
An annual global ranking of 101 standout steak restaurants, celebrating meat quality, cooking technique, and service in 2025.
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Buenos Aires, Argentina
Don Julio holds a Michelin star and a top-ten World's 50 Best ranking, placing it at the apex of Buenos Aires' parrilla tradition. Booking two months ahead is standard; walk-in queues form close to opening time. The wine cellar runs to 60,000 bottles, and the beef — Aberdeen Angus and Hereford, dry-aged in-house — is sourced from the restaurant's own regenerative farm outside the city.

Sydney, Australia
Neil Perry's Double Bay flagship sits at the serious end of Sydney dining, where Blackmore Wagyu and line-caught coral trout share the menu with equal billing. Ranked No. 2 on the World's 101 Best Steak Restaurants list, Margaret pairs a wood-fired grill program with Australian seafood preparations that carry clear pan-Pacific influence. The wine list skews strongly toward Australian producers, and the front-of-house operates at a pace that feels effortless rather than rehearsed.

Hondarribia, Spain
A Michelin Plate asador on the slopes of Mount Jaizkibel, Laia Erretegia occupies a converted country-house stable outside Hondarribia and runs one of the Basque Country's more serious dry-aging programmes. Beef is aged a minimum of 30 days for the premium rib and at least 60 days for the dry-aged côte de boeuf. Ranked #168 in Opinionated About Dining's Casual Europe list for 2025, it draws a committed lunch crowd and operates a tight weekly schedule.

Saturnia, Italy
Operating from Saturnia's central piazza since 1976, I Due Cippi dal 1976 holds a Michelin Plate and earns its reputation on open-fire cooking and a rare-breed meat program that runs from Chianina to Japanese Wagyu. Chef Lorenzo Aniello oversees the grill; Alessandro Aniello curates a wine list weighted toward Tuscan and Italian labels. The price tier sits at €€€, with outdoor seating available in warmer months.

Singapore, Singapore
Singapore's open-flame standard-bearer, Burnt Ends occupies a converted space on Dempsey Road where a custom four-tonne wood-fired oven sets the terms for everything on the plate. Ranked #93 in the World's 50 Best Restaurants (2025) and holding a Michelin star, it represents the serious end of fire-led cooking in Asia, placing Australian barbecue technique in direct conversation with Singapore's broader fine-dining scene.

Jiminez de Jamuz, Spain
In the quiet León village of Jiménez de Jamuz, El Capricho operates at a tier of beef cookery few asadors anywhere attempt. José Gordon raises Iberian oxen on a closed-cycle farm, dry-ages the meat for up to 160 days in earthen cellars, and finishes cuts on a bespoke wood-fired open grill. Ranked #16 in Opinionated About Dining's Casual Europe list for 2025, it draws serious meat diners from across the world.

Tolosa, Spain
Founded in 1951, Casa Julián de Tolosa is the benchmark against which Basque asador cooking is measured. The restaurant ranked No. 7 on the World's 101 Best Steak Restaurants list in 2025, built on txuletón from mature Galician and Basque cattle, dry-aged in-house and grilled over oak coals. Xabi Gorrotxategi and Gabriel S López continue a tradition that has no serious rival in the region.

Madrid, Spain
On Calle de Ponzano in Madrid's Chamberí district, Lana puts Argentine fire-cooking at the centre of a formally considered dining room. Brothers Martín and Joaquín Narvaiz work across a display case of aged cuts and a wood-fired grill, earning a Michelin Plate and a place on the World's 101 Best Steak Restaurants list. The €€€ price point sits at the serious end of Madrid's grill scene without tipping into tasting-menu territory.

Stockholm, Sweden
On Kungsholmen, inside a former silver factory, AG has spent more than a decade building Stockholm's most serious case for beef. The programme runs from 90-day dry-aged Swedish dairy cow to Japanese A5, all cooked over open charcoal. EP Club ranks it in the Top 10 of its global steakhouse list, and Martin Kjäll took EP Club's Meat Master of the Year award in 2025.

New York City, United States
America's only Michelin-starred Korean steakhouse, Cote occupies a dark, atmospheric room in the Flatiron District where tableside grills and dry-aged A5 Wagyu reframe what a steakhouse can be. The Butcher's Feast at $65 remains the entry point. Ranked No. 2 on Robb Report's 50 Best Steakhouses in North America 2025 and holding a Michelin star since 2024, it draws a global following without straying from its core premise.

London, United Kingdom
A Farringdon warehouse conversion running a bespoke Basque grill, Ibai sits in the same ownership family as Lurra and Donostia but leans harder into open-fire beef and the French-facing side of Basque cooking. The Galician Blond cuts and the Croque Ibai pintxo have earned it a Michelin Plate in consecutive years. For a milestone meal built around serious meat cookery, it occupies a distinct position in London's fire-cooking scene.

Sydney, Australia
Housed in Sydney's City Mutual Building, Rockpool at 66 Hunter Street is one of Australia's most decorated fine dining addresses. Under Executive Chef Santiago Aristizábal, the kitchen centres on self dry-aged beef grilled over ironbark charcoal, alongside seafood and produce-led sides. Its World's 50 Best rankings — as high as #4 in 2002 — place it in rare company on the Australian dining scene.

Chicago, United States
Ranked the #1 steakhouse in North America by Robb Report in 2025, Asador Bastian brings Basque asador tradition to Chicago's River North, centering the txuletón — thick bone-in ribeye from old dairy cows — cooked over open fire in the historic Flair House. The wine list runs 140 selections with a strong Spanish spine, and the room reads intimate rather than clubby, which separates it from the city's old-guard chophouse circuit.

