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    Restaurant in Buenos Aires, Argentina

    Don Julio

    2,245Pearl Points

    Book two months out. Worth every step.

    Don Julio, Restaurant in Buenos Aires

    About Don Julio

    Don Julio holds a Michelin star and ranked #10 in the World's 50 Best Restaurants in 2024 — the most credentialed steak reservation in Buenos Aires. Expect dry-aged Angus and Hereford from the restaurant's own farm, a 60,000-bottle cellar, and a near-impossible booking window. Reserve two months out or queue close to opening time.

    Don Julio, Buenos Aires: The Verdict

    At the $$$$ price point, Don Julio is one of the most credentialed meals you can spend money on in South America. It holds a Michelin star (2024 and 2025), ranked #10 in the World's 50 Best Restaurants in 2024, and sits at #4 in Opinionated About Dining's South America ranking for 2025. You are not paying for atmosphere alone. You are paying for grass-fed Aberdeen Angus and Hereford beef dry-aged 21 days in-house, a 60,000-bottle cellar curated by owner-sommelier Pablo Rivero, and produce grown on the restaurant's own farm. If steak is your reason for being in Buenos Aires, Don Julio is the reservation to make — full stop. The only real question is whether you can get a table.

    The Space

    Don Julio occupies a corner building in Palermo across two floors, and the physical experience of arriving here is part of what you are booking. The open wood-fired grill dominates the ground floor — you will see the flames and the marbled cuts waiting to go on before you are even seated. Wine bottles signed by previous diners cover the walls in dense, floor-to-ceiling rows, which functions less as decoration and more as a visible record of the restaurant's 25-year history. The dining room is warm and unhurried; this is a neighbourhood parrilla that happens to hold a Michelin star, and the room does not try to look like anything else. Downstairs, the cellar is worth a visit if you can arrange it , 60,000 bottles representing the breadth of Argentine wine-growing territory. Adjacent to the restaurant is a butcher's shop and a small biodynamic garden. For a returning visitor, taking time with these spaces rather than rushing through dinner is the better use of your evening.

    What to Order (For Repeat Visitors)

    If you have been once and ordered the obvious cuts, the second visit is the time to go further. Executive chef Guido Tassi oversees butchery and aging entirely in-house, and the menu reads like a working education in beef anatomy. The skirt steak (entraña) is consistently cited as a house favourite, and the spiral sausage (chorizo espiralado) is produced in-house. Beyond beef, the farm-sourced vegetables , organic asparagus, peppers, courgette , and the heirloom tomato salad are not afterthoughts; they are sourced from Don Julio's own property outside Buenos Aires and worth ordering to understand the full scope of what Rivero has built. On the wine side, the list skews deep into Argentine regions most international visitors have not explored. Trust the sommelier team's guidance rather than defaulting to the obvious Malbecs.

    Regenerative Farming and Why It Matters Here

    Don Julio's farm-to-grill model is not marketing. The Aberdeen Angus and Hereford cattle are raised on local grass pasture, butchered at the in-house facility next door, and dry-aged for a minimum of 21 days before service. The grilled vegetables on the menu come from the same farm. This level of supply-chain control at a restaurant operating at this volume is rare, and it is directly legible in the consistency of the product. For a returning diner, this is the detail that explains why the steak here tastes different from other high-end parrillas in the city.

    Booking Reality

    This is a near-impossible reservation. Booking two months in advance is the standard advice, and it holds. Tables go fast at both the lunch sitting (11:30 am to 4 pm) and dinner (7 pm to 1 am), seven days a week. If you did not book ahead, your leading option is to queue close to opening or closing time , Don Julio serves sparkling wine and hot empanadas to diners waiting, which makes the process more tolerable than most. Walk-ins do occasionally get seated, particularly at lunch on weekdays, but do not build a trip around that assumption. Reservation platforms, the restaurant's own booking channel, and timing your approach close to service start are all worth trying. If Don Julio proves impossible, La Cabrera in Palermo and La Brigada in San Telmo are the most practical alternatives at a lower booking difficulty and lower price tier.

