Restaurant in Miami, United States
Los Félix
650ptsTwo Michelin stars. Book it now.

About Los Félix
Los Félix holds a Michelin star for the second consecutive year (2025) and an OAD Casual North America recognition — making it the strongest case for serious Mexican dining in Miami at the $$$ price tier. Chef Sebastian Vargas's kitchen in Coconut Grove is the neighborhood's defining restaurant and one of the harder reservations in the city. Book 3–6 weeks out minimum.
Is Los Félix Worth Booking in Miami?
Yes — and the short answer is that you should book it before someone else does. Los Félix holds a Michelin star (awarded in both 2024 and 2025) and an Opinionated About Dining Casual recognition for North America in 2025, which puts chef Sebastian Vargas's Mexican kitchen in measurable company with the most consistent restaurants on the continent. At the $$$ price range, this is one of the better-calibrated value propositions in Miami's Michelin tier. The question is not whether it delivers — it does , but whether you can get a table.
Why Coconut Grove Changes the Calculus
Location matters here more than it does at most Miami restaurants. Coconut Grove is not Brickell or Wynwood. It has its own tempo: older streets lined with banyan trees, a residential feel that keeps it from feeling like a dining destination district, and a history as the city's original artistic quarter. Los Félix is not incidental to this neighborhood , it is one of the primary reasons serious diners now make the trip south of the Design District. The Grove has been building a dining identity, and a Michelin-starred Mexican restaurant at 3413 Main Hwy anchors that conversation in a way that few single venues can. If you are putting together a Miami itinerary and want to eat somewhere that tells you something true about a specific part of the city, this is the booking that earns its place on the list. Pair it with a walk through the neighborhood before dinner; the contrast between the quiet streets and what Vargas is doing inside is part of the experience context worth understanding before you sit down.
For explorers who track the relationship between a restaurant and its surroundings, Los Félix rewards that attention. Coconut Grove is not a backdrop , it shaped what this restaurant is and why it operates at the register it does. Miami's dining scene is well-covered for high-concept tasting menus in hotel dining rooms; what it has fewer of is chef-driven neighborhood anchors with genuine culinary ambition and the credentials to back it up. Los Félix fills that gap directly.
The Michelin Consistency Signal
Two consecutive Michelin stars (2024 and 2025) matter more than a single year of recognition. A first star can reflect a moment; a second consecutive star signals that the kitchen is running at a stable, replicable level. For a Mexican restaurant in Miami , a city where the Michelin Guide has been active only since 2022 , holding the star across back-to-back cycles places Los Félix in a small group of restaurants that have proved they belong in that tier rather than benefited from novelty. The OAD Casual recognition adds a second credentialing layer: that guide measures consistency and value in casual formats, which suggests the kitchen is not inflating the experience to justify a price point. At $$$, that combination of signals is worth taking seriously. Compare this to similarly-starred peers nationally , venues like Lazy Bear in San Francisco or Alinea in Chicago , and Los Félix is operating at a meaningfully lower price ceiling for the same tier of recognition.
For Mexican cuisine specifically, the reference point that matters is Pujol in Mexico City, the benchmark for fine-dining Mexican in the Western Hemisphere. Los Félix is not positioning itself as a replica of that model, but the shared commitment to serious Mexican cookery at a high technical level is the relevant frame for understanding what Vargas is doing in Coconut Grove. In the US context, Alma Fonda Fina in Denver is another point of comparison for Mexican cuisine earning critical recognition outside of obvious coastal markets. Miami now has its own version of that conversation, and Los Félix is leading it.
Miami's broader dining scene , well-documented in our full Miami restaurants guide , has strong competition at the $$$ tier, including Boia De for Italian and Cote Miami for Korean. For Mexican specifically, Tacology and Taquiza cover the more casual end of that spectrum in Miami. Los Félix is the only option in the city operating at the intersection of Mexican culinary seriousness and Michelin-level execution.
Booking Los Félix: Expect Difficulty
Booking difficulty is rated Hard. A double Michelin star and a seat count that has not been publicly confirmed , combined with a neighborhood location that drives strong local repeat business , means the reservation window fills well in advance. Plan at least three to four weeks out for a standard booking. For weekend evenings, extend that to six weeks if you have a fixed date. If you are visiting Miami on a tight itinerary, this is the one reservation to secure before you book the flight. The restaurant's address is 3413 Main Hwy, Miami, FL 33133 , Coconut Grove , which is accessible from South Beach and Brickell but requires a deliberate trip rather than a casual detour. Factor travel time into your evening plan. Explore the rest of your Miami trip through our Miami hotels guide, our Miami bars guide, and our Miami experiences guide to build the full itinerary around this booking.
Know Before You Go
- Address: 3413 Main Hwy, Miami, FL 33133 (Coconut Grove)
- Cuisine: Mexican , chef-driven, Michelin-starred
- Price range: $$$ (strong value for the award tier)
- Awards: Michelin 1 Star (2024 and 2025); OAD Casual North America (2025)
- Google rating: 4.3 from 684 reviews
- Booking difficulty: Hard , reserve 3–6 weeks in advance
- Chef: Sebastian Vargas
- Neighborhood note: Coconut Grove , plan your evening around the area, not just the meal
FAQ
- Can Los Félix accommodate groups? Group bookings are possible but harder to secure given the demand level. For parties of four or more, contact the restaurant directly well in advance , six weeks minimum for weekend groups. Parties of two have the most flexibility and the leading shot at counter or bar seating if the main room is full.