Sydney, Australia
Occupying a commanding space above Martin Place, The Grill at The International channels Sydney's appetite for produce-led, fire-driven dining into a format built around premium Australian beef, oak-fired technique, and a wine program of considered depth. Chef Joel Bickford structures the menu around dry-aged cuts and complementary small plates that together make a case for what Australian fine dining can look like when it commits to both precision and place.

Busan, South Korea
Born and Bred, located inside the Paradise Hotel in Haeundae, brings the Hanwoo beef tradition of Seoul's Majang Meat Market to Busan's coast. The multi-floor concept spans a casual butcher eatery, a dedicated butcher lounge, and a basement omakase course led by third-generation butcher Chef Jung Sang-won. Ranked #51 in Asia's 50 Best Restaurants (2025) and #12 on Opinionated About Dining's Asia list, it sits at the sharper end of the city's fine-dining tier.

Surry Hills, Australia
Firedoor in Surry Hills is one of Sydney's most discussed fire-cooking restaurants, where every dish is prepared exclusively over wood flame by chef Lennox Hastie. The open kitchen places the grill at the centre of the room, and a daily-changing menu reflects whatever the fire and the season allow. Star Wine List awarded the restaurant a White Star recognition in 2021.

New York City, United States
Opened in November 2024 at One Madison Avenue, La Tête d'Or is Daniel Boulud's first dedicated steak restaurant, bringing French technique to the American steakhouse format. The Flatiron room features Art Deco design with walnut floors, marble, and blue velvet, while the menu pairs dry-aged and oak-grilled cuts with French sauces and a prime rib trolley that arrives tableside.

Melbourne, Australia
At 953 High Street in Armadale, Victor Churchill extends the legacy of the Sydney butcher into full-service fine dining, anchored by a 28-day self dry-aged beef programme and a charcoal grill that draws serious carnivores from across Melbourne. Glass-walled ageing chambers display prime cuts in full view of the dining room, making the case for butchery as both craft and spectacle before a single dish reaches the table.

Sint-Idesbald, Belgium
Carcasse in Sint-Idesbald holds a Michelin Plate and ranked #59 in Opinionated About Dining's 2025 Casual Europe list, placing it among Belgium's most recognised meat-focused restaurants. Under head chef Timon Michiels, the kitchen centres on self dry-aged beef (minimum 28 days) and charcoal-grill cookery, drawing from sourcing across Belgium, the Netherlands, Germany, the UK, and Spain. Open Thursday through Monday for lunch and dinner, priced at €€€€.

Sydney, Australia
Few restaurants in Sydney have held their ground as firmly as Porteño, the Surry Hills Argentinian asado house at 50 Holt Street. Where other venues chase reinvention, Porteño builds its reputation on ironbark, charcoal, and a decade-plus of fire-driven cooking. It sits in a different competitive tier from Sydney's fine-dining circuit, measuring itself instead against a smaller cohort of destination restaurants defined by singular culinary tradition.

Copenhagen, Denmark
At Rådhuspladsen in central Copenhagen, Capa takes a position rarely occupied in a city dominated by tasting-menu culture: a serious, technique-led steakhouse built around dry-aged beef and Nordic sourcing logic. Chef Casper Sobczyk works with Sashi meat and Freygaard beef from Finland, framing the grill as a vehicle for ingredient provenance rather than spectacle.

Gent, Belgium
On Hoogstraat, a short walk from Ghent's medieval centre, Gillis operates at the sharper end of Belgium's contemporary meat-focused dining scene. Chef Bram Candries built his reputation around dry-aged beef and a sharing format that anchors the meal in Flemish tradition without retreating into nostalgia. A White Star from Star Wine List and a 2025 ranking in the World's 101 Best Steak Restaurants confirm its position among Belgium's most seriously regarded tables.

London, United Kingdom
Hawksmoor Air Street sits at the serious end of London's steakhouse tier, operating out of an Art Deco room just off Regent Street with sweeping ceilings and stained-glass windows. The menu centres on British grass-fed beef dry-aged for 35 days and cooked over charcoal, backed by a deep wine list and a cocktail bar downstairs. Opinionated About Dining has ranked the group consistently since 2023, and a Michelin Plate in 2025 confirms its standing in London's mid-to-upper dining bracket.

London, United Kingdom
A Michelin-starred East London address where Basque fire-cooking techniques meet British seasonal ingredients, Brat sits above Redchurch Street in a former pub space that has become one of London's most decorated casual dining rooms. Ranked 65th on the World's 50 Best Restaurants list in 2024 and a multiple Star Wine List of the Year winner, the turbot-centred menu draws on Wales, the Basque Country, and lumpwood charcoal in equal measure.

Osio Sotto, Italy
La Braseria holds a Michelin Plate (2025) and a Google rating of 4.4 across 950 reviews, placing it among the more serious meat-focused restaurants in the Bergamo province. Chef Luca Brasi works with free-range Italian breeds, self-managed dry ageing, and a bespoke charcoal and wood grill to produce cooking grounded in Italian carnivore tradition. The price point sits at €€, accessible for the level of sourcing and technique involved.

Vancouver, Canada
Elisa is Yaletown's benchmark wood-fired steakhouse, operated by Toptable Group and awarded a Michelin Plate in 2025. Chef Andrew Richardson works a bespoke Grillworks Infierno grill across premium cuts from British Columbia, the US, and Japan. A 6,000-bottle cellar with a 700-selection wine list, led by Wine Director Franco Michienzi, rounds out one of Vancouver's most complete occasion-dining rooms.

Tokyo, Japan
Nikuya Tanaka has held Tabelog Silver consecutively since 2021, placing it among the most consistently recognised beef kaiseki counters in Ginza. Nine seats, a binchotan charcoal grill, and a dinner spend of JPY 60,000–79,999 position it in the same price tier as Tokyo's top omakase rooms. Reservations open three months ahead and are taken by phone or online.

