Get us in your inbox

Search
hoxton, cabra
Photograph: Anthony Tahlier

The 36 best West Loop restaurants

From an old-school sandwich joint to the city's top fine dining destinations, these are the best West Loop restaurants

Written by
Morgan Olsen
,
Samantha Nelson
&
Jeffy Mai
Advertising

No matter what you’re in the mood for, few neighborhoods offer as many options as the West Loop. Home to Time Out Market Chicago and some of the best restaurants in Chicago, the bustling area is packed with everything from omakase concepts to Michelin-starred fine dining destinations. Whether you’re dining in the section of Randolph Street known as “Restaurant Row” or venturing a bit further north to the former warehouse district Fulton Market, there’s a variety of beloved institutions to check out. So consult our guide to the best West Loop restaurants, make a reservation (as tables are always in demand) and get ready to taste the most delicious food Chicago has to offer.

RECOMMENDED: The best bars in the West Loop

Time Out Market Chicago

Top West Loop restaurants

  • Restaurants
  • Contemporary American
  • West Loop
  • price 4 of 4

Chicago is home to oodles of fine dining experiences, from big names like Alinea to relative newcomers Kasama and Esmé. But no foodie's checklist is complete without a meal at Oriole, chef Noah Sandoval's two Michelin-starred restaurant that's plastered with old concert flyers. The multi-course tasting menu—which costs $295 in the dining room and $335 at a kitchen table—is filled with clever, beautiful, indulgent bites that allow guests to be swept up in the experience. If you don’t have the cash to splurge on the full menu, you can reserve a spot at Oriole’s bar and lounge area and order a ham sandwich and one of Julia Momosé’s cocktails.

  • Restaurants
  • Italian
  • West Loop
  • price 3 of 4

Sarah Grueneberg left Spiaggia to open her own restaurant in 2015, and while she brought along the masterful Italian techniques she honed there, she left the fine dining trappings on Michigan Avenue. Monteverde is warm and welcoming, making it ideal for an indulgent date night. It'd be a crime to visit and not try the housemade pastas—from spaghetti with roasted tomatoes to chicken and asparagus-filled ravioli. Balance out the meal with a few piattini (small plates) and stuzzichini (snacks); just be sure to save room for dessert.

Advertising
  • Restaurants
  • American
  • West Loop

Housed in the former Checker Taxi building, El Che Bar is Chef John Manion’s Argentine steakhouse, a love letter to his time traveling throughout the country. Locally sourced vegetables, grilled meats and whole seafood are cooked on custom-built grills and chapas in an open hearth. Menu standouts include grilled oysters topped with smoked onion aioli and bacon, quail served with red chimichurri and the Parrillada platter, which includes chorizo, sweetbreads, sirloin cap and marrow bone.

  • Restaurants
  • American creative
  • West Loop
  • price 4 of 4

John Shields and Karen Urie Shields’s two-for-one special in the West Loop offers elevated tasting menus upstairs and the city’s best burger (yeah, we said it) in the dark, sultry basement. Talk about a winning combination. Here's your game plan: Hit the Loyalist on any 'ol Friday night for patties and a cocktail, and save Smyth for a very special occasion.

Advertising
  • Restaurants
  • Japanese
  • West Loop
  • price 3 of 4

Boka Restaurant Group's foray into Japanese fare is a huge success, with a variety of elegant raw fish dishes and other classics of the cuisine. Favorites include robata-grilled Mishima skirt steak seasoned with Japanese sea salt and beef fried rice with maitake mushrooms and soft-poached egg. You can also opt to have the chef choose a selection of sushi for you and spice it up with a bit of freshly-grated wasabi.

  • Restaurants
  • American
  • West Loop
  • price 2 of 4

Diners come to this megaproject from Paul Kahan for three things: To sample the massive list of brews while basking in the golden-hued, beer hall–like space; run through the current roster of impeccable charcuterie and oysters; or begin their weekend days with arguably the best brunch in town (think waffles with honey butter and jam and thick slabs of housemade bacon).

