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    Restaurant in New Orleans, United States

    Galatoire’s

    375Pearl Points

    Old-guard Creole dining with real institutional weight.

    Galatoire’s, Restaurant in New Orleans

    About Galatoire’s

    Galatoire's is one of New Orleans' most enduring Creole institutions, holding a Michelin Plate (2025) and an OAD Casual North America ranking. Booking is easy compared to competitors like Commander's Palace, but the experience splits sharply between lunch and dinner — Friday lunch is the version locals actually care about. Good for groups and celebrations; not the room for quiet conversation.

    Verdict: Book It — But Know Which Meal You're Booking For

    Getting a table at Galatoire's is genuinely easy by New Orleans fine dining standards. The restaurant takes reservations, walk-ins are possible, and the booking window is forgiving compared to, say, Commander's Palace, where weekend slots can disappear weeks out. That accessibility, though, masks a real split in experience: lunch at Galatoire's and dinner at Galatoire's are meaningfully different events, and which one you choose should drive your decision to book.

    The Space

    The dining room on Bourbon Street is a long, mirrored hall — white-tiled floors, ceiling fans, tightly spaced tables, and a noise level that builds as the room fills. It is a public room in the old New Orleans sense: you see and hear everyone, and they see and hear you. If you want privacy or a quiet conversation, this is not the right room. If you want to feel embedded in a specific kind of New Orleans social ritual, it is exactly right. The second-floor private dining option provides more separation if your group needs it.

    Lunch vs. Dinner: Where the Value Splits

    Friday lunch at Galatoire's has a particular reputation in the city. Regulars treat it as a near-ceremonial event , long, wine-heavy, and unhurried. For a first-time visitor who has already been once and wants to understand why locals are loyal to this place, Friday lunch is the version worth experiencing. The room operates differently at midday: the pacing is slower, the crowd skews local rather than tourist, and the sense of occasion is higher despite the informal setting.

    Dinner is a more conventional experience and better suited to visitors who want a reliable Creole meal in a storied room without committing to a multi-hour afternoon. The kitchen produces the same dishes either way, but the atmosphere at dinner is closer to what you'd get at any well-regarded New Orleans Creole restaurant. If your priority is the food rather than the full Galatoire's social experience, dinner is easier to slot into a trip itinerary.

    For a second visit specifically, go Friday lunch. For a first visit or a time-constrained itinerary, dinner works fine.

    Awards and Standing

    Galatoire's holds a Michelin Plate (2025) and appears on the Opinionated About Dining Casual North America list, ranked #243 in 2024 and Highly Recommended in 2023. The Michelin Plate signals a kitchen that meets a consistent standard without reaching starred territory , accurate for what Galatoire's is: a well-executed, tradition-forward Creole restaurant rather than a tasting-menu destination. The Google rating sits at 4.2 across more than 2,700 reviews, which for a high-volume Bourbon Street address reflects genuine quality rather than novelty appeal.

    The associated Galatoire's 33 Bar and Steak operation earned recognition from Star Wine List in 2022, suggesting the beverage program is taken seriously across the operation.

    Who Should Book

    Book Galatoire's if you want a Creole restaurant with genuine institutional weight and a room that reflects it. It makes sense for groups who want to eat well on Bourbon Street without landing in tourist-trap territory, for pairs who want an unpretentious but serious lunch, and for anyone who has eaten at Commander's Palace and wants a different register of the same tradition. Skip it if you need a quiet room, are looking for contemporary Creole cooking, or are prioritising wine-forward fine dining over comfort-driven classics.

    Chef Phillip L. Lopez leads the kitchen. Hours run Tuesday through Saturday from 11:30 am to 9 pm, Sunday from noon to 9 pm; the restaurant is closed Monday. For context on the wider New Orleans dining scene, see our full New Orleans restaurants guide.

    How It Compares

    See the comparison section below for how Galatoire's sits against its main peers.