Madrid, Spain
In the Salesas district, Los 33 occupies a particular niche in Madrid's grill scene: a parrilla-rooted menu that draws on Uruguayan tradition and Spanish dry-aged beef, split across a no-reservation tapas bar and a bookable dining room with an open-fire grill. Holding a 2025 Michelin Plate and a Google rating of 4.2 from over 1,700 reviews, it has become one of the harder tables to secure in the neighbourhood.

Florence, Italy
On Via Ricasoli, steps from the Duomo, Regina Bistecca anchors itself to the single most defining dish in Florentine cooking: bistecca alla Fiorentina from Chianina IGP cattle, grilled over a wood-fired hearth and seasoned with nothing but salt, pepper, and Tuscan olive oil. The setting, a former anatomy theatre with exposed brickwork and antique chandeliers, matches the seriousness of the kitchen's commitment to tradition.

Quito, Ecuador
Ranked No. 68 on Latin America's 50 Best Restaurants 2025 extended list, Tributo is Quito's most focused expression of fire-based cooking, built around dry-aged Ecuadorian beef and hyper-local sourcing. Chef-owner Luis Maldonado anchors the menu in nose-to-tail technique and Andean terroir, from a 120-day dry-aged cut raised at 4,000 metres to a 48-hour smoked rib broth. Among Quito's growing tier of serious dining rooms, it occupies a distinct position.

Bilbao, Spain
Amaren, in Bilbao's Abando district, centres its menu on dry-aged beef from old cows and oxen sourced across the Iberian Peninsula, grilled over an open fire by Chef Aitor Del Olmo. Stone, wood, and iron interiors root the room in Basque material culture. The wine list draws from Basque and Spanish appellations alongside Old World references, making it a coherent address for anyone tracing the txuleton tradition seriously.

Sydney, Australia
A basement steakhouse beneath Sydney's CBD, The Gidley pairs an old-world dining room of dark timber and leather booths with dry-aged Australian beef cooked over an ironbark and charcoal open-fire grill. The wine list holds a White Star recognition from Star Wine List, placing it among Sydney's more seriously curated rooms. The format suits slow business lunches and considered evening dinners in equal measure.

Monte Carlo, Monaco
Beefbar Monaco holds a Michelin Plate (2025) and sits at 42 Quai Jean-Charles Rey, positioning itself as the anchor property in a multi-city group founded in 2005. The menu works across USDA Prime, Australian Wagyu, and Japanese Kobe beef, wet- and dry-aged and finished on a high-temperature broiler. Price range is €€€, a tier below Monaco's multi-starred competition.

Paris, France
Inside a former Marais butcher shop on Rue Volta, Anahi marries Argentine fire cookery with French precision under the direction of Mauro Colagreco and Riccardo Giraudi. The room, with its original mosaic tiles and mirrored ceilings, frames a menu built around rare-breed beef, South American flavour signatures, and a wine list that ranges from boutique Malbec to classic Bordeaux.

Buenos Aires, Argentina
A Michelin Plate-recognised counter restaurant in Palermo, Fogón Asado seats twelve around a U-shaped chef's counter where a bespoke 360-degree open fire grill anchors a tasting menu built on wet and dry-aged Argentine beef. The format puts wood-fired technique front and centre, pairing each course with Argentine wines in a setting that positions the asado tradition inside a fine-dining structure.

Sydney, Australia
At 25 Martin Place in Sydney's CBD, AALIA brings Middle Eastern and North African grilling traditions to a contemporary Australian context. Executive Chef Paul Farag works from an ironbark wood and charcoal grill sourced from the Blue Mountains, anchoring the menu in fire-driven technique and historically researched ingredients. The interior, designed by architect Matt Darwon, pairs sculptural woodwork with warm lighting to match the cooking's register.

Melbourne, Australia
Steer Dining Room in South Yarra, Melbourne is a precision-driven Wagyu steakhouse celebrating Australian and Japanese beef. Must-try plates include A5 Kobe Wagyu, Stone Axe Wagyu tenderloin and the Wagyu tataki with yuzu kosho and sesame. The kitchen pairs wet- and dry-aged cuts with high-temperature broiler and hibachi grill techniques, while an exacting wine list — more than 400 selections and 60+ by the glass — elevates each bite. Recognised in 2025 for Wagyu excellence, the room is sleek and intimate, with warm lighting, polished service and dishes that balance silky fat, smoke-charred edges and bright, textural accents.

Dubai, United Arab Emirates
A Michelin-starred wood-fire kitchen operating out of a Jumeirah villa, 11 Woodfire ranks #28 in the World's 50 Best Restaurants MENA 2024 and carries a Opinionated About Dining placement for 2025. Chef Brando Moros builds his menu across meat, seafood, and vegetables, treating each with the same precision over oak, hickory, and hay coals. Dinner service runs from 6 pm on Mondays; Tuesday through Sunday opens at noon.

London, United Kingdom
Inside The Ned, one of the City of London's most architecturally significant banking halls, Lutyens Grill operates as a serious charcoal-grill room with a sourcing programme centred on rare breed European cuts and dry-aged beef. The dining room trades in dark wood panelling and tableside carving trolleys, placing it firmly in the tradition of the great London club grill. Chef Lee Kebble leads the kitchen.

Kyoto, Japan
An eight-seat counter in Gion, Miyoshi (Niku no Takumi Miyoshi) holds a Tabelog Silver Award for 2022–2026, following Gold in 2019 and 2020, with a score of 4.46. Chef Tsutomu Ito runs a beef kaiseki format priced at JPY 60,000–79,999 per person, placing it among Kyoto's most serious meat-focused counters. Ranked #23 in Opinionated About Dining's Japan list for 2025.