    Know Before You Go

    • Address: Guatemala 4699, Palermo, Buenos Aires
    • Hours: Monday to Sunday, 11:30 am–4 pm and 7 pm–1 am
    • Price: $$$$
    • Booking difficulty: Near impossible , reserve two months out minimum
    • Walk-in option: Queue near opening or closing time; sparkling wine and empanadas provided while waiting
    • Awards: Michelin 1 Star (2024, 2025); World's 50 Best #10 (2024); OAD South America #4 (2025); La Liste 83pts (2026)
    • Cuisine: Argentinian Steakhouse , grass-fed Angus and Hereford, dry-aged 21 days in-house
    • Wine: 60,000-bottle cellar; sommelier-led Argentine wine programme
    • Neighbourhood: Palermo

    Planning Your Buenos Aires Trip

    Don Julio works leading as the anchor of a broader Buenos Aires food itinerary. For contrast, Trescha offers modern creative cuisine on the opposite end of the format spectrum, while Crizia is a strong option for contemporary cooking without the booking difficulty. If you are extending into Argentina more broadly, Azafrán in Mendoza and Siete Fuegos in Mendoza are worth adding for wine-country context, and Cavas Wine Lodge in Alto Agrelo provides a full estate experience. Further afield, EOLO in El Calafate and Awasi Iguazu in Puerto Iguazu round out the Argentina picture. For the full Buenos Aires picture, browse our Buenos Aires restaurants guide, hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    • Is Don Julio worth the price? Yes, at the $$$$ tier, the combination of Michelin recognition, World's 50 Best #10 ranking (2024), and a vertically integrated supply chain , own farm, in-house butchery, 60,000-bottle cellar , means you are getting a level of product control that most restaurants at this price point do not offer. If steak is the purpose of the meal, there is no better-credentialed option in Buenos Aires.
    • What should I order at Don Julio? The in-house skirt steak and spiral sausage are house signatures. For cuts, the menu covers the full range of dry-aged Angus and Hereford, including thick rib-eye and T-bone. On a return visit, focus on the farm-sourced vegetables and heirloom tomato salad, and ask the sommelier team for guidance on the wine list rather than ordering independently.
    • Is Don Julio good for solo dining? Yes. The neighbourhood parrilla format and long service window (11:30 am to 4 pm at lunch, 7 pm to 1 am at dinner) make it a practical solo option. A seat at or near the grill gives you the leading view of the operation. Booking solo may also be marginally easier than securing a table for groups, since single-seat gaps appear more frequently.
    • Is lunch or dinner better at Don Julio? Lunch is the more practical choice for first-timers and walk-in attempts. The room is typically quieter, the light through the dining room is better for taking in the space, and competition for tables is slightly lower. Dinner is the full experience , the grill is in full swing, the room fills, and the wine programme is more actively engaged. For a second visit focused on the wine cellar, dinner is the right call.
    • Is the tasting menu worth it at Don Julio? Don Julio does not operate a fixed tasting menu in the classical sense , the format is à la carte parrilla, which means you build the meal yourself from the grill menu. The value case is strong because the per-cut quality is backed by in-house aging and farm sourcing. Order the skirt steak, a vegetable from the farm menu, and let the sommelier pair the wine; that combination gets you close to the full picture without over-ordering.
    • How far ahead should I book Don Julio? Two months is the standard minimum. At #10 in the World's 50 Best and holding a Michelin star, demand consistently outpaces availability. If you are travelling on a fixed itinerary, book the day your dates are confirmed. Walk-in queuing near opening time is a genuine fallback, but should not be your primary plan.
    • Can Don Julio accommodate groups? The restaurant operates across two floors, which provides more flexibility than a single-room venue. Groups should book as far in advance as possible and contact the restaurant directly to discuss seating arrangements. The à la carte format suits groups well since there is no fixed menu to coordinate around. For large parties in Buenos Aires, Aramburu has a more structured tasting format that may be easier to manage for groups with specific dietary requirements.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Don Julio worth the price?

    At $$$$ per head, yes — provided you understand what you are paying for. Don Julio holds a Michelin star and ranked #10 on World's 50 Best in 2024, and the beef is raised, butchered, and dry-aged entirely in-house from the restaurant's own farm. That vertical integration is what separates it from other high-end Buenos Aires parrillas. If you want a straightforward grill night without the prestige overhead, La Carniceria delivers strong cuts at a fraction of the cost.

    What should I order at Don Julio?