    Practical Details

    VenueCuisineBooking DifficultyAwardsLeading For
    Galatoire'sCreoleEasyMichelin Plate 2025, OAD #243 2024Classic Creole lunch or dinner; Friday lunch ritual
    Commander's PalaceCreoleModerate–Hard (weekends)Multiple James Beard AwardsSpecial occasions; jazz brunch; polished service
    Emeril'sCajun/New OrleansEasy–ModerateJames Beard recognitionRecognisable name; broader menu range
    Brennan'sCreoleEasy–ModerateHistoric New Orleans institutionBrunch; celebratory meals; tableside service
    Pêche Seafood GrillCajun SeafoodEasyJames Beard Award winnerCasual seafood; wood-fired cooking; value

    For more options across the city, see our New Orleans hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide. If you're comparing classic Creole cooking with other American fine dining cities, Le Bernardin in New York, The French Laundry in Napa, and Alinea in Chicago represent the upper end of what the format looks like at starred level. Galatoire's operates in a different register , comfort and tradition over technical ambition , which is the point.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Galatoire's good for a special occasion?

    Yes, with the right expectations. Galatoire's holds a Michelin Plate (2025) and has genuine institutional standing in New Orleans — the mirrored dining room and long-lunch culture make it feel ceremonial in a way few rooms in the city do. It works well for groups who want atmosphere and occasion built into the format, less so for anyone expecting quiet or intimate. For a more controlled special-occasion experience, Commander's Palace gives you a similar prestige level with a more polished service structure.

    What should I order at Galatoire's?

    Galatoire's is a Creole kitchen, so the menu follows classic New Orleans categories: sauced fish, crabmeat preparations, and long-standing house dishes that regulars order by habit rather than novelty. Specific menu items are not confirmed in available data, but the kitchen is not a place to experiment — ask your server what the table orders most, and follow that. The food is the context for the room, not the other way around.

    What should I wear to Galatoire's?

    Galatoire's has historically maintained a jacket requirement for men at dinner and on Sundays, reflecting its position as a formal Creole dining institution on Bourbon Street. Dress policy specifics are not confirmed in current venue data, so check directly before you go — but err toward dressing up. The room expects it, and arriving underdressed will read as a mismatch with the clientele.

    How far ahead should I book Galatoire's?

    Galatoire's takes reservations and is not hard to book by New Orleans fine dining standards — a few days' notice is usually enough for most sittings. Friday lunch is the exception: that slot draws regulars who treat it as a standing event, so book a week or more ahead if that's your target. The restaurant is closed Mondays; hours run 11:30am to 9pm Tuesday through Saturday, noon to 9pm Sunday.

    Location

    209 Bourbon St, New Orleans, LA 70130

    New Orleans, United States

    Compare Galatoire’s

    Price vs. Value: Galatoire’s
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    Galatoire’sEasy
    Emeril’sUnknown
    Re Santi e Leoni€€€Unknown
    BayonaUnknown
    Commander’s PalaceUnknown
    Pêche Seafood GrillUnknown

    How Galatoire’s stacks up against the competition.

    Also Consider

    Against Commander's Palace, Galatoire's is the easier and less formal option. Commander's Palace brings more service polish, a stronger special-occasion feel, and multiple James Beard Awards, but it also requires more planning, particularly on weekends. If you want the Creole tradition with less logistical friction, Galatoire's wins on accessibility. If the meal is the centerpiece of a trip and service depth matters, Commander's Palace is worth the extra effort.

    Pêche Seafood Grill and Emeril's serve different functions. Pêche, a James Beard Award winner, is the better choice for casual, wood-fired seafood at a lower price point and with no dress expectations. Emeril's trades on name recognition and delivers a broader menu, but lacks the institutional character of Galatoire's room. Neither is a direct substitute if what you want is the Galatoire's lunch-as-event experience.

    Bayona and Re Santi e Leoni sit in a different lane — contemporary and more chef-driven — and are worth booking if modern technique interests you more than tradition. For the classic New Orleans Creole register, though, the real decision is between Galatoire's and Commander's Palace, and it comes down to formality: Galatoire's for a long, convivial lunch; Commander's Palace for a polished, occasion-worthy dinner.

    Hours

    Monday
    Closed
    Tuesday
    11:30 am–9 pm
    Wednesday
    11:30 am–9 pm
    Thursday
    11:30 am–9 pm
    Friday
    11:30 am–9 pm
    Saturday
    11:30 am–9 pm
    Sunday
    12–9 pm

    Recognized By

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