London, United Kingdom
Aragawa brings its Tokyo-rooted Wagyu tradition to Mayfair, operating on a discipline of singular sourcing and binchotan charcoal cooking that most London steak restaurants don't attempt. All cuts are Tajima Wagyu, seasoned with salt alone, served in a room that reads more like a private dining club than a restaurant. Recognised with a Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025, and a 2024 entry in the World's 101 Best Steak Restaurants.

Paris, France
Jean-François Piège's Clover Grill occupies a precise position in Paris's meat-focused dining tier: a Michelin Plate holder ranked in Opinionated About Dining's top European casual lists for three consecutive years, where charcoal and Josper-grilled cuts from Galician Blond, Wagyu, and dry-aged European beef are served in a dark marble room a short walk from the Louvre. This is fire-driven cooking applied with classical rigour.

Los Angeles, United States
On Sunset Boulevard in Hollywood, Gwen occupies the sharper end of Los Angeles's fire-driven steakhouse tier — a Michelin-starred restaurant and European-style butcher shop built around whole-animal sourcing, dry-aged cuts, and a wood-fire grill. The tasting menu format and à la carte option place it in a price and format bracket alongside LA's most credentialed fine-dining rooms, with Opinionated About Dining ranking it among the top 250 restaurants in North America in 2025.

New York City, United States
A West Village supper club that has built its reputation on salt-crusted USDA prime rib and a wine program weighted toward bold reds. Ranked #2 in Opinionated About Dining's Casual North America list in 2023 and #4 in 2024, 4 Charles Prime Rib draws a devoted crowd to its candlelit, leather-booth interior on one of Manhattan's quieter residential streets.

Melbourne, Australia
Housed in the grand Cavendish House on Russell Street, Gimlet is Andrew McConnell's all-day Melbourne CBD institution where European elegance meets an open-fire grill programme built around dry-aged Victorian and South Australian beef. The wine list spans serious Australian producers and European labels, and the room — velvet banquettes, mirrored walls, vintage chandeliers — delivers the kind of atmosphere that makes a Tuesday lunch feel like an occasion.

Osaka, Japan
In Osaka's Namba district, Kitan-in runs an omakase-format yakiniku built around dry-aged wagyu, charcoal-grilled over open fire in an intimate setting with private rooms. Chef Hiroyuki Takeshita sources beef with deliberate attention to aging method, offering a structured progression through cuts and preparations that reflects serious engagement with Japanese beef traditions.

Dallas, United States
Knife, Chef John Tesar's dry-aging program in Plano's Legacy West corridor, ranks among the most seriously sourced steakhouses in Texas. Beef is aged in-house up to 240 days, with cuts presented alongside full traceability data on breed, feed, and method. Ranked #302 on Opinionated About Dining's North America list in 2025, it sits in a different tier from the conventional Dallas chophouse.

Tolosa, Spain
In Tolosa, where open-fire cooking has defined communal eating for generations, Casa Nicolás holds a clear position among the town's most serious asadores. The chuleta — dry-aged beef from European and Iberian cattle, cooked over a bespoke charcoal and wood grill — is the measure of everything here. Ranked on Opinionated About Dining's 2025 Casual Europe list and rated 4.5 across 529 Google reviews, it draws both locals and committed steak pilgrims.

San Francisco, United States
Niku Steakhouse brings Japanese dry-aging discipline and wood-fired technique to San Francisco's Design District, operating under a Michelin star and an Opinionated About Dining ranking among North America's top restaurants. The 18-seat chef's counter frames an open binchotan charcoal grill, and the wine list runs 730 selections with particular depth in Burgundy and California. Dinner runs $66 and above per person before wine.

Hong Kong, Hong Kong
On the fifth floor of H Code in Central, Fireside strips Hong Kong dining back to its most elemental register: open flame, dry-aged meat, and wood-fire technique. Chef Jaime Ortolá's fire-focused menu shifts with the seasons, anchored by long-aged Galician beef, whole carabinero prawns, and an Old World wine list that moves in step with the kitchen's rhythm.

Sydney, Australia
Nine floors above the CBD on a heritage-listed Margaret Street address, Shell House Dining Room and Terrace is Sydney's most considered meat-forward restaurant. Culinary Director Joel Bickford and Head Chef Brad Guest run an open-fire grill program built around dry-aged Australian beef, with a garden terrace offering unobstructed city views to match the ambition of the menu.

Austin, United States
Few Austin restaurants have held their position across five decades the way Jeffrey's has. Operating from a restored 1930s cottage in Clarksville since 1975, and reimagined in 2013, the restaurant pairs a Michelin Plate-recognised kitchen with one of the city's most serious wine programmes: 700 selections, 4,000 bottles in inventory, with deep verticals across Bordeaux, Burgundy, and Napa Cabernet.

Singapore, Singapore
On Mohamed Sultan Road, Bistecca Tuscan Steakhouse occupies a specific niche in Singapore's premium dining circuit: Italian steakhouse tradition executed with Australian F1 Wagyu and a high-temperature wood-fired grill. The signature Bistecca alla Fiorentina, a 1.1kg bone-in T-bone dry-aged in-house, anchors a menu where Chianti-steeped wine selections and attentive front-of-house work in deliberate concert.

Hanoi, Vietnam
Inside Capella Hanoi's French Quarter address, Koki brings Japanese precision to one of Southeast Asia's most historically layered cities. Head Chef Hiroshi Yamaguchi works a program anchored in kansha (respect for ingredients) and omotenashi (Japanese hospitality), with Yaeyama Kyori beef from Okinawa's Ishigaki Island and a seasonal omakase format that positions Koki in Hanoi's premium dining tier alongside Michelin-recognised neighbours.

