Restaurant in New York City, United States
Worth booking for the view; food holds up too.

Peak on the 101st floor of 30 Hudson Yards is a serious restaurant that happens to have one of the most dramatic views in New York. Chef Rose Noel's New American menu holds up beyond the spectacle, and Wine Director Zachary Kameron oversees a 1,920-selection list with real depth. Book a window table explicitly, and consider a late dinner — the kitchen runs until 10 or 10:30 PM and the room is better after dark.
Reservations at Peak are easy to secure — but the window tables go fast, and if you're coming specifically for the view, you need to request one when booking. That's the single most important logistical fact about this restaurant. Everything else — the food, the wine list, the late-evening energy , is secondary to that one variable.
Peak sits on the 101st floor of 30 Hudson Yards, operated by Oak View Group and helmed by chef Rose Noel. It has been ranked among the leading restaurants in North America by Opinionated About Dining (#330 in 2025, #352 in 2024), and holds a 3-Star Accreditation from the World of Fine Wine Awards , which speaks to the seriousness of the wine program rather than the food alone. Wine Director Zachary Kameron oversees a list of 1,920 selections backed by 9,000 bottles of inventory, with particular depth in Burgundy, Bordeaux, California, Italy, and Champagne. For a view restaurant, that's a serious cellar.
If you've been once and came for the spectacle, here's what to focus on your return: the food has more range than first-time visitors typically give it credit for. The menu leans New American , the kind of composed, seasonal plates where technique is visible but not theatrical. Dishes like hiramasa with Kirby cucumber and watermelon radish show that the kitchen isn't coasting on the altitude. The roasted chicken with kabocha squash and kale pesto is the kind of thing that would hold its own at a serious neighborhood restaurant, not just a tourist attraction perched above the Hudson.
Pricing is $$$, meaning a typical two-course meal runs above $66 per person before wine or tip. This is not a budget dinner, and it's not priced like one. Budget accordingly, and lean into the wine list , at this price point, the sommelier team (Jordan Skinner, Beata Parzych, Bradley Ghei, Jolie Sparacino, Nic Capron-Manieux, Aben Flores) is one of the most staffed in the city, which means you'll get real guidance rather than a perfunctory pour.
Peak runs later than most New American restaurants at this price point. Monday through Thursday the kitchen is open until 10 PM; Friday and Saturday until 10:30 PM; Sunday until 10 PM. If you're working around a Hudson Yards event, a late theatre night, or simply want dinner that doesn't require a 6 PM booking, Peak absorbs late arrivals more gracefully than comparable fine-dining options in Midtown. The 101st-floor setting means the city lights are at their sharpest after dark , which makes a 9 PM reservation a genuinely better experience than a 6:30 PM one, not just a more convenient one.
The atmosphere at that hour is calmer than the lunch crowd, which skews more tourist-heavy. By late evening, the energy settles into something closer to a business dinner or celebration meal, with the noise level dropping enough for actual conversation. It's not a quiet room , the scale of the space and the height of the ceilings work against that , but it's manageable after 9 PM in a way it isn't at peak lunch.
Reservations: Easy to book; request a window table explicitly or you may not get one. Hours: Mon–Thu 11:30 AM–10 PM; Fri–Sat 11 AM–10:30 PM; Sun 11 AM–10 PM. Budget: $$$ cuisine, $$$ wine , plan for $100+ per person before wine at dinner. Wine: 1,920 selections, 9,000-bottle inventory; strong in Burgundy, Bordeaux, and California. Address: 30 Hudson Yards, 101st floor, New York, NY 10001. Google Rating: 4.5 from 2,281 reviews.
See the full comparison below. If your priority is pure dining at the leading of the New York food pyramid, Le Bernardin, Atomix, and Per Se all outrank Peak on food alone. Peak's advantage is the combination of a serious wine list, a late kitchen, and a location that justifies the price in a way that goes beyond what you're eating.
For New American cooking in New York that prioritises the plate over the room, Craft and ABC Kitchen are stronger value options. For late-night energy with a serious drinks program, Beauty & Essex and Clocktower are worth considering. Wine-focused diners who want depth without the altitude premium should look at The Four Horsemen.
Outside New York, comparable experiences that blend serious food with destination settings include Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Alinea in Chicago, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, The French Laundry in Napa, Providence in Los Angeles, The Inn at Little Washington, Bayona in New Orleans, and Emeril's in New Orleans.
For a full picture of dining, drinking, and staying in the city, see our full New York City restaurants guide, hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide.
