ChameleonsEye / Shutterstock
Restaurants in Tel Aviv
Since the dining scene in Tel Aviv is so robust, finding a good meal can go beyond just recommending certain restaurants, though we certainly do that (and have full reviews on this site). You can also simply stroll to the areas of town that are known for food, and try the places with a crowd. Here are a few of the best neighborhoods for foodies, plus a look at kid-friendly eats, restaurants that work for vegans and the city's finest ice cream.
The Seaside Promenade
Dinner with a water view. What could be better? This area is loaded with lovely seafood and fish restaurants, but there are also tons of culinary gems in romantic Old Jaffa and in more inland, though still easily accessible, parts of Tel Aviv.
Note: Some non-kosher restaurants in Tel Aviv close after lunch on Friday, and then reopen Friday evening or on Saturday.
The old Tel Aviv Port used to be a derelict strip of warehouses and garages along the northern stretch of Tel Aviv’s beachfront. It’s now booming with restaurants, shops, and bars, all linked by a boardwalk promenade. The Port, or the Namal in Hebrew, is bustling through the wee hours, and there are snack and bakery counters, bars, food markets, and other restaurants for every need and interest.
The easiest way to get there is simply to follow the seaside promenade as it continues north from Hilton Beach (about a 10-minute walk). Note that on weekends Tel Aviv Port is a favorite with Israeli families who come from other towns to catch the sea breeze; you’ll have a calmer experience if you visit during the week.
Cars and taxis must stay outside the perimeter of the vast, fenced-in port, which is an added plus—pedestrians entering the entire enclave are checked by security guards at each of the port’s gates.
To get here, take bus no. 4 or 5, or sherut no. 4. Taxis will let you off at the closest gate to the restaurant or bar of your choice. Most people just browse and find a restaurant they’d like to try, but after 8pm or on weekends, you’ll need a reservation. After dinner, you can stroll out to the old Redding Electric Plant, which is now used as a venue for exhibitions, on a distant point at the northern end of the complex.
Yemenite Quarter, Carmel Market and Levinsky MarketThis area, which has undergone a massive rejuvenation since 2010, contains some of the best restaurants in town. These include the colorful and culinarily rich Carmel and Levinsky Market, as well as a grid of little streets off Allenby Street known as the Yemenite Quarter (Karem Ha-Teimanim in Hebrew). Built at the beginning of the 20th century, this is one of the oldest parts of the city and its tangled streets harbor lots of scrumptious, tiny eateries that draws on the Yemenite, Iranian, Turkish, Greek history of the neighborhood.
Probably Tel Aviv’s best-kept restaurant secret, Hatikva is a vast area inhabited by Israeli families from such countries as Yemen and Iraq, and lengthy Etzel Street is virtually wall-to-wall with restaurants serving the foods of their heritage. That means skewered meats, Middle Eastern salads, and delicious Iraqi pita breads that the waiters obtain straight from the ovens of the many bakeries that dot the street—one of Etzel Street’s mottoes is that an Iraqi pita more than 3 minutes old is stale!
The food is not only unusual and tasty, but affordable. Here you can purchase your meals by the skewer, which means you can put together a few choices like beef and turkey plus a salad and french fries, and end up with a tasty, filling meal for less than NIS 85. Or be more daring and order chicken hearts, or the pièce de résistance of Etzel Street restaurants: the enormously rich but delicate goose-liver skewer, barbecued to perfection.
The street is like a food festival. Just pick out a place that looks busy and interesting (preferably next door to a bread bakery), and grab yourself a table.
Getting there: Pick up southbound bus no. 16 on Allenby Street near Mograbi Square, and ask the driver to let you off at Rehov Etzel in Hatikva. The ride from central Tel Aviv should take about 15 minutes.
On the west side of Allenby Street, across from the Carmel Market, Sheinkin Street is sometimes called Tel Aviv’s Greenwich Village. It’s a mix of cafes, unusual shops, and family stores—a stroll and a meal here let you sample a slice of authentic Tel Aviv life away from touristy districts. King George Street, which makes a “V” with Sheinkin Street at Allenby, is home to a number of excellent and reasonably priced bakeries and nut shops—perfect if you’d like a snack for your hotel room.
After decades of neglect, this neighborhood, the oldest in the city, is coming alive with galleries, boutiques, cafes, and The Suzanne Dellal Center for Dance and Theater, the centerpiece for the revival of the area.
On and Around Ibn Givrol Street, Habimah, and the Tel Aviv Museum of Art
Ibn Gvirol Street runs through Tel Aviv’s center of culture, from the Cinémathèque northward toward Shderot Shaul Ha Melech, where you’ll find the Tel Aviv Museum of Art and the fantastic Cameri Theater, and finishing at the green, activity-packed Hayarkon Park. This street is lined with many great choices for everything from post-theater fine dining to young and experimental street food joints.