    The database confirms Aberdeen Angus and Hereford cuts, dry-aged 21 days on a bespoke multi-level wood grill — so prioritise the beef over everything else. The heirloom tomato salad and grilled seasonal vegetables from the restaurant's own farm are worth adding as sides. The wine list is personally curated by owner-sommelier Pablo Rivero across 60,000 bottles, so let the floor team guide a pairing rather than ordering blind.

    Is Don Julio good for solo dining?

    Solo diners can book here and the experience holds up — the two-floor corner space in Palermo and the counter-style observation of the open grill give individual diners something to engage with beyond their table. The portion format at an Argentine parrilla tends toward large cuts, so solo visitors should factor that into ordering. Booking lead times are the same regardless of party size: two months out is the standard.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Don Julio?

    Lunch (11:30am–4pm) is the better shot at a table if you cannot secure a dinner booking two months ahead. The queue strategy — arriving close to opening or closing — applies to both sittings, and the database notes that waiting diners are served sparkling wine and empanadas. Dinner runs later (7pm–1am) and tends to carry more atmosphere, but the food and service are consistent across both sittings.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Don Julio?

    Don Julio's menu structure is not documented in available venue data as a formal tasting menu format — it operates as a parrilla, meaning you select cuts and dishes rather than following a set progression. The database does reference an extensive cut list overseen by executive chef Guido Tassi, so the decision is about how much beef you want to explore rather than a tasting menu commitment. For a chef-driven multi-course format in Buenos Aires, Aramburu or Trescha are the relevant alternatives.

    How far ahead should I book Don Julio?

    Two months in advance is the standard, and it is not an exaggeration — Don Julio ranked #10 on World's 50 Best in 2024 and holds a Michelin star, which means international demand is constant. If you cannot book that far ahead, the walk-in queue at opening or closing is a documented option, and the restaurant keeps waiting diners comfortable with sparkling wine and empanadas. Do not count on the queue strategy during peak travel months without a backup plan.

    Can Don Julio accommodate groups?

    The database does not specify private dining or group booking caps, but the venue occupies a two-floor corner building in Palermo, which suggests capacity for larger parties. For groups of six or more, check the venue's official channels well ahead of your travel dates — the two-month booking lead time becomes more pressing the larger the group. If a private room with a confirmed group menu matters more than the parrilla experience itself, Elena at the Four Seasons offers that infrastructure more reliably.

    Location

    Guatemala 4699, C1425 Cdad. Autónoma de Buenos Aires, Argentina

    Also Consider

    Don Julio is the clear first choice if beef is the primary reason for the meal — no other steakhouse in Buenos Aires carries comparable credentials at this level. At $$$$, it sits in a different tier from La Carniceria ($$) and El Preferido de Palermo ($$), both of which offer solid Argentinian grilling at a fraction of the price and with considerably less booking difficulty. If your budget is the constraint, La Carniceria in Palermo is the most practical alternative for quality parrilla without the two-month wait.

    For a $$$$ spend on a different format, Aramburu runs a creative modern Argentinian tasting menu that is a better fit if you want a chef-driven progression rather than an à la carte grill. The booking difficulty is lower than Don Julio and the experience is more structured, which suits groups with dietary requirements or diners who prefer a fixed format. Elena ($$$) is the middle-ground option — a hotel steakhouse with good beef and easier reservations, though it does not match Don Julio's supply-chain depth or award profile.

    For non-steak nights in Buenos Aires, Mishiguene ($$$) covers Argentinian-Jewish cooking at a high level and books more easily. The decision is straightforward: Don Julio for the definitive parrilla experience if you can secure a table; La Carniceria or El Preferido for no-reservation flexibility at lower spend; Aramburu if you want the $$$$ tier in a tasting-menu format.

    Hours

    Monday
    11:30 am–4 pm, 7 pm–1 am
    Tuesday
    11:30 am–4 pm, 7 pm–1 am
    Wednesday
    11:30 am–4 pm, 7 pm–1 am
    Thursday
    11:30 am–4 pm, 7 pm–1 am
    Friday
    11:30 am–4 pm, 7 pm–1 am
    Saturday
    11:30 am–4 pm, 7 pm–1 am
    Sunday
    11:30 am–4 pm, 7 pm–1 am

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