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    Restaurant in San Francisco, United States

    Nopa

    510pts

    SF's most accessible serious dinner. Book it.

    Nopa, Restaurant in San Francisco

    About Nopa

    Nopa has run a daily-changing, farmer's market-driven New American menu from its Divisadero Street corner since 2006, earning consistent Opinionated About Dining recognition and World of Fine Wine accreditation. Booking is easy relative to San Francisco's tasting-menu tier, and the room rewards multiple visits as the menu shifts seasonally. Best for relaxed celebrations and date nights; go early if conversation matters.

    Nopa, San Francisco: Worth Booking?

    Nopa sits in a price tier that makes it one of San Francisco's more accessible serious restaurants — expect a dinner bill that lands well below the $$$$ tasting-menu circuit while still delivering cooking that has earned recognition on the Opinionated About Dining casual list for multiple consecutive years (ranked #468 in North America in 2024, #786 in 2025) and a World of Fine Wine 2-Star and 3-Star Accreditation. For a neighbourhood restaurant running a daily-changing menu sourced from Bay Area farmers' markets, that credential set is notable. The practical question is whether Nopa fits your occasion — and the answer is yes for a wide range of dinners, from casual dates to industry-night celebrations, but probably not if you want a formal tasting-menu format.

    Portrait

    Nopa has been operating from the corner of Divisadero and Hayes Street since 2006, in a building that was once a coin-operated laundromat and before that a Bank of Italy branch. The room is large, open, and loud on busy nights , a communal dining floor rather than an intimate enclosure. Chef Laurence Jossel built the restaurant around a simple premise: daily menus, local sourcing, generous portions, and good wine. That formula has held for nearly two decades, which is itself a form of credential in a city where restaurants close regularly.

    The daily-changing menu is the defining feature here, and it shapes how you should plan your visit. Because the kitchen works from seasonal farmers' market ingredients, the menu on any given Tuesday bears little resemblance to the one from the previous week. That makes Nopa genuinely suited to multiple visits , not because you need to try everything at once, but because the restaurant rewards return trips in a way that fixed menus do not. Wine professionals across the city have made it a recurring post-shift stop for exactly this reason: the room changes feel reliably fresh without requiring a special occasion to justify returning.

    For a first visit, arrive on a Friday or Saturday when service runs until 11 pm, which allows a more relaxed pace. Sunday opens earliest at 5 pm and closes at 9:30 pm , useful if you want a quieter room before the week begins. Weekday service runs 5:30–10 pm. Booking is rated easy, so planning a week or two ahead should be sufficient rather than the three-to-four-week lead time required at comparable San Francisco restaurants. That accessibility is genuinely part of the value here.

    A second visit is worth targeting mid-week, when the room is less pressured and you can get more attention at the table. The wine program has consistently drawn praise from industry professionals, so use the second visit to go further into the list rather than defaulting to the same bottle. The World of Fine Wine accreditation signals a program worth treating seriously rather than as an afterthought.

    By a third visit, Nopa works leading if you arrive with a small group , the larger format allows you to cover more of whatever the kitchen is running that evening, and the communal atmosphere of the room suits a table that's actually talking to each other. For solo diners or pairs, the counter or bar seating options can serve as an entry point without the formality of a full table booking.

    As a special-occasion choice, Nopa occupies a specific slot: it works well for a birthday or low-key celebration where the goal is a genuinely good dinner in a lively room, not a ceremonial tasting experience. If the occasion demands more ceremony, Lazy Bear or Atelier Crenn will suit better. For a date where conversation matters as much as the food, note that the room gets loud , earlier seatings (5:30–6:30 pm) will be easier for that purpose.

    Nopa sits within a broader San Francisco dining scene worth exploring. See our full San Francisco restaurants guide, and if you're planning an extended stay, check our San Francisco hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide. Nearby, Marlowe and Tartine Manufactory round out a strong NoPa and Mission corridor for multiple-day eating.

    Ratings & Recognition

    • Google: 4.5/5 (2,914 reviews)
    • Opinionated About Dining , Casual in North America: #468 (2024), #786 (2025)
    • Opinionated About Dining , Gourmet Casual Dining in North America: Recommended (2023)
    • World of Fine Wine: 2-Star and 3-Star Accreditation

    Booking & Practical Details

    Booking is easy relative to most recognized San Francisco restaurants , a week to two weeks ahead is generally sufficient. Hours run Monday through Thursday 5:30–10 pm, Friday and Saturday 5:30–11 pm, and Sunday 5–9:30 pm. The address is 560 Divisadero St, San Francisco, CA 94117. No dress code is specified, which is consistent with the room's relaxed but serious tone. For other acclaimed New American restaurants across the US, consider Le Bernardin in New York City, The Inn at Little Washington, Bayona in New Orleans, or Providence in Los Angeles for a sense of how Nopa positions within the national New American category.

    Pearl Picks Nearby

    Compare Nopa

    How Easy to Book: Nopa vs. Peers
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    NopaNew AmericanEasy
    Lazy BearProgressive American, Contemporary$$$$Unknown
    Atelier CrennModern French, Contemporary$$$$Unknown
    BenuFrench - Chinese, Asian$$$$Unknown
    QuinceItalian, Contemporary$$$$Unknown
    SaisonProgressive American, Californian$$$$Unknown

    How Nopa stacks up against the competition.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I order at Nopa?

    The menu changes daily based on seasonal, locally sourced ingredients — there are no permanent signature dishes to target. Your best move is to arrive open to whatever is on that evening and ask your server what came in that day. The daily-rotation format is a feature, not a limitation: it's the core of what Nopa has been doing since 2006, and it's a big part of why the place holds an OAD ranking and World of Fine Wine accreditation.

    What should I wear to Nopa?

    Come as you are — Nopa operates as a community gathering place, not a formal dining room. The building is a converted laundromat on Divisadero, and the room reflects that: casual, neighbourhood energy. Jeans and a decent top are the norm; no dress code has been documented for this venue.

    Is Nopa good for solo dining?

    Yes. Nopa has been a wine-industry and off-shift-cook hangout for years, which means solo diners read as regulars, not oddities. The bar and counter seating make it one of the more comfortable solo options among OAD-ranked San Francisco restaurants — easier to get a seat on short notice than at Lazy Bear or Benu, and far less formal.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Nopa?

    Dinner only — Nopa does not serve lunch. Doors open at 5:30 pm Monday through Thursday, 5:30 pm on Friday and Saturday (until 11 pm), and 5 pm on Sunday. If you want a daytime option in the neighbourhood, you'll need to look elsewhere.

    Does Nopa handle dietary restrictions?

    The daily-changing, seasonal menu format means the kitchen is already working with whatever is fresh and available, which gives them flexibility — but no specific dietary accommodation policies are documented for this venue. Call ahead or note restrictions at booking; the community-focused ethos since 2006 suggests reasonable goodwill, but confirm directly rather than assuming.

    Hours

    Monday
    5:30–10 pm
    Tuesday
    5:30–10 pm
    Wednesday
    5:30–10 pm
    Thursday
    5:30–10 pm
    Friday
    5:30–11 pm
    Saturday
    5:30–11 pm
    Sunday
    5–9:30 pm

    Recognized By

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