The neighborhood, just south of the Yarkon River, sometimes called Little Tel Aviv, is centered on Yirmiyahu Street, a short street near the point where Ben-Yehuda and Dizengoff streets meet, a block from the bend in the Yarkon. Take a bus or a cab north on Ha-Yarkon, Ben-Yehuda, or Dizengoff streets all the way to Yirmiyahu.
Near Jaffa
About 2.4km (1 1/2 miles) south of Old Jaffa and the port area is Jabalya (in Hebrew sometimes “Givat Aliya”) Beach. You need a car or a taxi to get to this out-of-the-way area. Tel Avivians in the know patronize the excellent seafood restaurants here, enjoying the unobstructed views of the sunset. Long neglected, this neighborhood has become a piece of prime residential real estate. There’s a public beach with safe swimming and changing rooms at the foot of the hill.
Tel Aviv’s Ice Cream SceneTel Aviv, a city that is hot most of the year, has unsurprisingly, some really great ice cream options. Among the most unique is Buza, an ice cream parlor that is named after the Arabic word for “ice cream,” which is typically made according to techniques (pounding and stretching, rather than churning) that were honed over centuries in Syria. Launched by a Jewish-Israeli kibbutznik and a famed Arab-Israeli chef, Buza won a UN award for promoting coexistence, bringing together Jews and Arabs with a shared love of unique, locally inspired flavors. The incredibly creamy and chewy texture is simply in a different league from what Americans and Europeans know as “ice cream”. Buza is located on 91 Hahashmonaim St and in four other locations throughout northern Israel.
The chain known as Golda also keeps Tel Avivim cool and happy through the hotter months from dozens of branches, by serving European-style ice creams in often unique flavors (pistachio with white chocolate, limoncello). Our favorite outlets of that chain are at Tel Aviv Port, on Rothschild Boulevard, and at 9 Yehieli St, in the Neve Tzedek neighborhood. Golda’s branches are open daily, generally from 8 or 9 am to midnight.
For homemade Italian gelati, our favorite is Arte Italian ice Cream, 11 Nahalat Binyamin; they also make sorbets and refreshing granitas, many of which are vegan.
Vegan Restaurants
Tel Aviv is a foodie town par excellence, where the locals dish on their latest restaurant finds with almost as much relish as they do when actually chowing down. The most recent culinary craze is for vegan restaurants, and somehow it’s fitting: after all, with hot, humid weather several months out of the year, lighter, fare just makes sense. Even the most famous, most classic restaurants are now offering vegetarian or fully vegan alternative menus, but check out some of the insider addresses below for recommended hot spots.
Opa’s low-key, monochrome cream décor is almost as impressive as its plant-based food, both of which strongly exude an elegant, minimalist ethos. As the antidote to the city’s plethora of hippie vegan joints, Opa is a sophisticated chef restaurant where you’ll sample dishes sourced from a farm just outside of Tel Aviv. Favorites include a salad dressed with fermented macadamia milk and, for dessert, a decadent Gianduja chocolate-hazelnut ganache.
8 Ha-khalutzim St. tel. 052/583-8242. Mon-Thurs 7pm-11pm, Fri 12pm-3pm. Bus: 4, 129, 172.
Anastasia Vegan Café was the first vegan cafe in Israel, and is still knowm for its delicious breakfast with loads of tasty dips, good salads, healthy shakes, and incredible cakes.
54 Frishman St. tel. 03/529-0095. Sun-Thurs 9am-10pm, Fri 9am-4pm, Sat 10am-4pm. Bus: 24, 48, 3, 25, 125.
Goodness is where you go to sample all the Israeli classics -- shnitzel, shawarma, shakshuka, kubbe — but vegan. They’ve somehow perfected the difficult task of making vegan cheese actually “cheesy” in texture and taste, and have a long menu of other fun, junk food type dishes, like sloppy Joe sandwiches or chicken nuggets, that are well complemented by the restaurants’ raucous, joyous vibe.
41 King George St. tel. 055/973-5792. Sun-Fri 11am-11pm, Sat 12pm-11pm. Bus: 4, 125, 72, 172, 129, 61, 62, 115.
Four One Six is a hip, dimly lit bistro restaurant that stands out as a special-occasions destination for vegans and their non-vegan friends. Any of the items on the impressive cocktail list (many based on gluten-free Stoli) go well with homemade signature dishes like the soy-based labane, topped with sumac, chile, and sumac, or the Korean oyster mushroom skewers.
