Restaurant in Savannah, United States
Mrs. Wilkes’Dining Room
100Pearl PointsCommunal Southern cooking, no reservation needed.

About Mrs. Wilkes’Dining Room
Mrs. Wilkes' Dining Room delivers communal Southern cooking at a price point that is hard to argue with, backed by back-to-back Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats rankings (#64 in 2023, #74 in 2024) and a 4.8 Google score across 3,100+ reviews. Walk-in format, shared tables, and a set rotating menu make it the clearest value meal in Savannah — go early to avoid a queue.
Is Mrs. Wilkes' Dining Room worth visiting in Savannah?
Yes — and it is one of the clearest value propositions in the city. Mrs. Wilkes' Dining Room on West Jones Street serves communal, family-style Southern cooking that has earned back-to-back rankings on the Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats in North America list: #64 in 2023 and #74 in 2024. A 4.8 Google rating across more than 3,100 reviews tells the same story. For first-timers in Savannah looking to eat well without spending much, this is where to go.
What to expect on your first visit
Mrs. Wilkes' is a communal dining experience. You sit at long tables with strangers, and the food arrives in shared bowls and platters passed around the table. If you are expecting a conventional restaurant format — individual orders, your own table, a printed menu , this is not that. What you get instead is a rotating spread of Southern staples: fried chicken, collard greens, black-eyed peas, cornbread, and the kind of sides that take hours to prepare. Under current chef Marcia Thompson, the kitchen has maintained the format that made the address a destination in the first place.
The room itself is a historic Savannah townhouse on Jones Street. The aroma when you walk in is the clearest signal you are in the right place: rendered fat, slow-cooked greens, and cornbread from the oven. That smell is doing real work as a first impression, and it tends to match what arrives at the table.
The format means the experience moves at its own pace. You will queue if you arrive at peak times, and seating fills up fast on weekdays and even faster on weekends. Come early, or plan to wait. The trade-off is that once you are seated, the meal is generous and the turnover pressure is low.
How does it compare on value?
Mrs. Wilkes' sits at the affordable end of Savannah's dining options, which makes it easier to recommend without qualification. For context, comparable family-style Southern cooking at the same price tier does not show up anywhere else on the OAD Cheap Eats list for this region with this level of consistency. If you are comparing across the country, the Southern format has strong practitioners at places like Olamaie in Austin and Virtue in Chicago, but neither operates the communal boarding-house model that defines the experience here. The price-to-quality gap at Mrs. Wilkes' is genuinely wide , this is a place where the awards recognition outpaces what most visitors expect to pay.
Ratings and recognition
- Google rating: 4.8 / 5 (3,151 reviews)
- Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats North America: Ranked #74 (2024) and #64 (2023)
Booking and logistics
Booking difficulty for Mrs. Wilkes' is rated Easy. The communal, walk-in format means you do not need a reservation in advance the way you would at a fine dining restaurant. The practical risk is the queue , arrive early on your planned day and you should be seated without difficulty. Weekend mornings and lunch slots draw the most foot traffic. If your schedule is flexible, a weekday visit reduces wait time.
The address is 107 W Jones St, Savannah, GA 31401, in the historic downtown grid. Savannah's walkable centre makes this direct to combine with other stops in the neighbourhood.
Practical comparison: Mrs. Wilkes' vs. nearby Savannah alternatives
| Venue | Cuisine | Price tier | Booking difficulty | Format |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mrs. Wilkes' Dining Room | Southern (communal) | Low | Easy (walk-in) | Family-style, shared tables |
| The Grey | American Regional | Mid-high | Moderate | À la carte, full service |
| Elizabeths on 37th | Southern | Mid-high | Moderate | Fine dining, set menus |
| Emporium Kitchen & Wine Market | American | Mid | Easy-moderate | À la carte |
How it compares
Mrs. Wilkes' and The Grey are solving different problems. The Grey is the right call if you want a polished, individually plated dinner with a serious wine list and a room that rewards dressing up slightly. Mrs. Wilkes' is the right call if you want to understand what Southern home cooking looks like when it is done at volume without shortcuts. They are not in competition , most visitors to Savannah should do both if the trip allows.