South Wales, United Kingdom
Set within Lanelay Hall Hotel & Spa in Pontyclun, BLOK is South Wales's fire-cooking destination, built around open-flame charcoal grilling and Welsh-sourced beef. Head Chef James Milward's menu centres on wet and dry-aged cuts — sirloin, rib-eye, tomahawk on the bone — finished with sauces that range from Café de Paris butter to green mojo. For the region, it occupies a distinct tier: hotel fine dining with a focused, technique-led concept.

Buenos Aires, Argentina
Inside the Four Seasons Buenos Aires on Posadas, Elena positions itself at the intersection of open-fire Argentine grilling and internationally informed technique. Executive Chef Juan Gaffuri's dry-aged beef programme, 200-label wine list focused on Mendoza and Patagonia, and a 2025 Michelin Plate make it one of the more seriously argued cases for modern Argentine cooking in the city.

Melbourne, Australia
Scott Pickett's South Yarra restaurant makes a direct argument for fire as the defining technique of Australian cooking. A Josper oven, rotisserie, and wood-fired grill anchor a menu built on wet- and dry-aged beef and local produce, all inside a room fitted with Otway Blackwood tables and seasonal botanical installations. At 159 Domain Road, the kitchen is the spectacle.

New York City, United States
Operating since 1885, Keens is one of Midtown Manhattan's oldest chophouses and a James Beard America's Classic. The dry-aged USDA Prime cuts, broiled on a high-temperature grill, anchor a menu that also features the signature mutton chop and prime rib hash. Ranked #150 in Opinionated About Dining's 2025 Casual North America list, it remains a reference point for old-school New York steakhouse tradition.

Singapore, Singapore
CUT by Wolfgang Puck reimagines the modern steakhouse with exacting precision, world-class sourcing, and cinematic flair. In a sleek, artful setting, guests embark on a progression of meticulously selected beef—Japanese Wagyu, American ribeye, and rare cuts—each kissed by fire, perfumed with woodsmoke, and finished with a jeweler’s attention to detail. Elevated sides and vibrant, globally inflected sauces add nuance, while an encyclopedic cellar offers vintages as bold or restrained as your evening requires. Service is poised yet warmly intuitive, ensuring every moment feels both exclusive and effortless. For the traveler who collects experiences, not just reservations, CUT delivers a singular expression of luxury: elemental, sensual, and unmistakably modern.

New York City, United States
Where most steakhouses along the NoMad corridor default to white tablecloths and tradition, The Bazaar by José Andrés operates on a different register entirely: large-cut meats over live fire, Japanese Wagyu served on sizzling Ishiyaki stone, and small plates shaped by molecular technique. Located on the second floor of the Ritz-Carlton New York, NoMad, it earns a White Star recognition from Star Wine List, signaling a wine program that runs well beyond a standard steakhouse list.

Tenerife, Spain
At Char Fuego Y Brasas inside Baobab Suites in Costa Adeje, chef Babacar Fall works across Basque-style grills, charcoal ovens, and cast-iron pans to produce fire-driven cooking built around dry-aged Spanish beef from Galicia, the Basque Country, and Teruel. The open kitchen places the live fire at the centre of the room. Recognition from Star Wine List signals a wine program serious enough to match the meat-focused format.

Sydney, Australia
Set within the historic sandstone Argyle Stores in The Rocks, The Cut Bar & Grill is Sydney's wood-fired steakhouse benchmark. Executive Chef Santiago Aristizabal, with Rockpool Bar & Grill lineage, leads a menu built around wet- and dry-aged Australian beef, David Blackmore Wagyu, and Rangers Valley cuts grilled over custom wood-fired heat in one of the city's most architecturally weighted dining rooms.

New York City, United States
Open since 1937, Minetta Tavern on MacDougal Street has operated at the intersection of French bistro technique and New York steakhouse tradition for nearly nine decades. Holding a Michelin Plate alongside consistent Opinionated About Dining recognition, it serves dry-aged beef and French-inflected classics in a room of red banquettes and caricature-lined walls that Greenwich Village has long considered its own.

Berlin, Germany
Berlin's most-photographed dining room sits on the Spree at Friedrichstraße 105b, drawing a nightly procession of artists, politicians and global figures to one of the city's most deliberate steakhouse programmes. Grill Royal holds three Star Wine List awards (2025) and a 4.3 Google rating across more than 2,800 reviews, with a 1,340-bottle cellar and a dry-aged beef roster spanning German Simmental to Japanese Wagyu.

Vienna, Austria
A Vienna steakhouse that helped shift the city's meat culture toward serious dry-aging and premium sourcing, Beef & Glory operates from Florianigasse in the 8th district with a menu spanning Austrian, American, and Japanese cuts. Under chefs Marco Condori and Dominik Zotter, the kitchen centres on a high-temperature broiler and house dry-aged beef. The experience remains committed to the ritual of the cut, the sear, and the rest.

Singapore, Singapore
Shatōburian in Singapore’s Palais Renaissance presents Modern Japanese yakiniku centred on A5 wagyu. Must-try plates include the Shato-Sando (chateaubriand wagyu, glazed foie gras, freshly grated truffle), the Premium Wagyu Don (steak-cut wagyu, unagi, foie gras, sea urchin, ikura, onsen egg, shaved truffles) and misuji grilled tableside. The kitchen imports wet-aged Hida wagyu from authorised Japanese auction houses and serves each cut with Himalayan salt or tare for focused seasoning. Tableside grills deliver controlled searing and a buttery mouthfeel, while a nose-to-tail philosophy and attentive service create a precise, intimate dining experience on Orchard Road.

