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    Restaurant in New York City, United States

    Marea

    1,015Pearl Points

    Serious seafood pasta, wine list to match.

    Marea, Restaurant in New York City

    About Marea

    Marea is one of New York City's most consistent Italian seafood fine-dining options, with a 950-bottle wine list anchored in Tuscany, Piedmont, and Burgundy that matches the food rather than outrunning it. Ranked on La Liste (81pts, 2026) and Opinionated About Dining's North America list, it earns the $$$$ price tag if pasta and crudo are your format. Book at least three to four weeks ahead — this does not hold easy availability.

    Verdict

    Book Marea if you want Italian fine dining in New York where the wine list is as serious as the food. Sixteen-plus years after opening on Central Park South during a recession — a bet that paid off — Marea has earned its place at the top tier of the city's seafood-focused dining. Ranked #178 on Opinionated About Dining's North America list in 2025 (down from #89 in 2023, but still in the conversation), and scoring 81 points on La Liste's 2026 global ranking, this is a restaurant with credentials you can verify. The room is lively, the pasta is the thing to order, and the wine program , 950 selections, 9,500-bottle inventory, weighted heavily toward Italy and Burgundy , is one of the most thoughtful in the city for the food it's paired with. It's expensive. Go in knowing that, and you won't be disappointed.

    The Room and the Energy

    Marea sits on Central Park South, which means the crowd skews toward power lunches and celebration dinners. The dining room is dressed in Indonesian rosewood, and the energy is lively without tipping into loud. This is not a hushed temple of gastronomy , conversation flows freely and the room has movement. If you're coming for a quiet, reverential tasting experience, consider Le Bernardin instead. If you want fine dining that doesn't make you feel like you're in a library, Marea is the better call. Business casual is the right read on dress code: men don't need ties, but you'll feel underdressed in jeans. The atmosphere makes it a strong pick for milestone dinners and client meals equally , the setting does the work without demanding that you perform for it.

    The Food: Crudo, Pasta, and Fish

    The menu is structured to move through raw, pasta, and mains. Start with the crudo , the raw section is designed so flavors increase in intensity as you go down the list, which is useful framing if you're deciding how many courses to commit to. The fusilli with red wine-braised octopus and bone marrow is the signature dish and has been on the menu since opening; order it. The fresh-cut semolina spaghetti with crab, sea urchin, and basil has the same longevity on the menu and earns it. Both dishes demonstrate why the pasta program here is worth the trip on its own. For mains, whole fish preparations like the salt-baked wild bass are available with condiment choices including salmoriglio (Sicilian capers and wild oregano), which shows the Italian coastal focus that defines the kitchen's identity. All pasta is made in-house. The kitchen under Chef PJ Calapa keeps the execution consistent across a menu that covers significant range without losing focus.

    The Wine Program: Where Marea Separates Itself

    At the $$$$ price tier, every serious restaurant in this city has a wine list. What separates Marea is the coherence between the list and the food. Wine Director Francesco Grosso leads a team that includes four sommeliers , Roberto Recchione, Matthew Ferri, Sergio Jardim, and Luis Perez , and the list reflects the kitchen's Italian coastal identity directly. Approximately 60 percent of the 950-selection list draws from Northwest Italy and Southeastern France, which maps cleanly onto the seafood and pasta menu. Tuscany and Piedmont are the primary Italian strengths; Burgundy anchors the French side. Wine pricing is listed at $$$ (many bottles above $100), and the corkage fee for bottles you bring is $75. For the diner who wants to let the sommelier pair wines to the crudo progression and pasta courses, this is one of the most natural setups for that experience in New York. The depth here rivals what you'd find at restaurants spending twice the floor space on their cellar. For comparison, if Italian wine depth is your primary criterion, Marea beats most of its price-tier peers on this specific dimension. If you're travelling from outside the city and want to benchmark against other serious Italian-leaning programs nationally, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg or The French Laundry in Napa operate at the same seriousness of wine curation, though with very different kitchen identities.

    Practical Details

    Know Before You Go

    • Address: 240 Central Park South, New York, NY 10019
    • Cuisine: Italian seafood , crudo, housemade pasta, whole fish
    • Price: $$$$ (cuisine pricing $$$, meaning a typical two-course meal excluding drinks runs $66+)
    • Hours: Lunch Monday–Friday, 12:00 pm–2:45 pm; Dinner seven days a week
    • Dress code: Business casual; ties not required, but dress smartly
    • Wine list: 950 selections, 9,500-bottle inventory; strengths in Tuscany, Piedmont, and Burgundy; corkage $75
    • Booking difficulty: Hard , reserve well in advance, especially for dinner and weekend slots
    • Google rating: 4.5 from 2,871 reviews
    • Awards: La Liste Leading Restaurants 2026 (81pts); Opinionated About Dining North America #178 (2025), #101 (2024), #89 (2023)
    • Owner/Group: Altamarea Group (Ahmass Fakahany); General Manager: Mark Lockard

    How to Book

    Booking is hard. Marea operates at the level where walk-ins are not a realistic plan for dinner, and even lunch slots on popular days fill fast. Reserve as far in advance as your plans allow , aim for at least three to four weeks out for weekend dinners. If you're planning around a milestone or anniversary (which is exactly the kind of occasion this room is built for), book the moment your date is set. For wider context on New York City dining options at this tier, see our full New York City restaurants guide. If you're building a full trip itinerary, our New York City hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide are useful companion reads.

