Restaurant in Reno, United States
Nevada Prime Precision

Charlie Palmer Steak is the most nationally credentialed steakhouse in Reno, sitting inside the Peppermill Resort with a drinks program that outpaces its local competition. Easy to book and comfortable for solo diners or groups, it's the right call when you want a polished, reliable evening — lean into the bar and wine list for the best return on your spend.
Charlie Palmer Steak sits inside the Peppermill Resort at 2500 E 2nd St, Reno — and the brand name alone carries enough weight to set expectations above most of what the city's casino-dining circuit delivers. The Charlie Palmer group built its reputation on serious steakhouses in Washington D.C. and Las Vegas, where the format — premium cuts, a drinks program worth lingering over, and service pitched above the surrounding resort noise , is well established. The Reno outpost follows that same playbook. If you've been once and enjoyed it, here's how to think about a return visit and what to prioritise.
For a return visit, the bar program is where Charlie Palmer Steak earns a second look. The Charlie Palmer brand has consistently invested in wine lists with genuine depth , California Cabernets and French Burgundies feature prominently across its locations , and cocktail menus that go beyond the casino-steakhouse default of overpoured classics. If you came for the steak last time, consider arriving early and spending time at the bar before your table. The cocktail side of the operation is more considered than what you'll find at Atlantis Steakhouse or Bimini Steakhouse, and it's a useful way to extend the evening without committing to a second full dinner spend.
Booking is easy , this is not a difficult reservation to secure in Reno, and walk-in bar seating is a realistic option on most evenings. The venue is attached to the Peppermill Resort, which means parking is not an issue and the room has the kind of insulation from the wider casino floor that makes it feel like a standalone dining destination rather than a hotel restaurant. For solo diners, the bar counter is genuinely comfortable and gives you access to the full menu without the slight awkwardness of a large booth for one. Groups should have no difficulty with reservations , the format handles four to six comfortably, and larger parties are worth calling ahead to arrange.
Against Reno's steakhouse field, Charlie Palmer carries more national brand recognition than its local competitors. Atlantis Steakhouse and Bimini Steakhouse both deliver solid cuts in a casino context, but neither brings a drinks program with the same ambition. If you want something further outside the steakhouse format, Beaujolais Bistro and Arario Midtown offer different registers entirely , lighter, more produce-driven cooking , and are worth knowing about if the red-meat-and-Cabernet format isn't what the group wants that night.
For full context on dining in the city, see our full Reno restaurants guide. If you're planning a wider trip, our Reno hotels guide, Reno bars guide, Reno wineries guide, and Reno experiences guide cover the rest.
Charlie Palmer Steak is the most nationally credentialed steakhouse option in Reno, and it's easy to book. On a return visit, lean into the bar and the wine list , that's where the format justifies itself most clearly over the local competition. It's not in the conversation with destination-level steakhouses the way Le Bernardin or The French Laundry anchor their respective cities, but for Reno it delivers a reliable, polished evening with a drinks program that holds up on its own terms.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Charlie Palmer Steak | Easy | ||
| Atlantis Steakhouse | Steakhouse | Unknown | |
| Bistro Napa | Californian French | Unknown | |
| Bimini Steakhouse | Unknown | ||
| Arario Midtown | Unknown | ||
| Beaujolais Bistro | Unknown |
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