Monterrey, Mexico
Monterrey's most serious steakhouse makes its case through breed provenance, precise dry-aging, and open-fire technique rather than spectacle. Located at Punto Valle inside Town Center San Pedro, Holsteins — under chef Luis Ochoa — works with Holstein, Angus, and Wagyu cattle and pairs them with a beverage programme spanning Valle de Guadalupe reds and native agave spirits. The result is northern Mexico's cattle culture treated as a discipline.

George Town, Malaysia
Firewood holds a Michelin Plate (2024 and 2025) for its open-fire cooking in a heritage shophouse on Jalan Masjid Kapitan Keling. The custom charcoal grill drives a menu anchored in dry-aged beef, flame-treated seafood, and Nyonya-inflected sauces. Counter seats face the grill directly, and pre-ordering dry-aged cuts in advance is recommended for serious meat eaters.

Detroit, United States
Prime + Proper occupies a restored 20th-century building in downtown Detroit, running an in-house butchery program that ages all USDA Prime beef for a minimum of 28 days. The open-fire grill, glass-walled dry-age rooms, and a wine list recognised by Star Wine List place it in a narrow tier of steakhouses operating at national scale. Chef Anthony Dirienzo leads the kitchen at 1145 Griswold Street.

London, United Kingdom
A three-storey Soho pub restored to working-pub form, The Devonshire at 17 Denman Street pairs a ground-floor Guinness counter with an upstairs Grill Room built around a wood ember open-fire grill and Scottish dry-aged beef butchered on-site. Michelin Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025 confirms its place in London's tighter tier of serious gastropubs. Booking well ahead is advisable.

Chicago, United States
Set in a converted 1920s meat and produce warehouse in Chicago's Fulton Market District, Swift & Sons channels the city's meatpacking heritage through a contemporary steakhouse lens. USDA Prime beef, a 2,800-bottle wine list with strong California and French depth, and AvroKO's architecturally considered interior place it firmly in Chicago's upper tier of formal steak dining. Ranked #106 on Opinionated About Dining's Casual North America list in 2024.

Helsinki, Finland
Set on Korkeavuorenkatu in central Helsinki, The Grand Bar & Grill is one of Finland's most serious steak destinations, built around dry-aged Nordic beef, open-fire cooking, and a warm brasserie room that reads as both cosmopolitan and distinctly Finnish. Chef Sylvester Soisalo leads a kitchen defined by close producer relationships and Nordic seasonal produce, with a menu that extends from dry-aged T-bone and Finnish Prime Rib to oysters, escargots, and classic beef tartare.

New York City, United States
Open since 1927, Gallaghers on West 52nd Street is one of Midtown Manhattan's longest-running steakhouses, earning a Michelin Plate in 2024. USDA Prime beef is dry-aged in-house in a street-facing glass locker, then grilled over hickory. With a Google rating of 4.6 across more than 8,400 reviews, it holds its ground in a competitive Midtown steakhouse tier at the $$$ price point.

Antwerp, Belgium
Maven occupies a former warehouse in Antwerp's Zuid district, building its identity around wood-fired, meat-driven cooking with in-house dry-aged cuts from rare European breeds including Rubia Gallega, Simmental, and Portuguese Mirandesa. Chefs Jules Koninckx and Luc de Laet run a programme that sits at the serious end of Belgium's new-era steak restaurant category, pairing its grill work with a curated natural and old-world wine list.

New York City, United States
American Cut in Tribeca has occupied a specific niche in New York's steakhouse circuit since 2013: modern in format, theatrical in atmosphere, and built around USDA Prime and A5 Wagyu cuts prepared on a high-temperature grill. Under chef Juan-Pablo Perez, the kitchen anchors its menu around dry-aged beef while the cocktail program and supper-club room keep the energy running late into the evening.

Toronto, Canada
Among Toronto's upper tier of fine dining steakhouses, Jacobs & Co. at CIBC Square holds a Michelin Plate (2025) and one of the city's more serious wine programs: 1,175 selections, 6,200 bottles in inventory, and a $50 corkage policy. The in-house dry-aging room and a sourcing approach spanning North America, Australia, and Japan place it in a distinct peer set from the broader steakhouse market.

Miami, United States
Bavette's Steakhouse & Bar brings Chicago's most celebrated jazz-age steakhouse format to Miami, anchored by USDA Prime beef dry-aged in-house for 42 days and a beverage program built around serious red wine pairings. Ranked by Opinionated About Dining in Casual North America for three consecutive years through 2025, it occupies a particular tier: classic steakhouse execution with the atmosphere of a pre-Prohibition supper club.

San Francisco, United States
A Marina District institution since 1987, Izzy's Steaks & Chops has operated through San Francisco's dining revolutions without abandoning the format that made it work: an open fire grill, dry-aged Creekstone Farms Black Angus beef, and a room that feels like it belongs to the neighbourhood rather than to a moment. The recent renovation, led by Gachot Studios, sharpened the room without erasing it.

Kyiv, Ukraine
One of Kyiv's most seriously appointed steakhouses, Beef on Shota Rustaveli Street runs a charcoal grill programme built around A5 Japanese and Australian Wagyu, USDA Prime, and locally dry-aged cuts, alongside a wine list that ranges from Old World classics to boutique producers. Chef Kseniia Amber leads the kitchen. The open-kitchen format and dark-wood interior make it a natural choice for both business dinners and longer celebratory meals.

Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Occupying a prime position inside the Regent Hong Kong on Tsim Sha Tsui's waterfront, The Steak House is one of the few fine-dining rooms in the city built around a charcoal grill. The wine list runs to 500 selections with a 2,000-bottle inventory weighted toward Burgundy and Bordeaux, and the room — clad in burgundy, black, copper, and suede — holds a Michelin Plate for 2024 and 2025.

