Restaurant in Miami, United States
Taquiza
360Pearl PointsNo-reservation tacos that have earned three OAD nods.

About Taquiza
Taquiza is the most credentialed casual Mexican restaurant in Miami: two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024–2025) and three years on OAD's Cheap Eats in North America list, all at the $ price tier. No reservation needed, walk-in only, and located in low-key North Beach. The clearest value-for-money call in the city's Mexican dining options.
Should You Book Taquiza?
Walk-ins at Taquiza are genuinely easy — no reservation system, no weeks-long wait, no velvet rope. On a weekday afternoon you can show up at 7450 Ocean Terrace in Miami's North Beach and be eating within minutes. The harder question is whether you should bother making the trip at all, and the answer is yes, particularly if you are tracking down the most credentialed casual Mexican food in South Florida. Taquiza has held a Michelin Plate for two consecutive years (2024 and 2025) and has appeared on Opinionated About Dining's Cheap Eats in North America list three years running, peaking at #89 in 2024. That is an unusual run of recognition for a single-dollar-sign taqueria, and it signals something worth investigating.
The Space
North Beach is a quieter stretch of Miami's coastline than South Beach, and Taquiza fits the neighbourhood's low-key register. The physical setup is compact and counter-forward: this is a place to eat, not to linger over a long evening. Seating is casual and the room is modest in scale, which means that if you arrive at peak Saturday dinner service (the kitchen runs until 10 pm on Fridays and Saturdays), you may need to wait for a spot. The spatial intimacy is part of the experience — proximity to the kitchen operation means you are watching the process, which matters when the product is this focused. For a proper sit-down meal in a more formal dining room, this is not the right address; for a direct, no-ceremony feed, the layout suits the format exactly. If you are visiting Miami and want to cross-reference the broader dining scene, our full Miami restaurants guide covers the range from casual to fine dining.
The Food and Credentials
Chef Steve Santana leads the kitchen, and the recognition Taquiza has accumulated across three OAD Cheap Eats cycles suggests consistent execution rather than a one-year spike. The Michelin Plate , awarded in both 2024 and 2025 , confirms the inspectors have returned and found the food worthy of attention. At the $ price point, this is among the most decorated Mexican spots in Miami, and it sits in a different tier from the taqueria-as-trend venues that cycle in and out of the local dining conversation. For a point of comparison on what serious Mexican cooking looks like at a different price level and in a different context, Pujol in Mexico City is the benchmark; Taquiza is not competing in that register, but it is doing something more focused and more consistent than most of its local peers. If you want another angle on regional Mexican cooking in a US context, Alma Fonda Fina in Denver is worth the comparison.
Miami has other Mexican options. Los Félix offers a more cocktail-forward, sit-down Mexican experience with a polished room and a proper bar program. Tacology leans into a broader, more social format. Neither has Taquiza's OAD Cheap Eats track record or its Michelin recognition at the price point Taquiza operates at.
Drinks at Taquiza
The drinks program at Taquiza is in keeping with the venue's format: this is a casual taqueria operating at the $ price tier, not a mezcalería or cocktail bar. There is no evidence in the available data of an ambitious standalone bar program, and it would be misleading to frame it as one. If a serious cocktail experience is your priority in Miami, the Miami bars guide is the right starting point. What Taquiza does offer is the kind of drink pairing that makes sense for the food , the context is the food, and the drinks support it rather than competing for attention. For a venue where the drinks program is the main event at the $ tier, you are looking at a different category of establishment. Taquiza's editorial distinction comes from its food credentials, and that is where the value sits.
Timing and Logistics
Taquiza opens at noon seven days a week, which makes it one of the more accessible lunch options in the area. Friday and Saturday hours extend to 10 pm; all other days close at 9 pm. For first-timers, a weekday lunch visit between 12 and 2 pm gives you the leading chance of a short wait and a full selection. Weekend evenings are the busiest window, and the compact space means Saturday dinner can feel crowded. The North Beach location at Ocean Terrace puts you away from the South Beach volume, which is either an asset or an inconvenience depending on where you are staying. If you are building a full Miami itinerary, the Miami hotels guide and the Miami experiences guide are worth cross-referencing for the broader trip.
The Verdict
At the $ price point, Taquiza is the most credentialed Mexican restaurant in Miami by a clear margin. Three years of OAD Cheap Eats recognition and back-to-back Michelin Plates do not accumulate at a venue that is coasting. No reservation required, no dress code, and no significant barrier to entry , the only real cost is the trip to North Beach. For anyone serious about eating well in Miami without spending $$$$ per head, this is the address. For context on what that top-end spend looks like in Miami, Ariete and the broader Miami dining scene offer the comparison. But if the question is where to find the best-credentialed casual meal in the city, Taquiza answers it directly.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I order at Taquiza?
