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    Restaurant in Los Angeles, United States

    Funke

    795Pearl Points

    Book early. The pasta justifies the price.

    Funke, Restaurant in Los Angeles

    About Funke

    Evan Funke's Beverly Hills pasta showcase holds a Michelin Plate (2025) and ranked #25 on the LA Times 101 Best Restaurants 2024. Dinner-only, $$$$ pricing, and notoriously hard to book — reserve three to four weeks out. Stronger than Bestia for pasta craft and room theater, though Osteria Mozza offers more flexibility at a lower price point.

    Should You Return to Funke?

    If you've already been to Funke once, you already know the answer is probably yes — the question is when and what to focus on next. The Beverly Hills trilevel restaurant from Evan Funke holds a Michelin Plate (2025), landed at #25 on the LA Times 101 Best Restaurants 2024, and ranked #609 on Opinionated About Dining's Casual North America list for 2025. Reservations have remained notoriously difficult to secure well past the opening buzz, which tells you what you need to know about sustained demand. If you haven't locked in a table yet, plan at least three to four weeks ahead and treat Thursday as your leading weekday opening window before the weekend competition intensifies.

    Dinner Is the Main Event — And the Only Option

    Funke is dinner-only, Tuesday through Saturday (5–9:45 pm) and until 10:15 pm on Fridays and Saturdays. There is no lunch service. That matters for how you plan and budget: you are committing to a full dinner spend in the $$$$ tier with no lighter midday alternative at this address. If you want a Funke-adjacent pasta experience at a more accessible price point and format, Osteria Mozza offers a lunch-friendly setup and a la carte flexibility, and Angelini Osteria runs a more traditional trattoria pace for afternoon visits. For a second visit to Funke specifically, the right move is to lean into the full dinner format rather than trying to treat it as a quick meal.

    What to Focus on the Second Visit

    First-timers often anchor on the pasta, and rightly so. The kitchen's pasta laboratorio is visible from the dining room, and the handcrafted output is the clearest reason to pay $$$$ prices on South Santa Monica Boulevard. But on a return visit, the smarter play is to go wider. The sfincione palermitano , a round of dough finished with jammy tomato, onion, sharp cheese, wild oregano, and breadcrumbs , is a dish the LA Times specifically called out: it starts with crisp structure and collapses into something airier. If you ordered past the pasta section last time and stopped there, the prime rib-eye cap with crispy potatoes has been described as among the more satisfying meat-and-potato combinations in the city. And dessert from pastry chef Shannon Swindle earns its own line item: the seasonal crostata is worth holding space for, even at this price point.

    The arrabbiata is the pasta benchmark worth ordering on every visit. The LA Times noted the tomato and chile find a balance point that the spaghetti strands carry well , it reads as a calibration dish, the one that shows whether the kitchen is on that night. Use it as your baseline when comparing visits.

    The Room and the Rooftop

    The physical layout shapes the experience in ways that differ depending on where you sit. The main dining room surrounds the open kitchen and pasta laboratorio, which is the seat to request if the craft process is part of why you're here. The private dining room offers separation for groups or occasions where conversation matters more than kitchen theater. The rooftop bar is a genuine third option: arrive early, have a drink upstairs before your reservation, and assess whether the night calls for the full dining room commitment or a lighter bar-side approach. For a second visit, spending twenty minutes on the rooftop before sitting down is the move that first-timers often skip.

    Booking and Practical Details

    Funke is closed Sundays and Mondays. The Friday and Saturday seatings run fifteen minutes later (last table at 10:15 pm), which gives you more flexibility if you're working around a Beverly Hills evening. Book through the standard reservation platforms three to four weeks out at minimum; the LA Times noted that more than a year after opening, reservations were still notoriously hard to get. If you're flexible on date, mid-week Tuesday or Wednesday typically offers the most availability at this difficulty level. The address at 9388 S Santa Monica Blvd puts you firmly in Beverly Hills, with valet and street parking options typical for this stretch of the corridor.

    How Funke Fits the Broader LA Italian Scene

    Funke sits at the leading end of LA's Italian category by profile and price. For comparison, Antico Nuovo and Bianca offer handcrafted pasta in formats that are easier to book and less expensive, making them better choices if the theatrical setting and chef-name premium aren't part of your criteria. Bestia competes at a similar energy level with a broader Italian-influenced menu and a downtown Arts District location that some diners prefer for its less formal register. Funke's specific argument is the combination of the pasta laboratorio, the multilevel room, and the Beverly Hills clientele , if those elements don't matter to you, the alternatives above deliver strong pasta for less friction. If you want to benchmark Funke against Italian at the highest international tier, 8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana in Hong Kong and cenci in Kyoto represent what Italian cooking looks like in different global contexts. For chef-driven destination dining in other U.S. cities, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Le Bernardin in New York City, The French Laundry in Napa, Alinea in Chicago, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, and Emeril's in New Orleans offer useful reference points for how Funke's $$$$ pricing compares across formats.

