Restaurant in Dallas, United States
Quarter Acre
210Pearl PointsGreenville Ave's strongest case for $$$.

About Quarter Acre
Quarter Acre has earned back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and 2025, making it one of the most consistent contemporary kitchens in Dallas at the $$$ tier. It is the right call for a serious dinner on Greenville Avenue that does not require a full fine-dining commitment. Book two to three weeks ahead for weekends.
Who Should Book Quarter Acre — and When
If you are planning a date night on Greenville Avenue and want something that steps decisively past the neighbourhood bistro tier without crossing into full-occasion formality, Quarter Acre is where you should be looking. It also works well as a return visit for anyone who ate here once during its early run and wants to see how the kitchen has developed — back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and 2025 confirms this is not a one-year story. Two years of consecutive Michelin recognition in Dallas is a meaningful signal in a city where the inspector's eye is still relatively fresh, and it puts Quarter Acre in a small group of restaurants worth tracking over time.
What Quarter Acre Is
Quarter Acre operates as a contemporary restaurant at 2023 Greenville Ave, Suite 110 in the Lower Greenville corridor of Dallas. The price range sits at $$$, which in Dallas terms means you are spending meaningfully but not at the level of a full tasting-menu institution. That positioning is part of what makes it interesting: the kitchen is working at a Michelin-acknowledged level of craft, but the format does not require you to commit an entire evening or a four-figure bill to experience it.
The contemporary cuisine tag covers a wide range nationally, but at the Michelin Plate level it typically signals a kitchen with serious technical grounding, seasonal awareness, and a coherent point of view on how a plate should be constructed. Think of the Michelin Plate not as a consolation prize below a star but as a genuine quality marker, it means inspectors found the cooking worth noting and returned. Compare that to how the Plate tier operates at places like César in New York City or Jungsik in Seoul, both working in the contemporary space: the common thread is intentionality on the plate. Quarter Acre earns its place in that category conversation.
The Tasting Experience: What to Expect on a Return Visit
If you have been once, the question becomes what to focus on next. Without confirmed menu data, the most honest framing is structural: a contemporary kitchen at this recognition level will typically build progression into whatever format it offers, whether that is a structured tasting sequence or a la carte dishes designed to accumulate into something coherent. The discipline required to earn consecutive Michelin Plates suggests the kitchen has a clear sense of how flavours should move across a meal, from lighter, more acidic early courses toward richer, more complex mid-plates, with dessert acting as resolution rather than an afterthought.
For a returning diner, that means trusting the kitchen's sequence if one is offered, and if ordering freely, resisting the urge to anchor every dish in familiar comfort. The Michelin recognition is for what the kitchen is doing at its most ambitious, not for its most approachable item. Order toward the edges of the menu, not the centre.
Peer reference for calibration: Lazy Bear in San Francisco and Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg both operate in the contemporary space with tasting architecture as their core logic. Quarter Acre works at a different scale and price point, but the underlying instinct, that a meal should have narrative shape, appears to be shared. For Dallas diners who have also eaten at Mister Charles or Rye, Quarter Acre represents a step up in formality and ambition without requiring the full commitment of a destination tasting-menu institution like Alinea in Chicago or The French Laundry in Napa.
Ratings and Trust Signals
- Michelin Plate: 2024 and 2025, consecutive recognition, confirmed quality signal
- Google Reviews: 4.8 out of 5 based on 184 reviews, high score on a meaningful sample for a neighbourhood-scale contemporary restaurant
- Price tier: $$$, above casual, below full fine dining
Booking and Practical Details
Quarter Acre sits at moderate booking difficulty for Dallas. It is not a same-week walk-in restaurant at this recognition level, but it is also not the kind of place requiring a three-month advance reservation window. A two-to-three week lead time is a sensible target for weekend bookings; weeknight availability is likely more flexible. The address at 2023 Greenville Ave, Suite 110 places it in Lower Greenville, a neighbourhood with reasonable parking and a walkable bar scene for before or after, our Dallas bars guide covers the surrounding options in detail.
Phone and website data are not confirmed in our current record, so check Google directly or use a platform like Resy or OpenTable to find the live booking link. For broader trip planning in Dallas, see our full Dallas restaurants guide, our Dallas hotels guide, and our Dallas experiences guide.
Pearl Picks, Related Venues Worth Knowing
- Mamani, for a different angle on contemporary cooking in Dallas
- Tatsu Dallas, Japanese precision at the higher end of the Dallas contemporary tier
- Al Biernat's, if you want a Dallas institution rather than an emerging-kitchen story
- Le Bernardin in New York City, the benchmark for what Michelin-recognised contemporary cooking looks like at full star level
- Emeril's in New Orleans, comparable price tier and regional-contemporary ambition in the South
- Our Dallas wineries guide and restaurants guide for fuller trip context
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I order at Quarter Acre?
- Specific menu data is not confirmed in our current record, so we cannot name dishes. What we can say: at a Michelin Plate-recognised contemporary restaurant in the $$$ tier, the kitchen's most interesting work is usually in the middle courses, where technique and flavour complexity peak, rather than in the appetisers or desserts. If a tasting format or chef's selection is available, take it. That is where kitchens at this level show their hand most clearly.
Is Quarter Acre good for solo dining?
- At $$$ with a 4.8 Google rating and a Lower Greenville address, Quarter Acre is a solid solo choice if you want a proper meal rather than a casual plate. Contemporary restaurants at this tier often have counter or bar seating that works well for solo diners. Seat count is not confirmed in our data, but the neighbourhood-scale format suggests the room is manageable rather than sprawling, which tends to make solo dining more comfortable. For a cheaper solo option nearby, Rye is worth considering.