Lisbon, Portugal
Lisbon's most recognised steakhouse occupies a corner of Praça Dom Luís I, where open-fire grilling and in-house dry-aging define the format. Sala de Corte sources cuts from the Iberian Peninsula, Australia, and Japan, placing it at the serious end of Portugal's meat-dining spectrum. A Star Wine List White Star recognition in 2026 confirms the wine program matches the ambition of the kitchen.

Zurich, Switzerland
At Schifflände 6 in central Zürich, Williams Butchers Table operates where the butcher's counter and the dining room share the same floor space. The concept centres on dry-aged beef sourced from Switzerland, Spain, and the United States, with cuts selected at the counter before service. Chefs Joel Pires and Mario Pappa have built a program around high-temperature grilling and provenance-driven sourcing that positions the restaurant at the front of Switzerland's steakhouse category.

Tokyo, Japan
A counter-format beef kaiseki in Nishiazabu where wagyu is treated with the same rigor applied to premium fish at Tokyo's top omakase bars. Chef Jotaro Okubo applies kappo technique to Japanese Black cattle, working with wet-aged cuts over binchotan charcoal. Ranked by Opinionated About Dining among Japan's top restaurants in 2023, 2024, and 2025.

Dallas, United States
Nuri Steakhouse in Uptown Dallas places Texas prime beef and Korean culinary tradition on the same plate. The kitchen runs a high-temperature broiler reaching 1,600°F, sources cattle from 44 Farms and Blue Branch Ranch, and draws on Seoul-trained direction alongside Gordon Ramsay North America lineage. Star Wine List recognised the program three times in 2026, including a White Star designation.

Glasgow, United Kingdom
At the Finnieston end of Argyle Street, Porter & Rye has built its reputation around a dry-ageing cabinet that holds beef for up to 160 days and a kitchen that treats the process with corresponding seriousness. The room is small and mezzanined, the welcome informal, and the Sunday roast with bone-marrow jus has become something of a local institution. A reliable anchor in Glasgow's most food-dense neighbourhood.

Tokyo, Japan
A 16-seat counter in Azabu-Juban where wagyu is prepared through the disciplines of kappō cuisine rather than the conventions of the Western steakhouse. Chef Kenichiro Okada's seasonal omakase draws from Kobe, Matsusaka, Omi, and Sendai breeds, cooked over Spanish charcoal in full view of the counter. The format sits in the same intimate, high-craft tier as Tokyo's top sushi and kaiseki rooms.

Stellenbosch, South Africa
On a private island within a dam at Remhoogte Wine Estate, Vuur builds its seven-course menu around open-fire cooking using up to six wood types, with locally reared breeds dry-aged a minimum of 70 days. The setting, framed by the Simonsberg Mountains, is as deliberate as the technique. Reservations are essential and seating is limited.

New York City, United States
A Gilded Age chophouse reborn for the 21st century, Gage & Tollner has operated on Fulton Street in Downtown Brooklyn since 1879, with a restored dining room of mahogany mirrors and brass chandeliers that has earned consistent recognition on Opinionated About Dining's North American list. The menu draws from the Southern chophouse tradition shaped by Edna Lewis, running from oysters Rockefeller to dry-aged beef and fried chicken with cornmeal fritters.

London, United Kingdom
Operating from Bruton Place since 1952, Guinea Grill is one of Mayfair's longest-standing steak houses, built around British grass-fed beef sourced from named suppliers and dry-aged in-house. As a founding member of the Scotch Beef Club, it occupies a different register from Mayfair's Michelin-chasing tasting-menu circuit — straightforward in format, deliberate in sourcing, and recognised by Opinionated About Dining's 2023 Casual Recommended list.

Jakarta, Indonesia
Meatguy Steakhouse brings dry-aging discipline to South Tangerang, with beef aged between 28 and 120 days using techniques that include butter tallow incorporation. Chef Yudi Teuku oversees a menu anchored by Australian Wagyu cuts and an open-fire grill, set inside a space that includes a boutique wine cellar and cigar lounge.

Melbourne, Australia
Beneath the historic Georges Building on Little Collins Street, Meatmaiden operates as one of Melbourne's most committed smoke-and-fire rooms, pairing an ironbark-fired smoker with premium Australian beef from producers like O'Connor and Rangers Valley Wagyu. The subterranean setting, open kitchen, and serious dry-aging program place it in a distinct tier among the city's carnivore-focused dining options.

Melbourne, Australia
Grill Americano in Melbourne is a Northern Italian-inspired steakhouse that places premium Australian beef over a hand-built wood oven and Josper charcoal grill. Must-try offerings include the 1.2kg Bistecca alla Fiorentina, the 650g Rib-eye on the bone and the 200g Wagyu Eye Fillet MB 4+. Each cut arrives with finishing touches such as black truffle butter or a green peppercorn and Cognac sauce, and sides like Parmesan-crusted onion rings and truffle mac & cheese amplify the flavors. Owned by restaurateur Chris Lucas, Grill Americano pairs its wood-fired steaks with an extensive wine list of more than 2,000 bottles, creating a bold, tactile dining experience on Flinders Lane that suits celebrations and serious steak lovers alike.

Sydney, Australia
Set in Marrickville's converted industrial fabric, 20 Chapel places open-fire cooking at the centre of its menu rather than as a stylistic flourish. Chef Corey Costelloe, formerly of Rockpool Bar & Grill, brings dry-aged beef and Australian produce together over a custom wood-fired grill. The result is a restaurant that reads as a serious addition to Sydney's inner-west dining scene.