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    The Verdict on a Return Visit

    Funke is worth going back to, but only if you're prepared to book early, commit to dinner pricing, and use the second visit to push past the obvious pasta order. The room is theatrical by design, the pasta laboratorio is a genuine draw, and the awards record across Michelin, the LA Times, and OAD confirm this isn't a one-hit restaurant. The Google rating of 4.1 across 260 reviews is lower than the critical consensus, which suggests some diners find the experience doesn't fully match the price and hype , so go with clear expectations about what you're paying for: craft, setting, and spectacle at Beverly Hills rates, not a quiet neighborhood dinner.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Funke?

    Funke does not operate a traditional tasting menu format — the experience is a la carte, which gives you control over pacing and spend at a $$$$ price point. That structure suits the food well: the pasta program is the centerpiece, and ordering two or three pasta courses alongside a meat dish reflects how the kitchen is designed to be eaten. If you want a fixed chef-driven progression, Hayato or Vespertine are the correct Los Angeles choices.

    Is Funke good for a special occasion?

    Yes, with caveats. The tri-level Beverly Hills space — open kitchen, private dining room, rooftop bar — gives you genuine event architecture, and the LA Times ranked it #25 on its 2024 list of 101 best restaurants. Reservations are notoriously hard to secure, so book at least three to four weeks out. The private dining room is the move for milestone occasions; the main dining room skews more scene than celebration.

    What are alternatives to Funke in Los Angeles?

    For handcrafted pasta at a lower price point, Antico Nuovo and Bianca are the credible comparisons. For Evan Funke's own work in a slightly less theatrical setting, his earlier restaurant Felix in Venice is the direct alternative. If the draw is Italian cooking at the top end of LA's dining scene, those three cover the main territory without Funke's booking difficulty.

    Is Funke worth the price?

    At $$$$, Funke sits at the upper end of LA's Italian category, but the LA Times 101 Best ranking (#25 in 2024) and a Michelin Plate confirm it is not paying for decor alone. The pasta laboratorio is operational, not decorative, and the food output justifies the spend if pasta is your focus. If you want comparable craft at a lower price, Felix offers a similar ethos in a less glitzy room.

    Is Funke good for solo dining?

    It depends on where you sit. The open kitchen and pasta laboratorio create natural viewing interest for solo diners, and the counter or bar positions — including the rooftop bar — make solo visits more comfortable than a large table. Solo dining at the bar lets you order selectively and avoid the social pressure of a full table commitment at $$$$ prices. Book in advance regardless; walk-in availability is limited.

    Can I eat at the bar at Funke?

    The rooftop bar is a distinct option within the venue, and it offers a lower-stakes entry point compared to a full dining room reservation. It is the most accessible part of the space if you cannot secure a main dining room table. Note that Funke is closed Sundays and Mondays, and the rooftop operates within the same dinner-only hours: 5–9:45 pm Tuesday through Thursday, 5–10:15 pm Friday and Saturday.

    Location

    9388 S Santa Monica Blvd, Beverly Hills, CA 90210

    Los Angeles, United States

    Compare Funke

    Worth the Price? Funke vs. Peers
    VenuePriceValue
    Funke$$$$
    Kato$$$$
    Hayato$$$$
    Vespertine$$$$
    Camphor$$$$
    Gwen$$$$

    Comparing your options in Los Angeles for this tier.

    Also Consider

    • Kato — New Taiwanese, Asian, $$$$
    • Hayato — Japanese, $$$$
    • Vespertine — Progressive, Contemporary, $$$$
    • Camphor — French-Asian, French, $$$$
    • Gwen — New American, Steakhouse, $$$$

    How Funke Compares to Other $$$$ Restaurants in Los Angeles

    At the $$$$ tier in Los Angeles, Funke competes primarily on Italian craft and setting, not on the tasting-menu format that defines several of its peer-level rivals. Hayato and Kato both operate fixed tasting formats with arguably tighter execution scores in their respective categories; if you want a fully structured progression and a single bill that covers everything, those two are more predictable in what you'll spend and experience. Funke's a la carte format gives you more control, which is an advantage or a drawback depending on how you prefer to eat at this price point.

    Vespertine and Camphor are the clearest alternatives for diners who want something with strong critical credentials but a different cuisine direction. Vespertine is the most conceptually ambitious option in LA's $$$$ tier, while Camphor offers French-Asian cooking with generally better availability than Funke. Gwen competes more directly for the occasion-dinner spend and is the better choice if steak-focused New American is what you're after — the meat program there is a specific strength in the way Funke's pasta laboratorio is its own calling card.

    For the pure pasta argument, Funke is the highest-profile option in Los Angeles at this price tier. The booking difficulty is real — harder than Camphor or Gwen on most nights, and comparable to Kato. If you can't get in on your preferred date, Bestia and Osteria Mozza are the most sensible Italian fallbacks at a lower price point and easier booking window. For special occasions where the room matters as much as the food, Funke's trilevel layout and Beverly Hills setting make it a stronger choice than most peers — but go in knowing the energy is lively, not formal.

    Hours

    Monday
    5–9:45 pm
    Tuesday
    5–9:45 pm
    Wednesday
    5–9:45 pm
    Thursday
    5–9:45 pm
    Friday
    5–10:15 pm
    Saturday
    5–10:15 pm
    Sunday
    Closed

    Recognized By

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