What should I wear to Quarter Acre?
- Dress code is not listed in our confirmed data. At $$$ with Michelin Plate recognition, smart casual is a reliable default in Dallas, clean, put-together, not formal. Think the kind of outfit you would wear to a nice dinner with someone you want to impress, rather than a jacket-required institution. Dallas contemporary dining at this tier does not typically enforce strict dress codes, but arriving underdressed relative to the room would be noticeable at a 4.8-rated venue.
Can Quarter Acre accommodate groups?
- Seat count and private dining availability are not confirmed in our record. For groups of four or more, contact the restaurant directly before booking, contemporary kitchens at this tier sometimes have capacity constraints that affect larger parties. For a Dallas venue with confirmed group infrastructure at a higher price point, Al Biernat's is the more reliable option. For group bookings at Quarter Acre, plan further out than the standard two-to-three week window.
How far ahead should I book Quarter Acre?
- Two to three weeks is a sensible minimum for weekend reservations. The consecutive 2024 and 2025 Michelin Plate recognition means this restaurant has a dedicated following and weekend prime-time slots will not be available last-minute. Weeknight slots should be more accessible with a week's notice. If you are flexible on timing, mid-week dinner is likely the easiest path to a confirmed reservation without much advance planning.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I order at Quarter Acre?
Specific menu data for Quarter Acre is not confirmed, so ordering strategy comes down to format: at a $$$ contemporary restaurant with back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and 2025, the kitchen's tasting or chef-driven selections are almost always the safest bet. Ask your server what the kitchen is most focused on that evening rather than defaulting to a la carte anchors. That approach works consistently at this tier of Dallas dining.
Is Quarter Acre good for solo dining?
Yes, and arguably better solo than in a large group. A contemporary $$$ format at this recognition level tends to favour counter or bar seating where solo diners get direct kitchen engagement. Quarter Acre's address — Suite 110 at 2023 Greenville Ave — suggests a smaller footprint, which typically means solo diners are treated as full guests rather than afterthoughts. Call ahead to confirm bar availability.
What should I wear to Quarter Acre?
Two consecutive Michelin Plates at a $$$ price point signals a room that takes itself seriously without necessarily enforcing a strict dress code. Think neat, put-together: polished casual works, and a jacket would not be out of place. Lower Greenville skews younger and less formal than Uptown, so you are unlikely to feel overdressed in anything between dark jeans and a blazer.
Can Quarter Acre accommodate groups?
Groups of 2 to 4 are the reliable fit here. Suite 110 configurations at this price and recognition level rarely have private dining infrastructure for parties above 6, and a Michelin Plate contemporary kitchen is designed around precision-per-cover rather than volume. For parties of 6 or more, call directly to confirm availability before building plans around it.
How far ahead should I book Quarter Acre?
Book at least 2 to 3 weeks out. Two consecutive Michelin Plates — 2024 and 2025 — have meaningfully tightened demand at Quarter Acre beyond what Lower Greenville regulars expect from the corridor. It is not as difficult to land as a Dallas omakase counter, but same-week bookings at $$$ on a Friday or Saturday are a gamble. Mid-week has more give.
Location
2023 Greenville Ave #110, Dallas, TX 75206
Dallas, United States
Compare Quarter Acre
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Quarter Acre | Contemporary | $$$ | Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024) | Moderate |
| Fearing's | Southwestern, American | $$$$ | Unknown | |
| Lucia | Italian | $$$ | Unknown | |
| Tei-An | Izakaya, Japanese | $$$$ | Unknown | |
| Tatsu Dallas | Japanese | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown |
| Cattleack Barbeque | Barbecue | $$ | Unknown |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Also Consider
- Fearing's, Southwestern, American, $$$$
- Lucia, Italian, $$$
- Tei-An, Izakaya, Japanese, $$$$
- Tatsu Dallas, Japanese, $$$$
- Cattleack Barbeque, Barbecue, $$
How Quarter Acre Compares in Dallas
Quarter Acre occupies a specific and useful position in Dallas: it is where you go when you want Michelin-acknowledged cooking at the $$$ tier without stepping up to the $$$$ formality of Fearing's or Tei-An. Fearing's delivers a polished Southwestern experience in a hotel setting that suits expense-account dinners and visiting clients; Tei-An offers Japanese precision at a higher price point with a more singular culinary identity. Quarter Acre sits below both on spend but punches at a comparable quality level on the evidence of its consecutive Michelin Plates. If budget is a real factor and you want the most cooking per dollar in Dallas's contemporary tier, Quarter Acre is the stronger call than either.
Lucia is the most direct peer comparison: also $$$, also serious about craft, with a loyal neighbourhood following in Oak Cliff. Lucia wins on Italian specificity and a more established track record; Quarter Acre wins if you want contemporary cuisine with less categorical commitment. They are genuinely different experiences at a similar price point, and which one to book depends on whether you want Italian anchoring or open-format contemporary. For first-time visitors to Dallas's non-steakhouse dining scene, Lucia is the safer bet; for diners who have already done Lucia and want to see what else the city is producing, Quarter Acre is the logical next move.
Tatsu Dallas and Cattleack Barbeque serve different purposes entirely. Tatsu is $$$$ Japanese and competes with Tei-An for the high-end precision slot; it is not a value alternative to Quarter Acre. Cattleack is the city's standout barbecue option at $$ and is not in the same conversation for a contemporary dinner. If you are building a Dallas restaurant itinerary, Quarter Acre pairs well with Cattleack across different nights, one for contemporary ambition, one for Texas barbecue at its most serious, rather than treating them as alternatives.
Recognized By
Explore Dallas
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