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    Restaurant in San Francisco, United States

    SPQR

    605Pearl Points

    Serious Italian cooking, hard booking, repeat-visit payoff.

    SPQR, Restaurant in San Francisco

    About SPQR

    SPQR on Fillmore Street is San Francisco's most credentialled casual Italian at the $$$$ tier — Michelin Plate, OAD top 300 in North America, and a wine list with White Star and 3-Star World of Fine Wine accreditation. Book two to three weeks out for weekend dinners; brunch Saturday and Sunday is the easiest entry point. Chef Matthew Accarrino's à la carte format rewards multiple visits more than the tasting-menu peers at this price level.

    Verdict: One of Fillmore Street's strongest cases for serious Italian cooking in a room that rewards repeat visits

    SPQR earns its place on any San Francisco dining shortlist. Chef Matthew Accarrino has built a kitchen that holds a Michelin Plate and consistent recognition from Opinionated About Dining — ranked #288 in North America for casual dining in 2024 and #612 in 2025, with a Highly Recommended citation in 2023. The wine program carries a White Star from Star Wine List and 3-Star Accreditation from World of Fine Wine. At the $$$$ price tier, this is a dinner that asks something of your wallet, but delivers technically accomplished Italian cooking and a wine list serious enough to justify the spend if you know how to use it. If you are visiting San Francisco for the first time and want one Italian dinner that goes beyond pasta and nostalgia, SPQR is the booking to make.

    The Room and What to Expect on Your First Visit

    SPQR occupies a narrow, high-ceilinged space on Fillmore Street in the Lower Pacific Heights neighbourhood. The room runs long and intimate, with counter seating along one wall and tables filling the main floor. It is not a large restaurant. The spatial experience rewards those who book early: counter seats give you a clear line into the kitchen's rhythm, while a table mid-room offers slightly more conversation space. For a first-timer, the counter is the better seat — you get context for what arrives on the plate and the service dynamic is more engaged. Expect the room to feel purposeful rather than theatrical. There is no dramatic design moment here; the focus is directed at the food and the glass in front of you.

    On your first visit, the priority is understanding the format. SPQR runs an à la carte menu, a meaningful distinction from the tasting-menu format at peers like Atelier Crenn or Benu. That gives you control over pace and spend. Use it deliberately: order through the pasta course before deciding whether to extend into a full meat or fish course. The kitchen is technically strong enough that restraint is not required, two or three courses with a well-chosen bottle will leave you satisfied.

    A Multi-Visit Strategy

    SPQR is the kind of restaurant that opens up across visits. The first time, you are getting your bearings: the menu's structure, Accarrino's technique, the wine list's scope. The second visit is where you get more from the experience. By then you have a read on the room's rhythm, when to arrive, how far to push the menu, whether to lean on the sommelier or work through the list yourself.

    If you are planning a second dinner, shift from pasta-forward ordering to the more protein-driven middle of the menu. The restaurant's Italian framework means there is depth in both directions. For a third visit, or for those who treat SPQR as a recurring option during San Francisco trips, Saturday brunch (9 am to 2 pm) operates as a genuinely different experience. The room is less pressured, the price point tends to be lower, and the format is more casual. Sunday brunch runs the same hours. Dinner runs Wednesday through Monday (closed Tuesday), 5 to 9 pm.

    For context on how SPQR's multi-visit value compares in the Italian category: Quince sits at the same price tier but locks you into a tasting menu format, which makes repeat visits a higher commitment. Che Fico and Fiorella serve the neighbourhood Italian role at lower spend, while Belotti Ristorante e Bottega and Beretta cover the more accessible end of the spectrum. SPQR sits clearly above all of them on technical ambition.

    Timing: When to Go

    Dinner on a Wednesday or Thursday evening is the call for a first visit, the room is less crowded than Friday and Saturday, service has more breathing room, and booking is marginally easier mid-week. Friday and Saturday evenings are the hardest to secure and the most energetic, which works if the room's atmosphere is part of what you want. Saturday and Sunday brunch offers the leading accessibility for walk-in or late-notice booking, though counter seats during brunch still move quickly.

    SPQR is closed Tuesdays. If you are building a San Francisco itinerary around multiple dinners, account for that gap. For planning the wider trip, see our full San Francisco restaurants guide, our full San Francisco hotels guide, our full San Francisco bars guide, our full San Francisco wineries guide, and our full San Francisco experiences guide.

    Booking

    Booking difficulty at SPQR is rated Hard. Plan for a minimum of two to three weeks' lead time for a Friday or Saturday dinner reservation. Mid-week evenings open up with one to two weeks' notice in most cases. Brunch seats on Saturday and Sunday are the most accessible option if your schedule is flexible. There is no stated dress code in available data, but the room reads as smart-casual, overdressing would feel out of place, but so would arriving in gym gear.

    The Wine List

    The White Star from Star Wine List (awarded August 2022) and the 3-Star World of Fine Wine accreditation are meaningful signals. This is not a wine list assembled for optics, it is a working cellar, weighted toward Italy, that rewards engagement. If wine is part of why you are spending at this level, SPQR justifies the price tier more directly than many peers. For comparison, Saison runs an outstanding wine program but at a higher overall price point; SPQR's list delivers serious depth at a more controlled total spend if you order thoughtfully.

