Restaurant in Seattle, United States
1415 1st Ave
100Pearl PointsEasy to book, details still unconfirmed.

About 1415 1st Ave
1415 1st Ave sits on Seattle's accessible First Avenue strip with easy booking — a practical choice for explorers building a flexible itinerary. Specific cuisine, pricing, and hours are not yet confirmed, so verify before visiting. For context on the broader Seattle dining scene, compare it against neighbours like Canlis, Kamonegi, and Walrus & Carpenter.
Is 1415 1st Ave worth booking in Seattle?
The address alone — 1415 1st Ave in Seattle's First Hill corridor — puts this spot in one of the city's most walkable dining zones, a short distance from Pike Place Market and the waterfront. With limited data currently available on the specifics, the practical question is whether the location and category make it worth a visit over more established neighbours. For explorers building a Seattle itinerary, the answer is contextual: first, establish what you're after, then decide whether this address earns a slot.
What to Know Before You Go
Because cuisine type, price range, and hours aren't confirmed in our records yet, the safest approach is to verify current details directly before committing. That said, Seattle's First Avenue dining strip has historically rewarded spontaneous visits on weekday evenings, when foot traffic is lighter and tables are easier to secure. If you're timing a visit to Seattle's dining scene more broadly, mid-week arrivals , Tuesday through Thursday , give you the leading shot at walk-in availability across the neighbourhood, without the weekend competition that fills rooms at places like Canlis or Joule weeks in advance.
For food and travel enthusiasts who want depth and context from every meal, Seattle's First Avenue is a reasonable base. It puts you close to the city's seafood-forward scene and within reach of the broader Pike-Pine corridor. If you're already exploring venues like Walrus & Carpenter or Kamonegi, this address can fit naturally into a multi-stop evening without requiring a cross-city detour.
Booking Difficulty: Easy
Booking here is rated easy, which in Seattle terms means you're not competing with the city's hardest reservations. Compare that to the weeks-out waits at destination-level spots , or the planning required for tasting-menu formats like those at The French Laundry or Atomix , and 1415 1st Ave reads as a lower-friction option for a Seattle evening. That accessibility is genuinely useful if you're building a flexible itinerary rather than anchoring your trip around a single reservation.
For more Seattle dining context, see our full Seattle restaurants guide, our full Seattle bars guide, and our full Seattle hotels guide. You can also browse Seattle wineries and Seattle experiences to fill out your visit.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is 1415 1st Ave worth the price?
Pricing varies at 1415 1st Ave; confirm via check the venue's official channels.
Where is 1415 1st Ave located?
1415 1st Ave is located in Seattle, at 1415 1st Ave, Seattle, WA 98101.
How can I contact 1415 1st Ave?
You can reach 1415 1st Ave via check the venue's official channels.
Location
1415 1st Ave, Seattle, WA 98101
Seattle, United States
Compare 1415 1st Ave
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1415 1st Ave | Easy | — | |
| Canlis | Unknown | — | |
| Joule | Unknown | — | |
| Kamonegi | Unknown | — | |
| Maneki | Unknown | — | |
| Walrus & Carpenter | Unknown | — |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Also Consider
- Canlis — New American, New American
- Joule — New Asian, New Asian
- Kamonegi — Soba, Soba
- Maneki — Japanese, Japanese
- Walrus & Carpenter — New American - Seafood, New American - Seafood
How 1415 1st Ave Compares in Seattle
Without confirmed cuisine type or price data for 1415 1st Ave, direct comparisons require some framing. What's clear is that the easy booking rating sets it apart from the harder reservations in Seattle's dining tier. Canlis is the city's benchmark for a special-occasion splurge — plan weeks ahead and expect a full-evening commitment. Joule sits in the mid-to-upper range with a bold New Asian focus and is better suited to diners who want a defined culinary point of view. If 1415 1st Ave skews casual, it fits a different brief entirely: lower stakes, easier access, and useful for rounding out a multi-venue evening.
For seafood-focused explorers, Walrus & Carpenter in Ballard is the stronger call — the oyster program there is a legitimate reason to make the trip across town. Maneki, Seattle's long-running Japanese institution, is the pick if you want history and reliability in a single booking. Kamonegi is the right choice if hand-cut soba is your priority and you're willing to plan ahead for a seat.
The honest read: until more detail is available on 1415 1st Ave's format and price point, treat it as a flexible neighbourhood option rather than a destination booking. If you're anchoring your Seattle visit around a single meal, the venues above offer clearer value propositions. If you're building a loose evening itinerary in the First Avenue area, the easy booking and central location make it a low-risk addition.
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