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    Restaurant in Panama City, Panama

    Maito

    465pts

    Panama's top table. Book weeks ahead.

    Maito, Restaurant in Panama City

    About Maito

    Maito is Panama City's highest-credentialled restaurant: World's 50 Best Top 100 in 2023, OAD Casual North America #9 in 2025, and a 4.7 Google rating across over 1,100 reviews. Chef Mario Castrellón's focus on indigenous Panamanian ingredients delivers serious cooking in a casual format. Book as early as possible — availability is near impossible — and treat this as the meal worth planning the trip around.

    If You've Been Before, Come Back — It's Still the Benchmark

    Return visitors to Maito often report the same thing: the room feels familiar, but the menu keeps moving. Chef Mario Castrellón's commitment to Panamanian ingredients sourced from indigenous communities means the cooking evolves with the seasons and with what's available, not with trend cycles. If your last visit was a year ago, the dishes on the table today will be different enough to justify the trip back — and the cooking level will be the same or better. For first-timers, the practical question is simpler: this is the restaurant in Panama City worth planning around.

    Maito's credentials are not ambiguous. It reached #100 on the World's 50 Best Restaurants list in 2023, and the Opinionated About Dining ranking for Casual in North America has tracked it consistently upward: #29 in 2024, rising to #9 in 2025. Those are not local-market rankings. They put Maito in conversation with restaurants like Lazy Bear in San Francisco and Atomix in New York City , restaurants where the cooking is the entire point of the visit. The difference is that Maito operates as a casual venue, not a formal tasting-room experience. You are not paying Alinea in Chicago prices or sitting through a four-hour ceremony. The quality-to-formality ratio here is unusually good.

    The Google rating sits at 4.7 across 1,147 reviews, which at that volume is a signal worth taking seriously. Consensus at scale is harder to achieve than a handful of enthusiastic early reviews, and Maito has held it. The menu is structured around land and sea, with Panamanian ingredients doing the work rather than imported luxury produce. That focus keeps the cooking grounded and gives it a specificity you won't find at Le Bernardin in New York City or Alain Ducasse at Louis XV in Monte Carlo , those are extraordinary restaurants, but they are not the places to understand what Panama tastes like.

    Planning Your Visit

    Booking difficulty at Maito is rated Near Impossible. That is not an exaggeration for a venue ranked in the global top 100. Reserve as early as the booking window opens , if you are travelling to Panama City specifically for this meal, lock in the reservation before you book flights. The restaurant is open Monday through Saturday, 12–10 pm, and closed Sunday. Lunch is worth considering if your schedule allows: the room will be quieter and the pacing more relaxed than a weekend dinner service, and the kitchen is running the same menu either way.

    Reservations: Book as far in advance as possible , this is a near-impossible table and availability disappears quickly. Hours: Mon–Sat 12–10 pm; closed Sunday. Location: Obarrio, Kenex Plaza, C. 59 Este, Panama City. Price range: Not published, but consistent with a globally ranked casual fine-dining venue , budget accordingly. Dress: No formal code stated, but smart casual is appropriate for the calibre of the experience. Groups: Contact the venue directly for group bookings; no specific group policy is published.

    The Case for a Special Occasion

    Maito works well for celebrations and business meals where the quality of the cooking needs to carry the evening. The casual format means it does not carry the stiffness of a formal tasting menu venue, which makes it more comfortable for guests who want a significant meal without a ceremonial atmosphere. If you are visiting Panama City for a milestone dinner, this is the clearest answer in the city. For a broader look at where to eat, drink, and stay while you're there, see our full Panama City restaurants guide, our full Panama City hotels guide, our full Panama City bars guide, our full Panama City wineries guide, and our full Panama City experiences guide.

    Other strong Panama City options worth knowing: Umi Restaurante Bar Izakaya, Atope, Caleta, Cantina del Tigre, and Corcho each serve a different profile of diner and occasion. Maito sits at the leading of that set on credentials, but it is not the only option worth booking.

    Compare Maito

    Getting a Table: Maito and Alternatives
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    MaitoPanamanianNear Impossible
    Cantina del TigreUnknown
    Umi Restaurante Bar IzakayaUnknown
    CaletaUnknown
    Fonda Lo Que HayUnknown
    La Tapa Del CocoUnknown

    How Maito stacks up against the competition.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I order at Maito?

    The menu is divided between land and sea, with dishes built around sustainably sourced Panamanian ingredients, including products from indigenous communities. Let the kitchen lead — the tasting menu format is the right way to experience what Chef Mario Castrellón is doing here. Ordering à la carte is possible, but you'll miss the throughline that earns Maito its place on the World's 50 Best list.

    Is Maito good for a special occasion?

    Yes, and it's one of the stronger cases for it in Panama City. The cooking is serious enough to carry a celebration without the room feeling stiff — the format is casual, which keeps the evening from tipping into formal-dinner awkwardness. Ranked #9 on OAD Casual North America in 2025 and a World's 50 Best entry in 2023, it arrives with credentials that land well at a business meal or milestone dinner.

    Can Maito accommodate groups?

    Groups are possible, but booking difficulty is rated near-impossible at a venue operating at this level — coordination matters more than it would at a typical Panama City restaurant. check the venue's official channels well in advance; the venue's address is Kenex Plaza, C. 59 Este, Obarrio. Smaller parties of two to four will find it easier to secure a table and a more flexible dining pace.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Maito?

    Maito opens at noon daily (except Sunday), so lunch is a genuine option and often easier to book than a prime dinner slot. If your schedule allows flexibility, lunch lets you sit with the full menu without the evening competition for tables. Dinner has the obvious atmospheric advantage, but given how hard this restaurant is to book, take whatever slot you can get.

    What should a first-timer know about Maito?

    Reserve as early as possible — this is a consistent Latin America 50 Best presence and a World's 50 Best #100 entry, and tables go fast. The restaurant is closed Sundays, open Monday through Saturday 12–10 pm. Expect a menu anchored in Panamanian identity: indigenous-sourced ingredients, colorful presentations, and a clear land-and-sea structure. It is casual in format, so the dress code is relaxed, but the cooking is not.

    What are alternatives to Maito in Panama City?

    For a more casual register with less booking pressure, Fonda Lo Que Hay is worth considering for local Panamanian cooking without the wait. Cantina del Tigre and Umi Restaurante Bar Izakaya offer good options if you want to shift cuisine type entirely. Caleta and La Tapa Del Coco work for seafood-forward meals at a lower commitment level. None of them sit in the same tier as Maito on global rankings, but they're solid backups if you can't get a table.

    Hours

    Monday
    12–10 pm
    Tuesday
    12–10 pm
    Wednesday
    12–10 pm
    Thursday
    12–10 pm
    Friday
    12–10 pm
    Saturday
    12–10 pm
    Sunday
    Closed

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