-food scale), there is almost no financial risk to returning. The question is never whether it's affordable , it is , but whether you're extracting full value from each visit by making deliberate choices rather than defaulting to the fastest option in line. If you approach it that way, this is a place that rewards familiarity. The OAD recognition two years running confirms what regulars have known: the quality here isn't accidental, and it holds.
Ratings & Recognition
- Opinionated About Dining , Cheap Eats North America: Ranked #417 (2025)
- Opinionated About Dining , Cheap Eats North America: Ranked #400 (2024)
- Opinionated About Dining , Cheap Eats North America: Recommended (2023)
- Google: 4.5 stars (5,778 reviews)
Booking & Practical Details
No reservation required , walk up and order. Leo's Tacos Truck operates at 1515 S La Brea Ave, Los Angeles, CA 90019. Open Monday through Thursday and Sunday from 10am to 2am; Friday and Saturday from 10am to 3am. No dress code. No indoor seating. Cash is standard at operations like this, though practices can vary , come prepared. For groups, the format works well: everyone orders individually at the window, which removes any coordination overhead. See also: our Los Angeles hotels guide, our Los Angeles bars guide, and our Los Angeles experiences guide for planning the rest of your visit.
More from Los Angeles
Planning further ahead? Our full Los Angeles restaurants guide covers everything from trucks to tasting menus. For serious tasting-menu dining in other US cities, Le Bernardin in New York, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, The French Laundry in Napa, Single Thread in Healdsburg, and Smyth in Chicago represent the range. Also see our Los Angeles wineries guide if you're building a fuller itinerary. For New Orleans, Emeril's is the reference point for a different style of American food institution.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Leo's Tacos Truck good for a special occasion?
Not in the traditional sense. There's no table service, no ambiance to speak of, and no reservation to make it feel like an event. But if your occasion is celebrating a great meal at an honest price — OAD has ranked Leo's among North America's top cheap eats three years running — it holds up. Pair it with a sit-down dinner elsewhere if you need the full occasion format.
Can Leo's Tacos Truck accommodate groups?
Groups are fine operationally — the walk-up format means everyone orders at their own pace and there's no table to reserve or lose. Larger groups should expect to eat standing or find nearby curb space. It's a truck at 1515 S La Brea, not a dining room, so manage expectations on comfort and coordinate orders in advance to keep the line moving.
What should I order at Leo's Tacos Truck?
The al pastor is the reason Leo's has appeared on OAD's Cheap Eats in North America list from 2023 through 2025 — start there. Beyond that, the menu is a taqueria lineup and you're eating from a truck, so order what looks freshest and moving fastest at the counter. Don't overthink it.
Can I eat at the bar at Leo's Tacos Truck?
There's no bar. Leo's is a food truck with counter-style ordering at 1515 S La Brea Ave. You order, you wait, you eat on your feet or wherever you can find space. That's the format — plan accordingly.
Is lunch or dinner better at Leo's Tacos Truck?
Late night may actually be the move. Leo's runs until 2am Sunday through Thursday and 3am Friday and Saturday, which sets it apart from most kitchens in LA. Lunch works fine for a quick stop, but the late-night window is where Leo's fills a gap that almost no sit-down restaurant in the city covers at this price point. If you're choosing a time, go after 10pm on a weekend and see what the fuss is about.
Location
1515 S La Brea Ave, Los Angeles, CA 90019
Los Angeles, United States
Compare Leo's Tacos Truck
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Leo's Tacos Truck | Taqueria | Easy | |
| Kato | New Taiwanese, Asian | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Hayato | Japanese | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Vespertine | Progressive, Contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Holbox | Mexican Seafood, Mexican | $$ | Unknown |
| Sushi Kaneyoshi | Sushi, Japanese | $$$$ | Unknown |
Comparing your options in Los Angeles for this tier.
Also Consider
- Kato, New Taiwanese, Asian, $$$$
- Hayato, Japanese, $$$$
- Vespertine, Progressive, Contemporary, $$$$
- Holbox, Mexican Seafood, Mexican, $$
- Sushi Kaneyoshi, Sushi, Japanese, $$$$
Leo's Tacos Truck sits at a completely different price tier from most of its named Los Angeles peers, which makes direct comparison more useful as a planning tool than a quality hierarchy. If you're deciding between Leo's and Kato, Hayato, Vespertine, or Sushi Kaneyoshi, you're not really choosing between equivalents, you're deciding between a $10 street-food visit and a $200+ per head tasting experience. They serve different purposes. Leo's is where you go after one of those dinners, not instead of it.
The closest peer comparison in both price and format is Holbox, which operates at $$ and holds strong OAD recognition for Mexican seafood. Holbox offers a more focused sit-down format with seafood-forward Mexican cooking; Leo's is faster, cheaper, and open significantly later. If you're after Mexican food in LA at an accessible price point and have one visit to allocate, your choice between the two comes down to format preference: counter service with a specific seafood focus (Holbox) versus a truck format built around al pastor (Leo's). Both have the credentials to justify the trip.
Among the four-dollar-sign options, Vespertine is the furthest departure, progressive tasting menus with a high booking difficulty and a commitment to a specific artistic vision. Kato and Hayato both require advance planning and deliver a fundamentally different dining experience. Sushi Kaneyoshi is among the harder bookings in the city. Leo's requires no planning whatsoever and operates until 3am on weekends. The practical recommendation: build an LA food itinerary that includes at least one of the higher-end options and uses Leo's as the accessible, no-pressure counterpoint, ideally late at night after something more formal.
Hours
- Monday
- 10 am–2 am
- Tuesday
- 10 am–2 am
- Wednesday
- 10 am–2 am
- Thursday
- 10 am–2 am
- Friday
- 10 am–3 am
- Saturday
- 10 am–3 am
- Sunday
- 10 am–2 am
Recognized By
Explore Los Angeles
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