Advertising
  • Restaurants
  • Contemporary American
  • West Loop
  • price 2 of 4

Few Chicago restaurants possess the staying power that Girl & the Goat has been able to maintain since 2010, when it opened on Restaurant Row in the West Loop. It's still tough to nab a reservation at Top Chef Stephanie Izard's flagship spot (she has a satellite location in Los Angeles), where diners can nosh on sauteed green beans, goat empanadas, goat belly and wood-oven–roasted pig face.

  • Restaurants
  • Mediterranean
  • West Loop
  • price 2 of 4

There are a few things you should know before visiting Avec. First and foremost: Prepare to give up any notion of personal space upon entering. The cozy, always-packed, Mediterranean-skewing West Loop restaurant offers communal seating and shared plates (fear not—you don't have to share with your neighbors). Whether it's your first visit or your 15th, you must order menu mainstays chorizo-stuffed medjool dates and the "deluxe" focaccia with taleggio cheese, airy ricotta, truffle oil and fresh herbs.

Advertising
  • Restaurants
  • Contemporary American
  • West Loop
  • price 3 of 4

If you need a break from the traditional (read: hoity-toity) fine dining experience, book a seat at Roister. There are no white tablecloths, the music is loud and you can totally get away with wearing jeans. Brunch is available, but you'll want to go for dinner, when you can fully appreciate the open-hearth kitchen and everything it has to offer. The whole chicken is a must for first-time visitors and includes flaky fried thighs, roasted breast, and housemade hot sauce. Toss in an order of truffled cheddar rillettes and mussels in Thai green curry, and you'll see what all the hype is about.

  • Restaurants
  • Italian
  • West Loop
  • price 1 of 4

The old school vibe at this corner shop isn’t manufactured—the Graziano family has been doing its thing here since 1937. While it’s hard to go wrong with any of their sandwiches, the Mr. G—prosciutto, salami and sopressata, with biting aged provolone and marinated artichokes tucked into crackly-crisp bread anointed with hot oil and truffle mustard vinaigrette—claims house specialty status for a reason. Just be prepared to wait for your order, because the lunch rush is a very real phenomenon here.

Advertising
  • Restaurants
  • Japanese
  • River West/West Town
  • price 4 of 4

This omakase newcomer from husband and wife Phillip Frankland Lee and Margarita Kallas-Lee arrived with much acclaim, including a Michelin star for Sushi by Scratch Restaurants’ outpost in Montecito, California. Tucked away below West Loop bar The Drop In, the 10-seat concept dishes out 17 courses across three seatings each night. You can expect plenty of luxe ingredients to be featured, as well as inventive nigiri—like a piece with unagi and roasted bone marrow drippings.

https://media.timeout.com/images/105925010/image.jpg
Jeffy Mai
Editor, Time Out Chicago
  • Restaurants
  • Italian
  • West Loop
  • price 3 of 4

Chef and owner Joe Flamm combines his Italian heritage with the bright flavors of Croatian cuisine at this Fulton Market spot named for his grandmothers and the herb native to both countries. You’ll feel like you’ve taken a trip to the Mediterranean sitting amidst the restaurant’s pale stone and blue tiles while dining on a seasonal menu of shellfish cooked on a custom charcoal hearth, housemade pastas and grilled meats. Pair your meal with a glass from the wine list, which emphasizes bottles from Italy and the Balkans, or a Mint Tea Julep made with peppermint tea.

Advertising
  • Restaurants
  • Contemporary American
  • West Loop
  • price 3 of 4

Meaning love in Danish, Elske is an appropriate name for a venture from husband-and-wife team David and Anna Posey. Though the relatively affordable tasting menu (priced at $125) is a no-brainer for special occasions, the à la carte menu makes Elske surprisingly accessible for an average weeknight. Piece together a progression of savory plates from David—they're always changing and loaded with farmers-market fresh produce—and save room for Anna's otherworldly desserts. The sunflower seed parfait with sour honey and bee pollen has been on the menu since day one, and it's easy to see why after just one bite.