    Other NYC Seafood Worth Knowing

    If Marea's price point is too steep or the booking window doesn't work, the city has strong alternatives at different price levels. Crevette and Saint Julivert Fisherie offer seafood-forward menus at more accessible price points. Lure Fishbar and Mermaid Oyster Bar are worth knowing if the occasion is more casual. Oceans rounds out the city's broader seafood picture. For Italian coastal seafood with serious wine programs outside New York, Gambero Rosso in Marina di Gioiosa Ionica and Alici on the Amalfi Coast give useful context for what this style of cooking looks like at its Italian source.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I wear to Marea?

    Business casual is the right call. The venue data is explicit: ties are not required, but you will feel underdressed in jeans and a t-shirt among the power-lunch and celebration-dinner crowd that fills the Central Park South dining room. Think collared shirts for men, smart separates or a dress for women.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Marea?

    Marea's strength is in the structured progression of its menu — crudo, pasta, then mains — which functions like a tasting arc even when ordering à la carte. The crudo section is explicitly designed so flavors build in intensity as you move down the menu, and signature pastas like the fusilli with octopus and bone marrow have remained on the menu since opening, which signals they hold up. If you want a chef-dictated tasting format, Masa or Per Se is the more committed version; Marea suits guests who want that progression with more control over pacing and spend.

    Can Marea accommodate groups?

    Groups are manageable but require advance planning at a restaurant operating at the $$$$ tier on Central Park South. Larger parties should check the venue's official channels well ahead of the intended date. The dining room's lively atmosphere — noted as less formal than most NYC fine dining at this price level — makes it a workable choice for celebrations without the stuffiness of Per Se or Eleven Madison Park.

    Is Marea worth the price?

    At $$$$ with a $75 corkage fee and a 950-label wine list weighted toward Italian and Burgundy producers, the spend is real. The case for yes: Marea has held a position on Opinionated About Dining's North America list continuously from 2023 to 2025 (ranked 89, 101, and 178 respectively), and the food-to-wine coherence — 60 percent Italian wines paired against an Italian seafood menu — is not something most NYC restaurants at this tier replicate. The case for no: if the wine program doesn't matter to you, the food alone at this price faces stiff competition from Le Bernardin, which operates at a similar tier with more singular focus on seafood.

    What should I order at Marea?

    Start with the crudo and work through the menu in order — it is built to be eaten that way, with flavors intensifying as you progress. The fusilli with red wine-braised octopus and bone marrow is a noted signature; the fresh-cut semolina spaghetti with crab, sea urchin, and basil has been on the menu since opening. For mains, whole fish preparations like the salt-baked wild bass are available with condiment choices including salmoriglio. Skip the crudo section and you are missing what separates Marea from other Italian restaurants in this city.

    Location

    240 Central Park S, New York, NY 10019

    New York City, United States

    Compare Marea

    Marea vs. Similar Venues
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking Difficulty
    MareaSeafood$$$$Hard
    Le BernardinFrench, Seafood$$$$Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    AtomixModern Korean, Korean$$$$Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Eleven Madison ParkFrench, Vegan$$$$Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    MasaSushi, Japanese$$$$Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Per SeFrench, Contemporary$$$$Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown

    A quick look at how Marea measures up.

    Also Consider

    Against the other $$$$ restaurants in New York, Marea occupies a specific position: it's the right choice if Italian seafood and a wine-forward experience matter more to you than a single tasting format or a landmark chef narrative. Compare it directly to Le Bernardin, the obvious peer for seafood fine dining in the city. Le Bernardin is more technically precise and the room is quieter, with a kitchen that treats fish with greater minimalism. Marea is louder, more social, and the Italian frame (pasta, crudo, whole fish with condiments) gives the menu more range and more entry points for wine pairing. If you're bringing someone who doesn't eat seafood exclusively, Marea's broader menu is the safer call.

    Per Se and Eleven Madison Park both operate at higher overall price points and are built around set tasting formats. If you want the full choreographed experience of a New York institution, either of those delivers more total ceremony. But Marea's à la carte structure means you can spend more selectively, crudo and a pasta, with wine by the glass from a deep list, is a genuinely satisfying meal without committing to a $300+ per-person tasting menu. For value at the $$$$ tier, Marea competes well.

    Atomix and Masa are both harder to book and narrower in their formats, Atomix for Modern Korean tasting, Masa for omakase. Neither is a direct substitute for what Marea does. If Italian cuisine, wine depth, and a room that works for both business and celebration are your criteria, Marea is the clearest answer in the city at this price tier. Book it for the wine pairing experience specifically: the sommelier team and the coherence between the list and the menu is what separates this from other fine dining options at the same spend level.

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