- Can I eat at the bar at Los Félix? Bar seating at Michelin-starred Miami restaurants can be a useful workaround for full dining rooms, and Los Félix is worth asking about directly. If bar seating is available, it is often the most practical option for walk-in attempts or short-notice bookings in the Mexican fine-dining format.
- Does Los Félix handle dietary restrictions? Mexican cuisine at this level typically accommodates dietary restrictions with advance notice , the kitchen is working with a defined set of ingredients and techniques that lend themselves to modification. Contact the restaurant ahead of your visit to confirm specifics; do not leave this to arrival.
- Is Los Félix worth the price? At $$$, yes , clearly. Two consecutive Michelin stars at this price tier is a rare combination in Miami. You are paying less than you would at Ariete or L'Atelier de Joël Robuchon Miami for a kitchen with equally serious credentials. The OAD Casual recognition reinforces that the value delivery is intentional, not accidental.
- Is the tasting menu worth it at Los Félix? For a food-focused visit, yes. Chef Sebastian Vargas's tasting format is the fullest expression of what this kitchen is doing with Mexican cuisine at a technical level. If you are making the trip to Coconut Grove specifically for the restaurant, the tasting menu gives you the most complete picture of why Los Félix earned and held its Michelin star. For casual or exploratory visits, à la carte may suit better , ask at booking.
- Is Los Félix good for a special occasion? Strong yes. The combination of Michelin recognition, a neighborhood setting that feels considered rather than corporate, and a $$$-tier price point that does not require a financial event makes this a practical special-occasion choice. It works better for occasions where the food is the point , not for milestone celebrations that need a private room or extensive service ceremony. For that level of occasion formality, a $$$$-tier property like Le Bernardin in New York or The French Laundry in Napa sets a different register. Los Félix is the better choice when the food and setting matter more than the occasion infrastructure.
Compare Los Félix
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Los Félix | $$$ | — |
| Ariete | $$$$ | — |
| Boia De | $$$ | — |
| Cote Miami | $$$ | — |
| Stubborn Seed | $$$$ | — |
| Los Fuegos by Francis Mallmann | $$$$ | — |
How Los Félix stacks up against the competition.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can Los Félix accommodate groups?
Groups of 4 or more should plan carefully. Los Félix's Michelin-starred format and a seat count that has not been publicly confirmed means large parties face real availability constraints. Book as far in advance as possible and check the venue's official channels — walk-in group seating at a double Michelin star restaurant in Coconut Grove is not a realistic option.
Can I eat at the bar at Los Félix?
Bar seating has not been confirmed in available venue data for Los Félix. Given the restaurant holds back-to-back Michelin stars (2024 and 2025) and demand consistently outpaces supply, securing a table reservation is the only reliable strategy — do not bank on bar or walk-in access.
Does Los Félix handle dietary restrictions?
Specific dietary accommodation policies for Los Félix are not publicly documented. At Michelin-starred restaurants in the $$$ price range, kitchens generally expect and handle dietary requests when flagged at the time of booking — contact them directly when you reserve to confirm what is possible.
Is Los Félix worth the price?
At $$$ and with consecutive Michelin stars in 2024 and 2025, Los Félix is well-priced relative to comparable Michelin-starred restaurants in Miami. For serious Mexican cooking at this credential level, there is no direct competitor in Coconut Grove. If the price feels high, compare it against a meal at Cote Miami or Stubborn Seed — Los Félix delivers equivalent recognition at the same or lower spend.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Los Félix?
The tasting menu format is the format here — Los Félix's Michelin recognition and Chef Sebastian Vargas's approach are built around a structured dining experience, not casual ordering. If you prefer à la carte flexibility, this may not be your ideal fit. If you are willing to commit to the full format, the two consecutive Michelin stars signal it earns that commitment.
Is Los Félix good for a special occasion?
Yes — Los Félix is one of the clearest special-occasion calls in Miami right now. A back-to-back Michelin star, a Coconut Grove setting with genuine character, and Mexican cooking at Chef Sebastian Vargas's level adds up to a dinner people will actually remember. Book 3-4 weeks out minimum and treat availability as a constraint, not a suggestion.
Recognized By
Related editorial
- Best Fine Dining Restaurants in ParisFrom three-Michelin-star icons to the next generation of Parisian chefs pushing boundaries, these are the restaurants that define fine dining in the world's culinary capital.
- Best Luxury Hotels in RomeFrom rooftop terraces overlooking ancient ruins to Michelin-starred hotel dining, these are the luxury hotels that make Rome unforgettable.
- Best Cocktail Bars in KyotoFrom sleek lounges to hidden speakeasies, Kyoto's cocktail scene blends Japanese precision with global influence in ways you won't find anywhere else.
Save or rate Los Félix on Pearl
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.