  • Restaurants
  • Japanese
  • West Loop
  • price 2 of 4

When temperatures drop, many feel the urge to escape to somewhere remote and exotic. After some boozy slushies in this hidden oasis under Green Street Smoked Meats, you can almost pretend you’ve been transported to a gritty basement ramen shop in Tokyo. Reminiscent of the cautioning one might find from a buffalo wing-centric sports bar, the menu features a stern warning of how spicy the soup can be—and spicy it is, but worth the momentary pain. If you can’t take the heat, you can still get the classic High Five Ramen with half or even no spice or you can opt for one of the milder bowls like the shoyu ramen.

Advertising
  • Restaurants
  • West Loop

Be forewarned: A trip to Proxi will undoubtedly leave you wanting more. It’s not that the menu is lacking; on the contrary, it’s rife with so many tough decisions that you’ll have to book a second visit to try it all. Tempura elotes or sweet potato chaat? Foie gras steamed buns or wagyu beef cheeks? Smoked lamb chops or Indonesian chili chicken? It’s not for the indecisive, but Proxi has officially landed on the short list of restaurants we’d gladly frequent every weekend if we could.

  • Restaurants
  • Indian
  • West Loop

Traditional Indian dishes are made with local ingredients and modern cooking techniques at ROOH Chicago, which has made its mark on Randolph Street since opening in 2019. While the menu has plenty of noteworthy meat dishes like Bengali lamb shank, it’s especially friendly to vegetarians and vegans with options such as sweet potato chaat with spinach tempura. ROOH's well balanced cocktails incorporate ingredients used in Indian food such as persimmon, cumin and turmeric.

Advertising
  • Restaurants
  • Steakhouse
  • West Loop
  • price 3 of 4

At this cavernous West Loop steakhouse, chef Chris Pandel blends old-school Midwestern charm with forward-thinking sensibilities. On the steak front, there are a handful of cuts to choose from, ranging from a ruby-red filet mignon to a splurge-worthy Japanese A5 wagyu strip loin. But you're here for the beef Wellington, with mushrooms, foie gras and spinach wrapped up into a perfectly flaky pastry crust. Finish it off with some petite sweets, which are presented in a dessert trolley.

  • Restaurants
  • Soul and southern American
  • West Loop
  • price 1 of 4

A family-owned Tennessee fried chicken restaurant dating back to 1973 has grown into a franchise with dozens of locations across 14 states. Head to Fulton Market for a plate of hormone-free, never frozen chicken fried in peanut oil and served with baked beans, slaw and white bread to help you handle the heat. The tasty Southern fare doesn't end there—make sure to try fried green tomatoes and sweet potato pie with a bottomless cup of sweet tea.

Advertising
  • Restaurants
  • Peruvian
  • West Loop

Stephanie Izard helms this shiny rooftop restaurant inside the Hoxton, a hotel located in the heart of the West Loop. Here she specializes in light, bright Peruvian fare that's ideal for the sunny space. Dig into an order of salmon ceviche by the pool, dip grilled shishitos into a pepper-forward aioli and tuck into a plate of smoked goat empanadas.

  • Restaurants
  • Japanese
  • West Loop

The omakase menu at this tiny West Loop restaurant changes daily based of of chef Sangtae Park's whims and what's in season and available to him. But if you're willing to put your trust—and $225—in the knowledgeable sushi chef, you can indulge in a 16-course menu that's packed with appetizers, the freshest cuts of fish and dessert. There are three seatings a night, and only six seats at the omakase counter, so be sure to make a reservation well in advance.

Advertising
  • Restaurants
  • Mediterranean
  • West Loop

The sister restaurant to Ēma in River North, Aba showcases chef CJ Jacobson's lighter style of Mediterranean cooking. The Lettuce Entertain You Restaurant features spreads and cold and hot mezze options including crispy short rib hummus, housemade stracciatella and crispy potatoes. Diners looking for substantive fare can enjoy char-grilled lamb chops or a selection of kebabs. On the beverage front, expect summer-ready sippers like the Aloe? It's Me, a tantalizing blend of mezcal, aloe, green juice, lime and jalapeño.