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Peak | New American | {"wbwl_source": {"slug": "peak", "page_type": "star_accreditation", "category_slug": "star-accreditation", "award_result": "Accredited", "is_global_winner": "False"}, "scraped_details": {"hero_image": "", "page_title": "3-Star Accreditation", "page_url": ""}, "source_row_snapshot": {"raw_name": "Peak"}}; Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in North America Ranked #330 (2025); Pop quiz time. Where is the highest outdoor observatory deck in the western hemisphere? If you guessed The Edge at Hudson Yards, you win. And your prize? Dinner at Peak, the next-door restaurant with jaw-dropping views over lower Manhattan and New Jersey. This spot stands above the competition in this high-end complex, and while the crowd of mostly tourists and business types is largely here for those views, the food is far from a concession. Kick things off with dishes like the hiramasa topped with Kirby cucumber and watermelon radish before a skin-on roasted chicken with roasted kabocha squash and kale pesto. Unsurprisingly, the prices skew high.; WINE: Wine Strengths: Burgundy, Bordeaux, California, Italy, France, Champagne Pricing: $$$ i Wine pricing: Based on the list\'s general markup and high and low price points:$ has many bottles < $50;$$ has a range of pricing;$$$ has many $100+ bottles Selections: 1,920 Inventory: 9,000 CUISINE: Cuisine Types: American Pricing: $$$ i Cuisine pricing: The cost of a typical two-course meal, not including tip or beverages.$ is < $40;$$ is $40–$65;$$$ is $66+. Meals: Lunch and Dinner STAFF: People Zachary Kameron:Wine Director Wine Director: Zachary Kameron Sommelier: Jordan Skinner, Beata Parzych, Bradley Ghei, Jolie Sparacino, Nic Capron-Manieux, Aben Flores Chef: Rose Noel General Manager: Chris Nelson Owner: Oak View Group; {"wbwl_source": {"slug": "peak", "page_type": "star_accreditation", "category_slug": "star-accreditation", "award_result": "Accredited", "is_global_winner": "False"}, "scraped_details": {"hero_image": "", "page_title": "3-Star Accreditation", "page_url": ""}, "source_row_snapshot": {"raw_name": "Peak"}}; Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in North America Ranked #352 (2024) | Easy | — |
| Le Bernardin | French, Seafood | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Atomix | Modern Korean, Korean | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Eleven Madison Park | French, Vegan | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Masa | Sushi, Japanese | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Per Se | French, Contemporary | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
Comparing your options in New York City for this tier.
Bar seating at Peak is available, though window tables are the draw and fill faster. If you haven't booked ahead, the bar is a reasonable fallback — the full menu is accessible and the wine list (1,920 selections, $$$ pricing) is the same wherever you sit. For a planned visit, reserve a table and request a window seat explicitly.
Peak sits on the 101st floor of 30 Hudson Yards and prices out at $$$ for a two-course meal, so the room skews upscale. Business casual is a safe baseline — think neat trousers and a collared shirt or equivalent. The crowd trends toward tourists and business diners, so the vibe is polished but not black-tie.
Dietary accommodation specifics aren't documented in our data, but Chef Rose Noel runs a New American menu with enough range — proteins, vegetables, and composed dishes — that common requests are generally workable at this price tier. check the venue's official channels before your visit to confirm; at $$$ per head, they should be able to accommodate with notice.
Lunch is the practical call if you want the view at lower stakes: the kitchen opens at 11:30 AM Monday through Thursday and 11 AM Friday through Sunday, and the room is likely less pressured than peak dinner service. Dinner adds atmosphere and a longer evening with the kitchen running until 10 PM (10:30 PM on Fridays and Saturdays), which makes it the better fit for a special occasion.
For pure dining quality over spectacle, Le Bernardin, Atomix, and Per Se all rank above Peak on Opinionated About Dining's North America list. For New American cooking at comparable price points without the view premium, Craft and ABC Kitchen offer stronger plate-focused value. Peak makes most sense when the 101st-floor setting is part of the occasion, not incidental to it.
Yes — the setting does the heavy lifting. The 101st floor of 30 Hudson Yards, next to the Edge observatory, delivers a visual impact that most NYC restaurants can't match. The food clears the bar for a celebration rather than undermining it, and the wine list (1,920 selections, World of Fine Wine 3-Star Accredited) gives the occasion some substance. Book a window table and request it by name when reserving.
The Opinionated About Dining write-up (where Peak ranks #330 in North America for 2025) calls out the hiramasa with Kirby cucumber and watermelon radish as a strong opener, and the skin-on roasted chicken with kabocha squash and kale pesto as a main worth ordering. The wine program, overseen by Wine Director Zachary Kameron with a 9,000-bottle inventory strong in Burgundy, Bordeaux, and California, is worth engaging rather than treating as an afterthought.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.