Restaurant in New York City, United States
Serious contemporary dining without ceremony overload.

Acru is a Michelin Plate and OAD Top North America 2025-recognised contemporary restaurant at 79 MacDougal Street in Greenwich Village. At the $$$$ price point, it delivers credentialed food in a neighbourhood that stays active after dinner — a practical advantage over Midtown alternatives. Book 2–3 weeks ahead; this is not a walk-in situation.
Acru's Google rating of 4.3 across 99 reviews is the number to start with, but it undersells what you're actually booking. A Michelin Plate and an Opinionated About Dining (OAD) Leading Restaurants in North America 2025 listing put Acru in a credible competitive tier for contemporary dining in New York City at the $$$$ price point. For a first-timer, the address alone tells you something useful: 79 MacDougal Street in Greenwich Village situates this restaurant in one of Manhattan's more walkable, late-night-friendly neighbourhoods, which matters if you're planning around a longer evening.
If you're visiting Acru for the first time, go in knowing that this is not a casual drop-in. The $$$$ pricing signals a considered dinner, and the OAD recognition in 2025 confirms the kitchen is operating at a level where that spend is defensible. The Michelin Plate — awarded in 2025 , means inspectors found the food worth noting, even if a star wasn't assigned. That distinction puts Acru in a useful middle band: serious enough to anchor a special evening, but without the ceremony overhead that comes with Michelin-starred rooms. For a first visit, that balance tends to work well.
The Greenwich Village location on MacDougal Street is one of the practical advantages of booking here. The surrounding blocks stay active well past standard dinner hours, which makes Acru a reasonable anchor for a night that continues after the meal. If you're coordinating around other plans in the West Village or SoHo, the geography works. Compare this to the Midtown concentration of $$$$ contemporaries like Per Se or Le Bernardin, where the neighbourhood largely empties after 10 PM , MacDougal Street does not have that problem. After dinner, New York City's bar scene is accessible on foot, which is a genuine logistical plus for anyone building a fuller evening.
On timing, this is a restaurant that rewards booking earlier in the week if your priority is attention from the room rather than atmosphere. Weekend evenings at this address and price point tend to fill with occasion diners, which shifts the energy. If a quieter, more focused dinner matters to you, Tuesday through Thursday gives you the better version of the experience. Booking difficulty is rated hard, so do not attempt this as a walk-in. Plan at minimum two to three weeks ahead, more if you're targeting a Friday or Saturday.
For first-timers at the $$$$ tier in New York, Acru sits in a tier below the full-ceremony rooms but above the neighbourhood-contemporary category. The Star Wine List White Star recognition, published April 2025, signals that the wine program is taken seriously here, which matters at this price point. If wine is central to your evening, that credential is worth weighing. Comparable contemporary rooms in New York that have earned wine recognition alongside food accolades tend to offer better overall value when you're spending at the leading of the market, because the beverage program lifts the whole equation. At Acru, the evidence points in that direction.
For context on how Acru fits into the wider New York dining picture, the OAD Leading North America 2025 list is one of the more reliable proxies for kitchen consistency. It skews toward serious food audiences and is harder to game than crowd-sourced ratings, which gives the 2025 listing real weight. Venues like Lazy Bear in San Francisco and Alinea in Chicago operate in the same credentialed contemporary tier nationally; within New York, Acru is competing for the same diner who wants a high-conviction contemporary meal without committing to the full tasting-menu formality of an Atomix or an Eleven Madison Park.
If you're building a full New York evening around Acru, the Village location integrates well with nearby options. César, Barawine, and Café Mars are worth knowing as alternatives or add-ons depending on your evening's structure. For a pre-dinner drink or a late stop, the neighbourhood gives you options that Midtown simply does not. See our full New York City restaurants guide for broader context, and our New York City hotels guide if you're planning a full trip around the meal.
Against the full $$$$ contemporary field in New York, Acru occupies a practical middle position. Masa and Per Se operate at a higher ceremony level with price tags to match , if budget is a constraint within the $$$$ band, Acru is the more accessible entry point. Le Bernardin remains the reference point for precision and consistency at this price tier, but it demands a Midtown evening rather than a Village one. For diners who want the credential without the geography, Acru is worth the booking.
Atomix and Eleven Madison Park both run structured tasting menus with higher per-head commitments and longer booking windows. If you want more control over your evening's format and length, Acru gives you that flexibility. The tradeoff is that the full-ceremony rooms tend to deliver a more completely managed experience. Choose Atomix or EMP when the full arc of the evening matters as much as the food; choose Acru when you want serious food in a neighbourhood setting where the evening can develop on its own terms.
For value within the tier, the combination of OAD recognition, Michelin Plate, and a Star Wine List credential makes Acru one of the better-supported bookings at this price point in downtown Manhattan. Comparable credential stacks at the same address rarity are worth noting: this is a Village restaurant with uptown-tier recognition, which is a genuine differentiator. Diners comparing Acru against César or YingTao at a lower price point should factor in the award tier before deciding whether the premium is justified.
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acru | Contemporary | ACRU is a restaurant in New York City, USA. It was published on Star Wine List on April 5, 2025 and is a White Star.; Michelin Plate (2025); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in North America (2025) | Hard | — |
| Le Bernardin | French, Seafood | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Atomix | Modern Korean, Korean | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Eleven Madison Park | French, Vegan | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Masa | Sushi, Japanese | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Per Se | French, Contemporary | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Atomix is the closest peer at the $$$$ level if you want tasting-menu precision with comparable critical recognition. Eleven Madison Park scales up on ceremony and price. If Acru feels too committal for the occasion, the contemporary field in New York at $$$ offers better flexibility without sacrificing seriousness.
At $$$$ with a Michelin Plate and an Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in North America nod for 2025, Acru clears the credential bar for its tier. It sits below the full-ceremony level of Masa or Per Se, which makes it the more practical call when you want serious contemporary cooking without paying for tableside theatre. The question is whether $$$$ contemporary is your format — if it is, Acru is a defensible choice.
No menu details are confirmed in available records for Acru. check the venue's official channels at 79 MacDougal St before booking — at the $$$$ price point, any contemporary kitchen of this standing should be able to accommodate dietary needs given advance notice.
Yes, with the right expectations. A Michelin Plate and OAD recognition give Acru the credentials to anchor a milestone dinner, and the $$$$ price point signals occasion-appropriate seriousness. It works better for two than for larger groups — confirm table configuration when booking if you're coming with four or more.
Acru is on MacDougal Street in lower Manhattan, priced at $$$$ with Michelin Plate recognition — so arrive with calibrated expectations rather than treating it as a casual walk-in. Hours and booking policy are not publicly confirmed, so reach out directly before your visit. Given the OAD and Michelin credentials, this is a reservation-first venue.
Possible, but the $$$$ price point and contemporary format make solo dining a considered call here. Counter or bar seating details are not confirmed in available records. If solo fine dining is your format, Sushi Noz or Atomix offer counter-specific experiences better suited to a single guest.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.