  • Restaurants
  • Barbecue
  • West Loop
  • price 2 of 4

Hogsalt Hospitality's barbecue concept looks to Texas for inspiration. Hop in the line that snakes around the bar and grab a cocktail while you wait for your turn at the counter. Guests can choose from coffee-rubbed brisket, juicy chicken legs, saucy pulled pork and ruby-red pastrami. Load your tray with classic sides—like baked beans studded with pork belly and elote-style street corn—before you snag a picnic table on the covered patio.

Advertising
  • 4 out of 5 stars
  • Restaurants
  • Korean
  • River West/West Town
  • Recommended

You’d be excused for focusing solely on the barbecued meats at this modern Korean spot. After all, they’re terrific—from the marinated L.A.-style galbi and thick Duroc pork belly to the well-marbled cuts of wagyu. But don’t miss out on the rest of the menu. The scallion pancakes and Korean fried chicken wings are must-try starters, while the kimchi fried rice is studded with bits of bacon and spam (optional but recommended) and the silken tofu stew is comfort in a bowl on a cold day.

https://media.timeout.com/images/105925010/image.jpg
Jeffy Mai
Editor, Time Out Chicago
  • Restaurants
  • Italian
  • West Loop
  • price 2 of 4

This project from the Boka Group and Chef Lee Wolen (Boka) took over the former home of Bellemore, serving Italian dishes in an ornate space where diners sit under an arched pergola draped in greenery or flowing sheets of fabric that hang from the ceiling. You'll find crispy arancini, salads, homemade pastas, pizzas, meats and veggies on the menu—including Wolen's signature chicken parmigiana, topped with fire roasted tomato sauce and buffalo mozzarella. Lesser known Italian and West Coast Italian wineries are the focus of Alla Vita's bottle list—and there are cocktails (both alcoholic and non-alcoholic) for those who don't need a glass of red or white with their meal.

Advertising
  • Restaurants
  • West Loop

The first Chicago restaurant devoted to okonomiyaki, Gaijin features both a 12-foot griddle at the chef’s counter and individual griddles on its tables to keep the savory cabbage pancakes warm. Start with a rotating selection of Japanese-inspired pickles from chef Paul Virant before digging into an Osaka-style okonomiyaki featuring shrimp tempura and corn, or a Hiroshima-style layered pancake, which incorporates yakisoba noodles. Just be sure to leave room for a crispy-on-the-outside, chewy-on-the-inside mochi doughnut with a matcha-citrus or pandan-coconut glaze. 

  • Restaurants
  • Contemporary American
  • West Loop
  • price 3 of 4

Sepia has become a bona fide West Loop stalwart for elegant dining. The warm and sophisticated room is a destination for dishes like lamb loin with crispy potato, turnip and pistachio—not to mention a cocktail and wine program that sets the bar for Chicago. Combine the best of both by attending a four-course dinner featuring pairings from guest wine and spirit makers.

Advertising
  • Restaurants
  • Steakhouse
  • West Loop

Chef Joe Flamm pays tribute to classic steakhouses of the 1950s while also offering some new twists on old indulgences with a menu including steak tartare with sriracha aioli, shrimp cocktail with horseradish snow and steak frites with beef fat fries. The dining room also embodies the classic Hollywood vibe with chandeliers hanging over silvery pod-like booths perfect for a celebratory meal, while the new all-season patio is a summer hotspot.

  • 4 out of 5 stars
  • Restaurants
  • Mexican
  • West Loop
  • price 3 of 4
  • Recommended

The name Leña Brava means “ferocious firewood,” a nod to the restaurant’s focus on classic wood-fired dishes such as the signature whole grilled sea bass. You can also build your own tacos with corn tortillas, caramelized onions, grilled chiles and skirt steak, lamb neck birria or pork carnitas. Pair your meal with beer from sibling spot Cruz Blanca for an impeccable time.

