Restaurant in New York City, United States
Paradise Lost
170Pearl PointsLate-night fallback

About Paradise Lost
Paradise Lost is a practical East Village evening pick if the plan is drinks or a late stop near 2nd Avenue. It is less convincing for a structured dinner, special occasion, or dietary-sensitive booking because menu, price, seating, reservation details are not confirmed here.
For Paradise Lost in New York City, the most useful verified planning detail is timing. The venue is open daily from 5 PM to 2 AM, which makes it an evening and late-night option rather than a daytime stop. First-timers should plan around that schedule and confirm any details not listed here directly before going.
Use it as an evening or late-night option
The available verified details point to a simple decision: Paradise Lost is a New York City venue with daily 5 PM to 2 AM hours and a smart casual dress code. There is no confirmed cuisine type, chef, price range, menu format, booking method, or seat count here, so the safest recommendation is to keep plans flexible and verify any specific needs in advance.
For a first visit, timing matters more than format. Early evening may suit a more planned arrival, while later at night may suit a looser schedule. If the plan depends on a full meal, dietary accommodations, group capacity, or a fixed budget, confirm those details directly before making Paradise Lost the center of the night.
The first-timer read: easy to fit in, harder to plan around
Paradise Lost works as a flexible New York City evening option because it opens every day and runs late. That is the practical advantage. The tradeoff is that several decision-making details are not verified here, including price, menu style, reservation process, group capacity. For someone choosing between lunch and dinner, this is not a lunch candidate based on the verified hours; the useful comparison is early evening versus late night.
Readers mapping a broader night can use our full New York City restaurants guide, then check our full New York City bars guide for other options. For visitors building a full trip, the broader New York City rails also help: hotels and experiences.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Paradise Lost handle dietary restrictions?
Dietary accommodation details are not verified here. Check with Paradise Lost directly before you go, especially if your plans depend on specific food, allergy, or menu information.
Is Paradise Lost good for a special occasion?
It can work if the occasion fits an evening or late-night New York City plan. The verified details are its daily 5 PM to 2 AM hours and smart casual dress code; confirm reservations, group capacity, any special-arrangement details directly.
What should a first-timer know about Paradise Lost?
Treat Paradise Lost as an evening and late-night New York City option. The useful verified facts are simple: it opens every day from 5 PM to 2 AM, the dress code is smart casual.
What should I wear to Paradise Lost?
The verified dress code is smart casual. Plan for polished but comfortable city-night-out clothing.
Can I eat at the bar at Paradise Lost?
Food and seating details are not verified here. Ask Paradise Lost directly before you go, or consider other New York City options such as B&H Dairy, Malai Marke, Cello's Pizza, Mamoun's Falafel, or Risotteria Melotti if your plan depends on details that are not confirmed here.
How far ahead should I book Paradise Lost?
Booking details are not verified here. If your timing matters, contact Paradise Lost directly; the verified schedule is 5 PM to 2 AM every day.
Can Paradise Lost accommodate groups?
Group capacity is not verified here. Contact Paradise Lost directly before organizing a group visit, keep a backup plan in New York City if your party size or timing is fixed.
Location
100 2nd Ave, New York, NY 10003
New York City, United States
Compare Paradise Lost
| Venue | Location |
|---|---|
| Paradise Lost | New York City |
| B&H Dairy | New York City |
| Cello’s Pizza | New York City |
| Risotteria Melotti | New York City |
| Mamoun's Falafel | New York City |
| Malai Marke | New York City |
How Paradise Lost New York City compares with similar nearby venues.
Where to go if this does not fit the night
If the group needs a clearer food plan, choose Mamoun's Falafel for a faster casual meal or Malai Marke for a more structured dinner. If the plan is casual and budget-sensitive, B&H; Dairy is the more meal-focused alternative.
How Paradise Lost compares in the East Village
Paradise Lost is the better fit when the priority is a late evening stop rather than a defined meal. B&H; Dairy, Cello's Pizza, Risotteria Melotti, Mamoun's Falafel, Malai Marke are safer cross-shops when food is the anchor of the plan.
For value and clarity, Mamoun's Falafel and B&H; Dairy are easier choices because the meal format is the point. Cello's Pizza is the more natural casual group fallback. Risotteria Melotti and Malai Marke make more sense when the evening needs a sit-down restaurant experience rather than a flexible bar-led stop.
Booking difficulty appears easier here than at restaurants where the table itself is the main event, but that also means the occasion ceiling is lower. Choose Paradise Lost for an after-dinner plan in the East Village; choose one of the restaurant peers when budget, food, or group logistics need to be settled before arrival.
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