Skip to main content

    Restaurant in Buenos Aires, Argentina

    La Cabrera

    250pts

    Serious parrilla. Book early, eat well.

    La Cabrera, Restaurant in Buenos Aires

    About La Cabrera

    La Cabrera is one of Buenos Aires's most credible parrillas — ranked #41 in South America by Opinionated About Dining in 2025 and consistently listed across three consecutive years. Booking is easy compared to rivals like Don Julio, making it a strong first choice for food-focused travelers who want serious Argentinian beef without a weeks-long wait for a table.

    Verdict

    La Cabrera is the parrilla you should book if you want a serious Argentinian steakhouse experience in Palermo with enough credibility to back it up. Ranked #41 among the leading restaurants in South America by Opinionated About Dining in 2025 — and consistently ranked across three consecutive years — this is not a tourist trap riding on reputation. It is a working steakhouse that earns its place on the list year after year. Booking is easy by Buenos Aires standards, which makes it a strong default choice for food-focused travelers who want quality without the reservation anxiety of Don Julio.

    The Experience

    Walk into La Cabrera on José A. Cabrera 5127 and the visual language is unmistakably Argentine: a warm, high-ceilinged room where the grill is the centerpiece and the cut of beef on the plate next to you does the convincing. The service style here is attentive without being fussy , waiters know the menu, they work quickly, and they do not hover. For a food enthusiast looking for depth and context, that matters. A steakhouse at this level should let the product do the talking, and La Cabrera largely obliges. Under chef Gastón Riveira, the kitchen has maintained a consistent standard that three years of OAD recognition reflects. The 4.3 rating across more than 22,000 Google reviews is a meaningful signal: at that volume, you are not looking at a skewed sample.

    For timing, the lunch service , open daily from 12 pm to 5 pm , is the better call if you want a quieter room and a more deliberate pace. Dinner runs from 6:30 pm to midnight every day of the week, and the room fills by 8:30 pm. Coming earlier in the dinner window, around 6:30 to 7 pm, gives you the full experience without competing with the peak crowd for attention from the floor. Saturday lunch is particularly good for travelers who want to sit longer without feeling rushed.

    The service philosophy at La Cabrera is worth examining because it directly affects whether the price point feels earned. Unlike some high-profile Buenos Aires restaurants where the room's prestige outpaces the floor's attentiveness, La Cabrera runs a tighter operation. The staff-to-table ratio holds up during peak hours, which is where a lot of well-regarded parrillas in this city lose points. If you have visited La Brigada in San Telmo, La Cabrera will feel more polished in service but similar in focus: the beef is the reason you are here, and the room exists to frame that, not to overshadow it.

    For food and wine explorers who want to extend the trip into Argentine wine country, the contrast between what La Cabrera does with beef and what producers like those at Azafrán in Mendoza or Siete Fuegos in Mendoza are doing with fire-driven cooking gives useful context for how regional this cuisine really is. Buenos Aires and Mendoza are distinct expressions of the same tradition. Other Argentine steakhouse comparisons worth noting: Kutral por Martin Abramzon in Ronda and Los Talas del Entrerriano in General San Martin offer different registers of the same parrilla tradition for those building a longer itinerary.

    Booking La Cabrera is direct , this is not a venue where you need to plan three weeks ahead as a baseline rule. A few days in advance is usually sufficient, though weekend dinner and Saturday lunch fill faster. If your Buenos Aires schedule is tight, lock it in earlier. For a broader look at where La Cabrera fits in the city's dining options, see our full Buenos Aires restaurants guide. Those extending beyond food can also browse our Buenos Aires hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide.

    How It Compares

    Compare La Cabrera

    Booking Options Near La Cabrera
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    La CabreraArgentinian SteakhouseEasy
    Don JulioArgentinian Steakhouse$$$$Unknown
    AramburuModern Argentinian, Creative$$$$Unknown
    MishigueneArgentinian - Jewish, Israeli$$$Unknown
    RouxSeafood, Contemporary$$$Unknown
    ElenaSouth American, Steakhouse$$$Unknown

    Comparing your options in Buenos Aires for this tier.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I order at La Cabrera?

    Focus on the beef: this is an Argentinian parrilla under chef Gastón Riveira, so the cuts from the grill are the reason to come. La Cabrera is OAD-ranked in South America's top 50, which means the kitchen is operating at a level where you can trust the house selections. Ask staff what's grilling well that day rather than over-researching in advance.

    Does La Cabrera handle dietary restrictions?

    A parrilla format is built around beef and fire, so this is not the right booking if you are vegetarian or need plant-forward options as a primary concern. For pescatarians or those avoiding red meat, options will be limited. If dietary restrictions are significant, call ahead directly — the address is José A. Cabrera 5127, Palermo, and staff can confirm current menu flexibility.

    Is La Cabrera good for solo dining?

    It works for solo diners, though portions at Argentinian parrillas tend to run large and are priced for sharing. You will get a full experience at the counter or a small table, but expect to order selectively to avoid over-ordering. If solo dining is your format regularly, lunch service (open from noon daily) is a quieter entry point than peak dinner.

    Is lunch or dinner better at La Cabrera?

    Dinner is the main event: the room fills, the grill is running at full capacity, and the atmosphere reflects what La Cabrera's OAD ranking is built on. Lunch (noon to 5 pm daily) is a lower-pressure option if you want the same kitchen without the wait. If you are visiting once and want the full version, book dinner and plan to arrive at the 6:30 pm opening.

    How far ahead should I book La Cabrera?

    Book at least two to three weeks out for dinner, especially Friday and Saturday. La Cabrera's consistent OAD rankings in South America's top 50 (ranked #41 in 2025) mean it draws both locals and international visitors. Lunch walk-ins are more feasible on weekdays, but dinner without a reservation is a risk not worth taking.

    What should a first-timer know about La Cabrera?

    La Cabrera is a parrilla, not a multi-course tasting restaurant — the format is grill-focused, the pace is social, and portions are generous. It has held OAD South America rankings for three consecutive years (2023–2025), which gives it credibility beyond tourist-trap steakhouse territory. Come hungry, book ahead, and treat the grill selections as the meal rather than an accompaniment.

    Hours

    Monday
    12–5 pm, 6:30 pm–12 am
    Tuesday
    12–5 pm, 6:30 pm–12 am
    Wednesday
    12–5 pm, 6:30 pm–12 am
    Thursday
    12–5 pm, 6:30 pm–12 am
    Friday
    12–5 pm, 6:30 pm–12 am
    Saturday
    12–5 pm, 6:30 pm–12 am
    Sunday
    12–5 pm, 6:30 pm–12 am

    Recognized By

    Keep this place

    Save or rate La Cabrera on Pearl

    Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.