16 HaArba’a St. tel. 03/775-5060. Daily 12pm-11pm. Bus: 62, 115, 63, 238, 2, 8.
Market Seasonal Kitchen is a vegan salad bar and restaurant that opened in 2015, offering seasonal, homemade vegan comfort food such as stews, soups, sandwiches, salads. Saturday's opening time is one hour after Shabbat.
31 King George St. and 140 Dizengoff St. Sun-Mon 12pm-11pm, Tues-Thurs 12pm-9pm, Fri 12pm-3:30pm, closed Sat. tel. 03/552-5808. Bus: 4, 62, 115, 61, 129, 172.
Kid-Friendly Restaurants
If your child has a sophisticated palate, feel comfortable taking him or her to most every restaurant in this chapter; Israel is a famously pro-kid country where even many of the pricier places will be happy to host young ones and provide them with entertainment like coloring books and crayons. This box really is geared towards the picky eaters among the younger set, which is easy in a country where restaurants serving schnitzel, fries, burgers and pizzas are found every few streets. Try any one of the spots below and you’re sure to find at least two or three dishes that will satisfy even the most spice-averse of youngsters:
Barbunia No frills and near the hotel district, it offers fresh fish and relatively speedy service. The latter is always a blessing when traveling with impatient youngsters—just get there early at dinnertime to avoid the line.
163 Ben Yehuda St. tel. 053/942-4941. Fixed-price meals NIS 90–NIS 110. Daily noon-midnight. Bus: 4, 10, 55.
Fat Cow This chill burger spot focuses on its butcher-quality cut, grilled to perfection (though there are a few other options, like tasty chicken fingers and a remarkably good Caesar salad) is great for a tasty, quick meal less than 10 minutes from Mezizim Beach. The interior is diner-style, and the outside your typical mix of bar stools and low tables, with an all-around focus on comfort.
265 Dizengoff St. tel. 03/773-2591. Fri-Wed noon-midnight, Thurs noon-1am. Bus: 4, 10, 62, 115.
Pizza Brooklyn. With two branches — on King George 88, near Dizengoff Center, and on Dizengoff 274, in the Old North, you’ll find the perfect midway between gourmet and casual. The pies range from basic but delicious Margherita to more creative versions, like Hawaiian with corned beef.
- Contemporary Israeli
Abraxas Tzafon
Eyal Shani is Israel’s answer to Gordon Ramsay, and the Israeli media enjoys dishing on this power chef’s business dealings almost as much as Israelis enjoy tucking into his creative and always organic culinary offerings. From the curried cauliflower to calamari pasta with parsley…$$Allenby Street & Southward - Bakery
Abulafia and Sons Pita Bakery
A much-loved Jaffa landmark, this aromatic bakery sells direct-from-the-oven, personal-size, traditional Arabic pita-bread pizzas, stuffed breads, and Palestinian-style cheese, potato, and vegetable burekas. Everything is delicious (and very filling), and although there is no…$Jaffa - Vegan
Anastasia
In 2014, two friends, an architect and a restaurateur, decided to open Tel Aviv’s first vegan café with the hope that the city would learn to love the power of the plant. Turns out, they were right. Since it took up residence in a Bauhaus-style building just minutes from Dizengoff…$$In & Around Dizengoff St. - Israeli
Asif Culinary Institute of Israel
Asif is a cafe, a museum, and a nonprofit organization dedicated to Israeli cuisine, supported by Michael Solomon, Naama Shefi, and a long list of other Israeli culinary stars. It’s a space to take stock of the country’s rich culinary past and present, a concept that many Israelis…$$On and Around Ibn Givrol Street, Habimah, and the Tel Aviv Museum of Art - Seafood
Barbunya
Few places in Tel Aviv, or the world for that matter, can boast that for years a line of hungry customers has snaked out the door and down the street, most every day of the week. The reason? The freshest of seafood, reasonably priced and expertly, if simply, cooked. The menu offers…$$Ben-Yehuda Street Area Bretonne
Named after the northwestern district of France, Bretonne serves up a dizzying array of savory and sweet (mostly) buckwheat crepes that make for a substantial but casual meal. These include Middle Eastern versions of the classics, like the eggplant and labaneh crepe, which is also…$On and Around Ibn Givrol Street, Habimah, and the Tel Aviv Museum of Art- Israeli/Wine Bar
Brut
Located on Nahalat Binyamin, Tel Aviv’s garment district and a stone’s throw from the Carmel Market, Brut is an excellent “wine bistro” that gives a Levantine twist on French and Italian small plates. You’ll be seated at just a handful of bar stools at the open kitchen, where a…$$Yemenite Quarter, Carmel Market and Levinsky Market - Israeli
