Restaurant in San Francisco, United States
Tadich Grill
200Pearl PointsSan Francisco's oldest restaurant, still earning it.

About Tadich Grill
San Francisco's oldest restaurant earns its OAD Casual North America #411 ranking (2025) through decades of well-executed regional seafood and a room that has genuine character. Weekday lunch in a booth is the move for returning visitors. Booking is easy by SF standards — walk-ins work for the counter most days.
Is Tadich Grill worth booking in 2025?
Yes — if you want a Financial District lunch that feels nothing like a business cafeteria and everything like a room that has been doing this since before California was a state. Tadich Grill, operating since 1849, is San Francisco's oldest continuously operating restaurant and one of the few places in the city where the room, the food, and the occasion feel genuinely earned rather than manufactured. Ranked #411 on Opinionated About Dining's Casual North America list for 2025 (up from #460 in 2024 and Recommended in 2023), it is in a steady upward trajectory with serious diners who track this category. If you have been once and defaulted to dinner, this page will tell you why lunch is the smarter move.
The room
The spatial setup at Tadich Grill rewards understanding before you arrive. The long, wood-panelled dining room runs deep from California Street, with a counter along one wall, a row of enclosed wooden booths along the other, and open tables filling the centre. The booths are the draw: semi-private, high-backed, and designed for two-to-four people who want conversation without the ambient noise of the full room bleeding in. If you are returning, ask specifically for a booth rather than a centre table. The counter seats solo diners efficiently and gives a direct view of the kitchen line. The room seats a substantial number of covers — this is not an intimate twelve-seat operation , which means weekday lunch has a particular energy: purposeful, fast-moving, and full of people who know what they are ordering before they sit down.
Lunch vs dinner: which sitting works better for you
This is the core question for a returning visitor. Lunch at Tadich runs Monday through Friday, 11am to 2:30pm, and it is where the restaurant is most itself. The Financial District crowd fills the room with a pace that suits the format: you are in, fed well, and out within ninety minutes if you need to be. The menu skews toward the kind of regional seafood dishes , San Francisco's Dungeness crab, sand dabs, cioppino , that have defined California coastal cooking for generations. The kitchen under chef Adriano Dela Rosa handles volume without losing precision, and the lunch sitting is where that balance shows most clearly.
Dinner runs 4:30 to 9:30pm, Monday through Saturday (the restaurant is closed Sundays). The room quiets slightly and the pace slows, which makes it more comfortable for a longer meal. But the trade-off is that dinner loses some of the particular energy that makes Tadich feel like a working institution rather than a preserved one. For a special occasion dinner, it works , the booths especially create enough privacy and atmosphere. For a first or second visit, though, lunch on a weekday is the stronger recommendation.
Saturday is dinner-only (4:30–9:30pm), so if you are visiting on a weekend, that is your only option. Plan accordingly and book ahead , Saturday dinner fills faster than weekday lunch.
Booking and timing
Booking difficulty is low by San Francisco standards. Unlike the city's tasting-menu restaurants , where seats at Lazy Bear, Atelier Crenn, or Benu require weeks or months of lead time , Tadich operates on a walk-in and same-week reservation basis for most services. Weekday lunch is your most flexible window. Saturday dinner requires more planning. The counter is available for walk-ins even when the dining room is full, making it a reliable fallback for solo diners or spontaneous visits.
Know Before You Go
- Address: 240 California St, San Francisco, CA 94111
- Hours: Mon–Fri 11am–2:30pm and 4:30–9:30pm; Sat 4:30–9:30pm; Sun closed
- Booking difficulty: Easy , walk-ins viable for weekday lunch; book ahead for Saturday dinner
- Awards: Opinionated About Dining Casual North America #411 (2025)
- Google rating: 4.5 from 2,944 reviews
- Chef: Adriano Dela Rosa
- Leading for: Weekday Financial District lunch, solo counter dining, classic SF seafood
- Closed: Sundays
How It Compares
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I order at Tadich Grill?
The kitchen runs on California seafood prepared in a straightforward, regional American style — this is not the place to test the kitchen with adventurous requests. Lean into whatever the fish of the day is and the house classics. Tadich has held an OAD Casual North America ranking since 2023, which means regulars trust the formula. Avoid over-ordering; the portions are generous and the pacing is built for a working lunch.
What should I wear to Tadich Grill?
Business casual is the natural register here — the room is a Financial District institution at 240 California St, and the lunch crowd skews toward suits and collared shirts. No formal dress code is documented, so clean and presentable is enough. You will feel out of place in beachwear; you will feel fine in jeans and a blazer.
