Restaurant in Tulum, Mexico
Two Michelin Plates. Book ahead in peak season.

Casa Banana is Tulum's only Argentine kitchen to hold back-to-back Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025), with a 4.4-star Google rating across more than 1,200 reviews. At $$$, it offers consistent, grill-forward cooking in the Zona Hotelera — a reliable choice when the rest of the beach road feels like a gamble. Book two to three weeks out in peak season.
That number combination tells you something important before you've looked at a menu: Casa Banana is not a flash-in-the-pan beach restaurant riding Tulum's tourism wave. Two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) at a $$$ price point on Km. 7.5 of the Tulum-Boca Paila coastal road puts this Argentine kitchen in a category with very few neighbours. If you've already eaten here once and are wondering whether to go back, the answer is yes — and this time, focus on how you sit and what you order rather than simply showing up.
Tulum's restaurant corridor runs long and the quality drops off sharply once you leave the handful of venues that have earned real recognition. Casa Banana has held its ground across two Michelin cycles, which in a destination this seasonal and this subject to turnover is a meaningful signal. For context, Michelin Plates recognise restaurants that consistently produce good cooking , they are a quality floor, not just a marketing badge. Relative to the wider Mexico portfolio , which includes Pujol in Mexico City and Le Chique in Puerto Morelos , Casa Banana sits at the more accessible end of the country's formally recognised dining, but it earns its place.
Argentine cuisine at its core is about technique applied to protein and fire , cuts treated with patience, seasoning that lets quality ingredients speak rather than masking them with complexity. In Tulum, where the dominant culinary register is Mexican-influenced open-fire cooking (see Hartwood) or contemporary Mexican tasting menus (see Arca), an Argentine kitchen is a genuine point of difference. The flavour profile leans savoury and direct: chimichurri acidity, char from the grill, the clean mineral quality of well-sourced beef. It is not a cuisine built on subtlety, which makes it a good fit for a beach destination where you want your dinner to feel satisfying rather than demanding.
For comparison, Los Fuegos by Francis Mallmann in Miami and Gaucho Piccadilly in London represent the Argentine format at very different price brackets and levels of formality. Casa Banana sits closer to a well-run neighbourhood parrilla than a destination steakhouse , but with the consistency that Michelin recognition implies. That is the right register for a Zona Hotelera setting.
If your first visit was at a table, consider requesting counter or bar seating on your return. In kitchens built around grill work and direct preparation, watching the fire is not just theatre , it gives you a cleaner read on what is coming off the grill at its leading moment, and it naturally prompts conversation with the kitchen team about what to prioritise. At the counter, you are also more likely to be paced well through the meal rather than receiving everything at once. Argentine restaurants can run generous in portion and speed; counter positioning lets you manage that more effectively.
This is the same logic that applies at counter-forward Argentine and fire-cooking venues across the Americas and Europe: proximity to the cooking changes the sequence of the meal and often the quality of the dishes that reach you. If Casa Banana offers counter seating, it is worth asking specifically for it rather than accepting any available table.
At the $$$ tier in Tulum's Zona Hotelera, you are paying for location premium as much as culinary ambition. The key question is whether the kitchen delivers enough to justify that premium over the more casual options in the corridor. The Michelin Plate says yes, and a 4.4 average across 1,209 Google reviews , a sample large enough to be statistically meaningful , confirms that the experience holds up at volume and across seasons. That said, $$$ in Tulum does not mean the same as $$$ in a major city; expectations should be calibrated to a beach-road setting, not a metropolitan fine-dining room.
If you are specifically interested in value at this price point, Cetli offers Mexican cooking at $$, and Autor gives you contemporary ambition at a similar tier to Casa Banana. For Argentine cooking specifically at a different price ceiling and context, the comparison is Animalón in Valle de Guadalupe, where the open-fire format sits inside wine country and commands a different kind of occasion.
Booking difficulty at Casa Banana is moderate. In peak Tulum season (December through March and July), book at least two to three weeks ahead. Shoulder season gives you more flexibility, but given the Michelin recognition and strong review volume, walk-in availability on popular evenings is not reliable. If the venue offers a counter or bar, that seating is often easier to secure on shorter notice than a main-room table , worth asking about when you call or enquire.
For the broader Tulum dining picture, see our full Tulum restaurants guide. For where to stay, our Tulum hotels guide covers the Zona Hotelera and town options. Tulum bars, wineries, and experiences round out the full trip picture.
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Casa Banana | Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024) | $$$ | — |
| Arca | World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
| Taqueria Honorio | — | ||
| Cetli | $$ | — | |
| Hartwood | $$$$ | — | |
| Mestixa | $$ | — |
A quick look at how Casa Banana measures up.
Counter or bar seating is worth requesting specifically, especially if you're dining solo or as a pair. At a kitchen built around grill-focused Argentinian technique, the counter puts you closer to the action and tends to produce a more engaged meal than a standard table. Ask when you book rather than hoping on arrival, particularly in peak season.
Hartwood is the closest comparison if you want open-fire cooking with serious technique at a similar $$$ price point. Arca goes further into creative tasting-format territory and suits groups willing to spend more. If you want Tulum cooking that leans into local Mexican tradition over imported cuisine, Cetli and Taqueria Honorio are stronger calls. Mestixa sits between regional Mexican and modern technique and is worth considering if Casa Banana is fully booked.
Two to three weeks minimum during peak season, which runs December through March and again in July. Outside those windows, one week is usually sufficient, though same-week bookings carry risk on weekends. Casa Banana holds two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025), which keeps demand higher than a typical Zona Hotelera beach restaurant.
Groups of four to six are manageable, but Casa Banana's format, oriented around counter seating and a grill-focused kitchen, is better suited to smaller parties. Larger groups should check the venue's official channels well in advance to confirm table configuration. For groups of eight or more, Arca or Hartwood may offer more flexible arrangements.
Casa Banana sits at the $$$ tier, so you are paying Zona Hotelera location pricing on top of the food. The Michelin Plate recognition for two consecutive years signals consistent kitchen execution, which justifies the spend more than atmosphere alone would. If you want a structured multi-course format, this is a reasonable choice at the price; if you prefer ordering freely from a la carte proteins and sharing plates, the format delivers better value than a locked tasting menu.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.