Elizabeths on 37th occupies a different tier again: more formal, higher price point, and focused on an upscale Southern interpretation. If a special-occasion dinner is what you need, Elizabeths is the better fit. For everyday value and the kind of meal you will talk about because of the food rather than the setting, Mrs. Wilkes' has the stronger argument. Emporium Kitchen & Wine Market is a reasonable middle-ground option for a more conventional sit-down lunch, but it does not carry the same awards credibility.
Outside Savannah, the closest analogues for communal Southern cooking with this level of recognition are limited. Olamaie in Austin and Virtue in Chicago both take Southern cooking seriously, but at higher price points and in conventional restaurant formats. The boarding-house model at Mrs. Wilkes' is specific enough that there is no obvious substitute , if you are in Savannah, the question is when to go, not whether.
For more on where to eat, drink, and stay in the area, see our Savannah restaurants guide, hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Mrs. Wilkes’Dining Room handle dietary restrictions?
Dietary accommodations can vary. Flag restrictions in advance via the venue's official channels.
What should I order at Mrs. Wilkes' Dining Room?
The format makes the ordering decision for you — everything arrives family-style in shared bowls and platters, so you eat whatever lands on the table that day. The Southern staples rotate but typically cover fried chicken, collard greens, and cornbread-style sides. Given the walk-in, communal setup at 107 W Jones St, the full spread is the point; there is no menu to cherry-pick from.
What are alternatives to Mrs. Wilkes' Dining Room in Savannah?
For a more polished, individually plated Southern experience, The Grey is the main alternative — higher price, reservations required, full bar program. Elizabeths on 37th offers a refined, white-tablecloth take on Southern food closer to fine dining territory. If you want something casual with a strong drinks list, Emporium Kitchen and Wine Market fits. None of them replicate the communal, walk-in format Mrs. Wilkes' runs.
Is Mrs. Wilkes' Dining Room good for a special occasion?
Only if your group is comfortable with communal seating alongside strangers — the format is shared long tables, not a private dining room. For a milestone dinner where atmosphere and privacy matter, The Grey or Elizabeths on 37th are better fits. Mrs. Wilkes' is the right call for a celebratory lunch that is about the food and the experience of Southern hospitality, not the setting.
Location
107 W Jones St, Savannah, GA 31401
Savannah, United States
Compare Mrs. Wilkes’Dining Room
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mrs. Wilkes’Dining Room | Southern | Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats in North America Ranked #74 (2024); Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats in North America in Ranked #64 (2023) | Easy |
| The Grey | Americian Regional | Unknown | |
| Emporium Kitchen & Wine Market | Unknown | ||
| Elizabeths on 37th | Unknown |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Also Consider
- The Grey, Americian Regional, Americian Regional
- Emporium Kitchen & Wine Market, Notable alternative
- Elizabeths on 37th, Notable alternative
Mrs. Wilkes' and The Grey are not direct competitors, but they are the two most awards-credible restaurants in Savannah right now, and they serve completely different purposes. The Grey is where you go for a polished à la carte dinner with a serious drinks program and full table service. Mrs. Wilkes' is where you go when you want to eat Southern food the way it was designed to be eaten, communally, generously, and without a large bill at the end. If you have two meals to allocate in Savannah, these two together cover the range better than any other pairing in the city.
Elizabeths on 37th is the right call for a formal Southern dinner at a higher price point, think white tablecloths, individual plates, and a menu that treats Southern cuisine as fine dining material. It handles special occasions better than Mrs. Wilkes' can. But for everyday value and the specific pleasure of a shared table loaded with fried chicken and sides, Mrs. Wilkes' has no local equivalent. Emporium Kitchen & Wine Market sits in the mid-range and offers a more conventional lunch or dinner format, but it does not carry the same depth of recognition as either Mrs. Wilkes' or The Grey.
The practical summary: book The Grey for dinner, consider Elizabeths on 37th for a milestone meal, and walk into Mrs. Wilkes' for lunch when you want to understand what makes Savannah's food culture worth travelling for. On a pure value-per-dollar basis, Mrs. Wilkes' outperforms every other option on this list, the OAD Cheap Eats ranking two years running is not an accident.
Recognized By
Explore Savannah
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