Specific menu items are not documented in available venue data, so ordering specifics should be confirmed on arrival. What is documented is that Taquiza has earned a Michelin Plate and three consecutive OAD Cheap Eats rankings, which points to consistent kitchen execution across multiple years. Ask the counter staff what is freshest that day — at the $ price tier, the cost of experimenting is low.
What are alternatives to Taquiza in Miami?
For Mexican at a comparable $ price point, Taquiza has no direct credentialed rival in Miami — its OAD Cheap Eats appearances are unmatched in that category locally. If you want to spend more and shift cuisine, Ariete offers serious Cuban-influenced cooking in Coconut Grove, and Boia De delivers ambitious Italian small plates in Little Haiti. Neither replaces Taquiza if tacos are what you are after.
Is lunch or dinner better at Taquiza?
Lunch on a weekday gives you the easiest experience: the venue opens at noon daily and crowds are thinner before evening. Friday and Saturday dinner runs to 10 pm, which works if you want to pair it with a North Beach evening. The food is the same either way, so timing is about your schedule and crowd tolerance rather than menu differences.
Is Taquiza worth the price?
Yes, by a clear margin. At the $ price tier, a Michelin Plate and three OAD Cheap Eats rankings across 2023, 2024, and 2025 represent a level of credentialed recognition that is rare at this price point anywhere in the US. You are getting food that serious critics have repeatedly signed off on, for what amounts to very little money.
What should a first-timer know about Taquiza?
Taquiza does not take reservations, so walk-ins are the format — show up, queue if needed, order at the counter. The address is 7450 Ocean Terrace in North Beach, which is a notably quieter stretch than South Beach. Go hungry and plan to order more than you think you need; at $ per item, it is easy to underorder on a first visit.
What should I wear to Taquiza?
This is a casual beachside taqueria operating at the $ price tier in North Beach — beach clothes, shorts, and sandals are entirely appropriate. There is no dress code documented for this venue, and the neighbourhood and format would make a formal dress expectation out of place.
Can I eat at the bar at Taquiza?
Taquiza's specific seating configuration is not detailed in available venue data. Given its format as a casual $ taqueria in North Beach, counter or outdoor seating is the most likely setup. Confirm seating options on arrival or call ahead — a phone number is not currently listed for this venue.
Location
7450 Ocean Terrace, North Beach, FL 33141
Miami, United States
Compare Taquiza
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|
| Taquiza | $ | Easy |
| Ariete | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Boia De | $$$ | Unknown |
| Cote Miami | $$$ | Unknown |
| Stubborn Seed | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Los Fuegos by Francis Mallmann | $$$$ | Unknown |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Also Consider
- Ariete, Modern American, Contemporary, $$$$
- Boia De, Italian, Contemporary, $$$
- Cote Miami, Korean Steakhouse, Korean, $$$
- Stubborn Seed, Progressive American, Contemporary, $$$$
- Los Fuegos by Francis Mallmann, Argentinian, $$$$
Taquiza sits in a different price universe from most of Miami's decorated restaurants. At $, it competes on value in a way that Ariete ($$$$) and Stubborn Seed ($$$$) simply cannot, both are serious restaurants with strong credentials, but you are spending four times as much for a fundamentally different format. If a single high-quality, low-ceremony meal is the goal, Taquiza wins on pure value. If you want a full progressive tasting experience with wine pairings and a designed room, Ariete or Stubborn Seed are the right calls.
Boia De ($$$) is the closest peer in terms of critical recognition at a below-fine-dining price point, it is a serious Italian-leaning spot with its own award history. Between the two, Boia De offers a more formal sit-down experience with a stronger drinks program; Taquiza wins on price and on the specific credibility of the OAD Cheap Eats ranking. Choose Boia De if a full evening with cocktails and a wine list matters; choose Taquiza if the goal is the most decorated casual meal for the least spend. Cote Miami ($$$) and Los Fuegos by Francis Mallmann ($$$$) are for entirely different occasions, Korean barbecue and open-fire Argentinian, respectively, and do not compete with Taquiza for the casual lunch or quick dinner slot.
The practical summary: for the $ spend, Taquiza has no meaningful Miami competition on award credentials. For a broader evening out with cocktails and a full room experience, step up to Boia De or Ariete. For the most straightforward high-quality, low-cost meal in the city, Taquiza is the answer.
Hours
- Monday
- 12–9 pm
- Tuesday
- 12–9 pm
- Wednesday
- 12–9 pm
- Thursday
- 12–9 pm
- Friday
- 12–10 pm
- Saturday
- 12–10 pm
- Sunday
- 12–9 pm
Recognized By
Explore Miami
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