Mount Maunganui, New Zealand
Fife Lane Kitchen & Bar has appeared on the World's 101 Best Steak Restaurants list in 2025, placing Mount Maunganui on the map for serious beef. The charcoal grill program centers on self-dry-aged New Zealand cuts, including Lake Ohau Wagyu from Canterbury and Greenstone Creek from Taranaki. It is the Bay of Plenty's most credentialed steakhouse by a significant margin.

Buenos Aires, Argentina
In San Isidro, north of the Buenos Aires city limits, Hermanos brings the Petersen brothers' collective weight to a parrilla format that takes Argentine fire cooking seriously as a technical discipline. Wet-aged beef, open-flame precision, and a vegetable program given equal standing in the kitchen position this as one of the more considered entries in the greater BA parrilla scene.

Osaka, Japan
In Osaka's Kitashinchi district, Fukutatei takes a deliberately spare approach to Japanese Black wagyu: heifer-only beef, binchotan charcoal grilling, and seasoning limited to salt and pepper. The result is a Michelin Plate-recognised counter where the sourcing does the talking. Ranked #510 in Opinionated About Dining's 2025 Japan list, it occupies a considered niche between the city's teppanyaki mainstream and its starred kaiseki tier.

Johannesburg, South Africa
In Parkhurst, one of Johannesburg's most food-conscious neighbourhoods, The Blockman makes a case for the steakhouse as a serious culinary format. Chef-owner Vassilios Holiasmenos brings dual credentials as chef and butcher, with in-house dry-aging, whole-animal butchery, and open-fire grilling at the centre of the operation. The all-South African wine list and visible butchery add further weight to a focused, credible offering.

Tokyo, Japan
Nihonbashi Kakigaracho Sugita has held the Tabelog Gold Award every year from 2017 through 2026, placing it among the most consistently recognised Edo-mae sushi counters in Tokyo. The nine-seat room in Chuo Ward operates on reservation only, with pricing that sits in the JPY 40,000–49,999 range per person. Opinionated About Dining ranked it tenth among all Japanese restaurants in 2025.

Sydney, Australia
On a quiet stretch of Dalley Street in Sydney's CBD, Bistecca has built its reputation around a single cut: the bistecca alla Fiorentina, grilled over ironbark, charcoal, and olive branches on an open hearth. The focused menu, Tuscan-inflected room, and a phone-free policy place it in a narrow tier of Sydney restaurants where format discipline drives the experience. Chef Pip Pratt leads the kitchen, and the restaurant holds a White Star from Star Wine List.

Tokyo, Japan
Among Tokyo's premium beef restaurants, Wagyumafia operates in a category of its own: a members-only counter in Toshima City where wet- and dry-aged Wagyu is prepared on a high-temperature broiler in full view of a 14-seat audience. Ranked #41 in Opinionated About Dining's Casual Japan list for 2025, it also appears on the World's 101 Best Steak Restaurants. Open Tuesday through Saturday, evenings only.

Athens, Greece
Brutus Tavern occupies a measured position in Kolonaki's premium dining circuit, anchoring its menu around dry-aged and specialty beef cuts prepared over open fire with French technique. Olive-fed Wagyu, Spanish Black Angus, and a 40-day dry-aged tartare define the range. Under chef Stefanos Rizos, the kitchen draws sourcing from Spain, Australia, and the United States, with wet- and dry-aging programs running in parallel.
Find out on Pearl and keep score across every place in 2025 World's Best Steaks 101 Best Steak Restaurants.
Overview
The 2025 World's Best Steaks edition ranks 101 steak restaurants across 31 countries and 55 cities. Don Julio in Buenos Aires claims the top position, replacing Hundred Burgers from the previous year. The list shifted dramatically, retaining just 4 venues from 2024 while adding 97 new entries, signaling a complete recalibration of what qualifies as world-class steak.
This edition represents a near-total reset from the previous year's rankings. Only 4 restaurants survived from 2024, while 97 newcomers entered and 21 dropped out entirely. The geographic spread spans 31 countries, with Spain claiming four spots in the top 10 (Laia Erretegia at #3, El Capricho at #6, Casa Julian De Tolosa at #7, and Lana at #8). The shift from Hundred Burgers at #1 in 2024 to Don Julio in 2025 reflects a fundamental change in criteria or judging panel. Argentina, Australia, Spain, Italy, Singapore, Sweden, and the United States all place in the top 10, showing no single country's dominance in the global steak conversation.
The 2025 World's Best Steaks list underwent a dramatic overhaul. Don Julio in Buenos Aires takes the top spot, displacing last year's winner Hundred Burgers, which didn't make this year's cut at all. Only 4 restaurants from the 2024 edition retained their positions, while 97 new entries joined and 21 dropped out. Spanning 101 restaurants across 31 countries and 55 cities, this edition prioritizes global representation over previous years' focus. Spain claims four of the top 10 positions, the strongest showing by any country in the upper ranks.
The 2025 rankings mark a significant departure from previous methodology or judging criteria. With 97% turnover in the list composition, this edition essentially started fresh. The top 10 alone demonstrates the geographic range: Argentina opens at #1, followed by Australia at #2, then Spain with three consecutive entries from #3-#8, plus Italy at #4, Singapore at #5, Sweden at #9, and the United States rounding out at #10 with Cote in New York City.
The complete absence of Hundred Burgers, Black Bear Burger, and Bleecker Burger—all from the previous edition—suggests a move away from burger-focused establishments toward traditional steakhouses and asadors. The inclusion of Laia Erretegia, Casa Julian De Tolosa, and El Capricho points to recognition of Basque and Spanish steak traditions that emphasize specific cattle breeds and live-fire cooking.
With 55 cities represented across the 101 positions, the list averages fewer than two restaurants per city, indicating breadth over depth. The 31-country spread means roughly three restaurants per country, though distribution clearly isn't even given Spain's four top-10 placements.