    For internationally comparable Italian cooking at the $$$$ level, 8½ Otto e Mezzo Bombana in Hong Kong and cenci in Kyoto show where the format travels. On the American fine-dining spectrum, The French Laundry in Napa and Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg are the natural next step if you are scaling up. Le Bernardin in New York City, Alinea in Chicago, Providence in Los Angeles, and Emeril's in New Orleans round out the national reference set for this price tier.

    Ratings at a Glance

    • Google: 4.3 / 5 (753 reviews)
    • Michelin Plate: 2024, 2025
    • Opinionated About Dining: #288 North America Casual (2024), #612 (2025), Highly Recommended (2023)
    • Star Wine List: White Star
    • World of Fine Wine: 3-Star Accreditation

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is SPQR worth the price?

    At $$$$, SPQR asks a lot, and it mostly delivers. Chef Matthew Accarrino runs a kitchen that holds a Michelin Plate and consistent Opinionated About Dining recognition, and the wine list carries both a Star Wine List White Star and a 3-Star World of Fine Wine accreditation — credentials that justify the price if wine is part of your evening. Against nearby competition at similar price points, the cooking is technically precise and the room rewards multiple visits rather than a one-time splurge. If you are paying $$$$ for a single dinner and want a more theatrical experience, Atelier Crenn is a closer fit.

    Does SPQR handle dietary restrictions?

    No specific dietary restriction information is confirmed in the venue record. Given that SPQR operates at the $$$$ price point with a focused Italian menu under Chef Matthew Accarrino, it is worth contacting the restaurant directly before booking if you have serious dietary requirements — a kitchen at this level typically accommodates with advance notice, but assume nothing without confirmation.

    What should I order at SPQR?

    Specific current menu items are not confirmed in the venue data, so this answer cannot responsibly name dishes. What the record does confirm is that the kitchen operates under Matthew Accarrino with a wine program carrying two independent accreditations — pairing a wine-focused approach with the tasting format is where the experience holds together best. Ask the server for the pasta course and the wine pairing when booking; those two decisions will define your visit.

    How far ahead should I book SPQR?

    Plan for two to three weeks minimum for a Friday or Saturday dinner — booking difficulty is rated Hard. Mid-week evenings (Wednesday and Thursday) open up more reliably and offer a better service experience. Saturday brunch (9 am to 2 pm) is a lower-friction entry point if dinner availability is locked out.

    Is lunch or dinner better at SPQR?

    Dinner is the stronger choice for a first visit. SPQR only opens for brunch on Saturday and Sunday (9 am to 2 pm), which makes it a fine weekend option but not a full expression of what Accarrino's kitchen does — that shows up at dinner. Wednesday or Thursday dinner is the call for breathing room in the room and full engagement from the wine program.

    Location

    1911 Fillmore St, San Francisco, CA 94115

    San Francisco, United States

    Compare SPQR

    Recognized Venues: SPQR and Peers
    VenueAwardsPrice
    SPQR$$$$
    Lazy BearMichelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best$$$$
    Atelier CrennMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best$$$$
    BenuMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best$$$$
    QuinceMichelin 3 Star$$$$
    SaisonMichelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best$$$$

    A quick look at how SPQR measures up.

    Also Consider

    • Lazy Bear, Progressive American, Contemporary, $$$$
    • Atelier Crenn, Modern French, Contemporary, $$$$
    • Benu, French - Chinese, Asian, $$$$
    • Quince, Italian, Contemporary, $$$$
    • Saison, Progressive American, Californian, $$$$

    How SPQR Compares to San Francisco's Other $$$$ Restaurants

    At the $$$$ tier in San Francisco, SPQR's closest structural peer is Quince, also Italian, also at the top of the price range, but running a tasting menu that locks in your spend and removes ordering control. SPQR's à la carte format is a meaningful advantage if you want to calibrate the bill or if a full tasting menu isn't the right format for your group. For first-timers who want Italian without a fixed menu, SPQR is the more practical choice. For those who want Italian taken to its most formal expression with full production, Quince edges ahead on ceremony.

    Atelier Crenn and Benu are harder to book, higher in overall spend, and locked into tasting formats, they belong on a different shortlist. Lazy Bear runs a communal tasting menu that works well for groups who want a social event around the meal; SPQR suits pairs and solo diners who want a more focused, quieter room. Saison carries a stronger wine program reputation at a higher price point, if wine is your primary reason for spending at this level, Saison is the comparison to make, but the total bill will be higher. SPQR's 3-Star World of Fine Wine accreditation and White Star from Star Wine List mean the gap is smaller than price alone suggests.

    For diners choosing between SPQR and the broader Italian set in San Francisco: Cotogna is the right call when you want serious Italian at a lower price point and a more relaxed room. SPQR is the call when you want to spend at the $$$$ level and want the wine list and technical cooking to justify it.

    Hours

    Monday
    5–9 pm
    Tuesday
    Closed
    Wednesday
    5–9 pm
    Thursday
    5–9 pm
    Friday
    5–9 pm
    Saturday
    9 am–2 pm, 5–9 pm
    Sunday
    9 am–2 pm, 5–9 pm

    Recognized By

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