Advertising
Greek Islands
  • Restaurants
  • Greek
  • Greektown
  • price 2 of 4

Half the joy of eating at this Greektown stalwart is seeing how many times you can get your server to say “Opa!” The other half comes in the form of the savory saganaki and the keftedakia—small, luscious meatballs simmered in tomato sauce. For mains, choose the rich and flaky spinach-cheese pie or the fantastic loukaniko sausage instead. Honey-laden desserts are solid across the board, so order with confidence. But for maximum “Opa!” make sure you finish with a cup of potent coffee.

  • Restaurants
  • Cafés
  • West Loop
  • price 1 of 4

Thinking of spending your Sunday morning at this classic Chicago diner? Better check the weather: The line snakes out the door and onto Lou Mitchell Way well into the afternoon. Customers are treated to fresh, sugar-dusted doughnut holes (and, if you’re a woman, Milk Duds) while they wait, but the real feast starts when you sit down. Stacks of “meltaway” pancakes are perfectly browned, omelettes come in hot skillets (try the sweet, rich apple-and-cheese variety) and juicy, gooey patty melts seem too big to finish. But as with the rest of the irresistible dishes, you’ll find room.

Advertising
  • Restaurants
  • Greek
  • West Loop

A large wood and coal-burning oven in the open kitchen above LÝRA’s dining room fills the restaurant with the smells of cooking meat, building anticipation for the modern spins on Greek fare before they hit your table. While carnivores will delight in slow-roasted lamb gyros carved tableside and the deconstructed pastitsio with short rib ragu and black truffle bechamel, there are plenty of great vegan and vegetarian options like the hummus with charred beets. The restaurant hosts DJs and serves large format cocktails after 11pm on weekends.

  • Restaurants
  • American
  • West Loop

Eleven Eleven serves an eclectic menu blending Southern flavors like shrimp ‘n grits with Italian classics like cacio e pepe with wild mushrooms. Visit for happy hour to take advantage of half-price select bottles of wine and $8 cocktails—including gin or vodka martinis and a Blushing Gimlet made with pomegranate syrup—or linger in the evening on the terrace strung with lights and decorated with a colorful mural.

Advertising
  • Bars
  • Wine bars
  • West Loop

Situated below The Publishing House B&B, the Press Room serves a seasonal menu of top-notch eats to pair with their lengthy wine list, including Nashville hot quail and fried smelt. Those looking to chit-chat the night away over bottles should order a cheese and charcuterie board that includes prosciutto cotto, sheep's milk ricotta and housemade pickles.

  • Restaurants
  • Fusion
  • River West/West Town
  • price 2 of 4

Executive chef Saúl Román draws on his experience cooking in Mexico City and at Lincoln Square’s Artango Bar & Steakhouse for a menu of playful dishes including Korean sticky mushroom tacos, grilled skirt steak with chipotle chimichurri and lobster flautas. The bar offers a massive collection of mezcal and tequila you can try in a flight or as part of a cocktail like the Tijuana Unicorn Show (mezcal, lemon and prickly pear). Finish with the Churroulette, an assortment of housemade churros, one of which is laced with habanero.

Advertising
  • Restaurants
  • Italian
  • West Loop

Hailing from Lodi, Italy, Federico Comacchio helms the kitchen at Gioia, showcasing a rotating menu of regional Italian dishes and housemade pastas including paccheri prepared tableside with fresh tomato sauce and aged parmesan. Especially hungry diners can order the Orecchia di Elefante for two, a breaded double veal chop served on a wood platter with roasted potatoes and arugula. Just make sure that you'll have enough room to sample the frozen tiramisu souffle paired with a glass of limoncello.

  • Restaurants
  • American
  • West Loop

Sure, this Lettuce Entertain You concept has locations all over the city, but if you're ever in the West Loop over the lunch hour, you'll find that the masses flock to Beatrix and the adjacent Beatrix Market for fresh, feel-good eats that actually taste good. Take a seat inside Beatrix proper for blackened fish tacos, a mushroom and quinoa burger or the Straight "A" salad, with arugula, avocado, Asian pear, almonds and asiago.

Recommended
    You may also like
    You may also like
    Advertising