Bucke
This vibrant Tel Aviv cafe, a stone's throw from Habima Theater, is renowned for food that’s reasonably priced and healthy, with a strong emphasis on fresh vegetables. Vegetarians, vegans and carnivores alike rave about the fresh and beautifully spiced salads, leafy sandwiches,…$On and Around Ibn Givrol Street, Habimah, and the Tel Aviv Museum of Art - Israeli
Cafe Popular
Israeli celebrity chef Avi Bitton recently opened this hopping bar-restaurant on the ground and basement floors of a central boutique hotel. The evening menu offers creative dishes balancing traditional and modern Israeli cuisine, like beef tartare served with hot chili harissa and…$$On & Around Dizingoff St. - Mediterranean/French
Catit
Chef Meir Adoni’s Catit offers the most justly praised menu in Tel Aviv. Born of Adoni’s skill and creativity, and making use of traditions from around the Mediterranean, the menu’s always changing but, as a constant, both appetizers and main courses contain many layers of tastes and…$$$Allenby Street & Southward - Israeli/Middle Eastern/French
Dalida
Our favorite way to dine at this candlelit, handsome bistro is to get an array small plates, as the dishes here spans the globe from Tehran to Paris and beyond. Some favorites include the spicy feta brulée, and a spread of bone marrow and Jerusalem artichoke cream served with…$$Yemenite Quarter, Carmel Market and Levinsky Market - Mediterranean
Dallal
Dallal, on one of Neve Tzedek’s charming alleyways, is among the neighborhood’s prettiest spots. It’s set among three restored houses and within them are both interior and al fresco dining options. The kitchen turns out reliably tasty contemporary Mediterranean fare such as tzatziki…$$Neve Tzedek - Contemporary Israeli
Dok
Named after brothers and owners Asaf and Yotam Doktor, this tiny, revelatory restaurant on a busy main street is easy to miss if you’re not looking for it. It’s a culinary lab as much as an eatery, where the owners experiment with purely local ingredients, including specialty…$$On and Around Ibn Givrol Street, Habimah, and the Tel Aviv Museum of Art - Israeli
Eats Cafeteria
Eats Cafeteria is located in a restored heritage building, known as Beit Hanna, or Hanna’s House, named after the feminist political leader Hanna Chizik, who in the 1930s and 1940s trained women to work as farmers in preparation for the establishment of the state. Today, the house is…$$In & Around Dizingoff St. - Israeli Grill
Ha'achim
"Ha'achim" (The Brothers) is the predecessor to the more experimental Dok, by the brother Doktor brothers, and is similarly beloved. This location, on the vast patio outside the Zionist of America Organization (ZOA) building, which also houses a comedy club and a theater, is a…$$On and Around Ibn Givrol Street, Habimah, and the Tel Aviv Museum of Art - Contemporary Israeli
Hotel Montefiore
This iconic culinary institution located on the ground floor of a century-old boutique hotel of the same name serves modern French brasserie dishes, based on local Israeli ingredients, with Vietnamese touches. There are few greater pleasures than sitting at the restaurant’s handsome…$$$Yemenite Quarter, Carmel Market and Levinsky Market - Hummus
Hummus Abu Hassan
A beloved Jaffa hole in the wall, Abu Hassan has for decades drawn a steady stable of loyal customers, Jews and Arabs, working-class people and tourists, all of whom are eager to sample one of the oldest hummus joints in Israel. The restaurant was founded by Ali Karawan, a.k.a. Abu…$Jaffa - Sun-Thurs 12pm-11:30pm, Sat. 6pm-11:30pm. Closed Fridays
Kapara Mio
This spot, which evolved out of a pop up during the covid lockdowns, serves up some of the best homemade, Roman-style pasta in the city. The setting is simple: red and white checkered paper table cloths on a handful of street side tables. The menu is short and to the point, including…$$On & Around Dizengoff St. - Israeli Grill
M25
This carnivore's paradise serves up quintessential Israeli staples in a former market stall just off the main street of the crowded Carmel Market. It’s named after its location: 25 meters from the high-end butcher that supplies its dishes—the first clue as to how seriously these…$Yemenite Quarter, Carmel Market and Levinsky Market - Seafood
Manta Ray
With a pavilion open to the sea on a quiet stretch of beach between Tel Aviv and Jaffa, this is a great place to watch the rolling waves by day, or take in the sunset while you dine. This gorgeously designed seafood institution, perched just above the sands and crashing waves of Alma…$$$Almah Beach - Italian
Mel & Michelle