Can I eat at the bar at Tadich Grill?
Yes, and it is one of the better ways to experience the room solo or as a pair. The long wood-panelled layout includes counter seating that moves faster than waiting for a table during peak lunch hours. If you are walking in without a reservation on a weekday, the bar is your most practical entry point.
Is Tadich Grill good for a special occasion?
It works for a certain kind of occasion — a deal-closing lunch, a visitor from out of town who wants a genuine San Francisco institution, or a birthday dinner for someone who prefers substance over spectacle. It is not the right call if you want a long tasting menu or a flashy room; for that, Quince or Saison are better fits. The OAD ranking signals quality, not theatre.
Is lunch or dinner better at Tadich Grill?
Lunch is where Tadich Grill is most itself. The Monday-to-Friday service (11am–2:30pm) draws the Financial District crowd the restaurant was built around, and the energy reflects it. Dinner runs nightly Tuesday through Saturday (4:30–9:30pm) and is quieter — useful if you want a more relaxed pace, but the atmosphere thins out compared to midday. Saturday dinner-only hours make it a workable option for weekend visitors who plan ahead.
What are alternatives to Tadich Grill in San Francisco?
For a similarly grounded San Francisco seafood experience without the tasting-menu format, Tadich is in a category of its own by age and institution status. If you want more ambitious cooking and are willing to spend significantly more, Benu and Atelier Crenn both hold Michelin recognition and require advance booking weeks out. For a mid-range sit-down dinner closer to the tasting-menu format, Lazy Bear is worth considering. Tadich is the call when you want reliability, history, and a room that does not ask anything of you.
Can Tadich Grill accommodate groups?
Groups of four to six are manageable here, but Tadich is not a private-event venue in any documented capacity. The long, narrow room means large parties can slow service and feel cramped during busy lunch service. For a group business lunch in the Financial District, book early in the week and aim for a slightly off-peak time — 11:30am or after 1:30pm — to avoid the midday rush.
Location
240 California St, San Francisco, CA 94111
San Francisco, United States
Compare Tadich Grill
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tadich Grill | Regional American | Easy | |
| Lazy Bear | Progressive American, Contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Atelier Crenn | Modern French, Contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Benu | French - Chinese, Asian | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Quince | Italian, Contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Saison | Progressive American, Californian | $$$$ | Unknown |
Comparing your options in San Francisco for this tier.
Also Consider
- Lazy Bear, Progressive American, Contemporary, $$$$
- Atelier Crenn, Modern French, Contemporary, $$$$
- Benu, French - Chinese, Asian, $$$$
- Quince, Italian, Contemporary, $$$$
- Saison, Progressive American, Californian, $$$$
Tadich Grill and San Francisco's $$$$ tasting-menu tier are solving different problems, so the comparison is less about quality and more about what kind of meal you are in the market for. Lazy Bear, Atelier Crenn, Benu, Quince, and Saison all operate at a significantly higher price point with fixed tasting menus, multi-week booking lead times, and a format built around the kitchen's progression rather than your order. If that is your target, Tadich is not a substitute, it is a different category entirely.
Where Tadich wins clearly is booking accessibility and casual-to-serious value. All five comparison venues require planning weeks or months out; Tadich is achievable on a few days' notice, and the counter is walk-in viable. For a Financial District lunch or a meal that does not require committing to a two-hour tasting format, Tadich is the practical choice in a way that none of its $$$$ peers can match. The OAD Casual North America #411 ranking (2025) places it in credible company within its own tier, and its 4.5 Google rating across nearly 3,000 reviews reflects consistent execution rather than occasional brilliance.
If you are specifically after Regional American cooking at a more ambitious format, The French Laundry in Napa and Single Thread in Healdsburg are the closest day-trip alternatives for a special occasion splurge. For peer-level casual dining in other cities, Smyth in Chicago and Providence in Los Angeles are worth tracking. Explore our full San Francisco restaurants guide, plus guides to bars, hotels, wineries, and experiences in the city to build out the full trip.
Hours
- Monday
- 11 am–2:30 pm, 4:30–9:30 pm
- Tuesday
- 11 am–2:30 pm, 4:30–9:30 pm
- Wednesday
- 11 am–2:30 pm, 4:30–9:30 pm
- Thursday
- 11 am–2:30 pm, 4:30–9:30 pm
- Friday
- 11 am–2:30 pm, 4:30–9:30 pm
- Saturday
- 4:30–9:30 pm
- Sunday
- Closed
Recognized By
Explore San Francisco
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