Located in the center of Tel Aviv, this classic Italian restaurant is known for its cozy atmosphere and makes for the perfect romantic hideaway. It's top dish? The so-called Parisian gnocchi, which takes an iconic dish from The Boot and kicks it up a notch, with Gallic saucing.$$Ben Yehuda Street Area - Modern Israeli
Messa
You dine here in white-on-white splendor right out of “Architectural Digest”—white drapes, white polished marble floors, and a long white communal table with a polished burl wood top running down the center of the dining room, surrounded by upholstered white armchairs. All the color…$$$Ibn Girvrol Street Area - Shwarma
Mifgash Rambam
No hyperbole, Mifgash Rambam serves the best shwarma in Tel Aviv, and possibly all of Israel. The smoked, thinly sliced strips of lamb and beef are deeply seasoned here and never too fatty. The pickled onions, mango amba sauce, lemony tahini, and in an unusual move, tsatsiki, are…$Yemenite Quarter, Carmel Market and Levinsky Market - Israeli
Miznon
Celebrity chef Eyal Shani’s Miznon, or “the buffet,” celebrates the elegant simplicity of the pita. In this rarefied hole-in-the-wall, though, you’ll get an elevated sandwich like you’ve never tasted it before. The menu is short and to the point, featuring expertly executed classics…$On and Around Ibn Givrol Street, Habimah, and the Tel Aviv Museum of Art - Pan European
Par Derriere
The brainchild of a Parisian expat, this romantic wine bar and bistro’s secret weapon is its lush outdoor garden—be sure to ask to be seated there. As for the fare, the wine list is constantly changing but it usually features bottles from boutique French vineyards. And the vino pairs…$$Jaffa - Mediterranean
Pasta Banamal
A bustling, family-friendly pasta stand at the northern corner of the Tel Aviv Port Market, Pasta Banamal is a pint-sized spot serving up some of the city’s most reasonably priced, deliciously homemade pastas and salads, all based on what’s available that day in the surrounding…$Seafront Promenade - Contemporary Israeli
Pastel
Chef Gal Ben Moshe has recently remade this clean-lined, overwhelmingly white restaurant into one of the most interesting laboratories for modern Israeli cuisine. The menu showcases creative, thoroughly fun reinterpretations of dishes originating around the Levant (Syria, Lebanon,…$$$On and Around Ibn Givrol Street, Habimah, and the Tel Aviv Museum of Art - Israeli
Sabich Frishman
The menu at Sabich Frishman is simple: sabich or falafel. Sabich is a pillowy pita sandwich stuffed with fried eggplant, hard boiled eggs, and nutty tahini sauce. The dish is a mini history lesson: it had been a popular Shabbat morning meal among the Jewish community of Iraq and has…$On & Around Dizengoff St. - Iranian
Salimi
For years, the foods of Israel’s immigrants from Iran, Yemen, Iraq and other countries in the Middle East were relegated to “workers’ restaurants,” frequented by men who toiled in the area and sought a cheap and filling meal. Today, these historic eating establishments, when they…$Yemenite Quarter, Carmel Market and Levinsky Market - Yemeni
Saluf and Sons
★★★ YEMENITE[em]For decades, Yemenite cuisine was only available in Yemenite homes, never Israeli restaurants (those served almost exclusively Levantine and European foods). But times have changed, and modern, more culturally expansive Tel Aviv has been rejoicing in the Yemeni…$Yemenite Quarter, Carmel Market and Levinsky Market - Israeli/North African
Shukshuka
Come to Shukshuka for some of the city's best iterations of Israeli Shabbat breakfast classic, which is a spicy yet comforting tomato stew, often served topped with a fried egg. This unassuming, crowded, and joyful food stall turns out several unique versions of the signature dish,…$Yemenite Quarter, Carmel Market and Levinsky Market - Mediterranean
Suzanna
A charming spot that’s a favorite with dancers from the nearby performance center, Suzanna is perfect for a quick bite (we especially recommend their soups and wonderful salads). If you want something more substantial, start you meal with delicious puff pastries filled with seafood…$Neve Tzedek - Thai
Thai House
The best Asian restaurant in Israel. Period. It dazzles those who know real Thai cuisine, and makes converts of those who are new to this cuisine. The brainchild of an adventurous Israeli who spent years in Thailand living in a number of villages throughout the country, Thai House…$Ben-Yehuda Street Area - Seafood
Yulia
This waterfront, fish and seafood haunt near the Tel Aviv Port is a good option if you’re hoping to feel the sea mist on your face as you feast on its fresh bounty. There’s an indoor dining area with a fully stocked bar, but when the weather’s fine (which is most of the year), opt…$$Seaside Promenade


