Restaurant in New Orleans, United States
Parkway Bakery & Tavern
325ptsMichelin-recognised po-boys worth the rideshare.

About Parkway Bakery & Tavern
Parkway Bakery & Tavern is the most credentialed po-boy shop in New Orleans, holding a Michelin Bib Gourmand (2025) and three consecutive Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats rankings. It is a casual Mid-City tavern with no reservations required and a price point well under $20 per head. First-timers who want to understand New Orleans food culture should make the trip.
Verdict: One of the Most Decorated Po-Boy Shops in the Country — Worth the Trip Across Town
If you are visiting New Orleans and want to eat one po-boy that justifies the format, Parkway Bakery & Tavern at 538 Hagan Ave is the answer. It holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand (2025) and has appeared on the Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats in North America list three consecutive years — ranked #34 in 2023, #29 in 2024, and #32 in 2025. Those are not local-press pats on the back; OAD rankings draw on votes from serious eaters across the country. For first-timers, that credential matters: it tells you the kitchen is consistent, not just historically beloved.
What Parkway Actually Is
Parkway is a po-boy shop and tavern in Mid-City, a residential neighbourhood a few miles from the French Quarter. The format is counter-service or close to it , casual, fast-moving, with no dress requirement and no need to plan your evening around a reservation. The cuisine type is Po-Boys, which means the menu is built around the classic New Orleans sandwich: French bread, a generous filling, and the critical question of whether you want it "dressed" (lettuce, tomato, pickles, mayo). The bread quality in a po-boy is not a minor detail , it is the structural and flavour foundation of the whole thing, and New Orleans bakeries produce a specific style of French bread (light, airy crumb, thin crackly crust) that does not exist in the same form anywhere else in the country. A shop that earns a Bib Gourmand here is being judged on execution of that specific craft.
Under chef Jay Nix, Parkway has maintained the kind of sourcing and preparation standards that separate a Bib Gourmand po-boy spot from a tourist-trap version. The bread is the ingredient that matters most, and the fact that Parkway has held this recognition across three consecutive OAD lists suggests the sourcing relationship with local bakeries is not being cut short. That consistency , not a single standout year but a sustained run , is what makes this a reliable recommendation rather than a "catch it while it's good" gamble.
Who Should Book (and Who Might Not)
First-timers to New Orleans who want an anchor meal that is low-cost, high-quality, and representative of what the city actually eats every day should put Parkway near the leading of the list. With a 4.7 Google rating across 5,434 reviews, the satisfaction rate at this volume is unusually high. This is not a special-occasion dinner venue , there is no tasting menu, no wine programme to speak of, and the room is a tavern, not a dining room. But if you want to understand why New Orleans has a distinct food culture, a po-boy done well at a place like Parkway makes the argument more concisely than most sit-down restaurants can.
If you are looking for a white-tablecloth Creole meal, Commander's Palace or Bayona serve that need. Parkway does not try to be those places, and that clarity of purpose is part of why it works.
Practical Details
Address: 538 Hagan Ave, New Orleans, LA 70119. Neighbourhood: Mid-City , not walking distance from the French Quarter, so budget for a rideshare or a short drive. Booking difficulty: Easy , no reservation system required for standard visits. Dress code: None. Price range: Bib Gourmand designation and the cheap-eats category both indicate this is an accessible price point; expect to spend well under $20 per person for a full meal. Group suitability: The tavern format handles groups without the friction of a reservation-only restaurant. Phone/website: Not currently listed in our database , check Google Maps for current hours before visiting, as hours at casual spots can shift seasonally or around local events.
How It Compares
See the full comparison section below, but the short version: Parkway is the right answer when the question is where to eat a po-boy in New Orleans with documented quality. For broader New Orleans dining, see our full New Orleans restaurants guide.
FAQ
Is Parkway Bakery & Tavern good for a special occasion?
- Not in the formal sense. There is no tasting menu, no sommelier, and the room is a casual tavern. But if the occasion is "first real po-boy in New Orleans," Parkway absolutely fits. The Michelin Bib Gourmand and three consecutive OAD cheap-eats rankings make it a credible answer to that specific occasion. For a celebratory dinner, Commander's Palace or Saint-Germain are better matched to the format.
Can Parkway Bakery & Tavern accommodate groups?
- The tavern layout is group-friendly in a way that reservation-only restaurants are not. No booking is required, which removes the coordination overhead for larger parties. For groups of six or more, arriving during off-peak hours (mid-afternoon rather than the lunch rush) is the practical move. Phone details are not currently in our database, so confirm capacity questions directly via Google Maps or the venue's listed contact before a large group visit.
Can I eat at the bar at Parkway Bakery & Tavern?
- It is a tavern, so bar seating is part of the venue's character. Po-boys are casual food by design, and eating at the bar at a New Orleans tavern is entirely in keeping with how locals use a place like this. If you are a solo traveller or a pair, the bar is a practical option when the main room is busy.
What are alternatives to Parkway Bakery & Tavern in New Orleans?
- For po-boys specifically, Parkway is among the most credentialed options in the city. If you want to compare, Domilise's and Mahony's are names that come up in the same conversation. For a step up in format and price within New Orleans cuisine, Pêche Seafood Grill covers Cajun seafood at a mid-range price point, and Emeril's anchors the higher end of Cajun cooking. See our full New Orleans restaurants guide for a broader set of options across budgets.
Does Parkway Bakery & Tavern handle dietary restrictions?
- The menu is built around po-boys, which typically feature fried seafood, roast beef, or other meat-centric fillings. Vegetarian and gluten-free options are limited by the format , French bread and protein-heavy fillings are the product. If dietary restrictions are a primary concern, contact the venue directly via Google Maps before visiting. Phone and website details are not currently in our database.
What should a first-timer know about Parkway Bakery & Tavern?
- Three things: First, it is in Mid-City, not the French Quarter, so plan the trip intentionally rather than stumbling in. Second, the Michelin Bib Gourmand and three-year OAD run tell you this is genuinely good, not just famous , that distinction matters in a city with a lot of tourist-facing food. Third, the price point is low, so this fits into any day regardless of your overall New Orleans food budget. Pair it with a higher-end dinner at Bayona or Zasu and you have covered both ends of what the city does well.
Compare Parkway Bakery & Tavern
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Parkway Bakery & Tavern | — | |
| Emeril’s | — | |
| Re Santi e Leoni | €€€ | — |
| Bayona | — | |
| Commander’s Palace | — | |
| Pêche Seafood Grill | — |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Parkway Bakery & Tavern good for a special occasion?
Only if the occasion is 'eating the definitive New Orleans po-boy.' Parkway holds a 2025 Michelin Bib Gourmand and three consecutive Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats rankings, so the food quality is documented — but the setting is a casual tavern in Mid-City, not a white-tablecloth room. For a milestone dinner, Commander's Palace or Bayona fits better. For a low-cost meal that you will actually remember, Parkway is the right call.
Can Parkway Bakery & Tavern accommodate groups?
Parkway is counter-service format, which makes it more flexible for groups than a reservation-only restaurant — no fixed seating arrangements to negotiate. Larger parties should arrive early or off-peak, as the space fills quickly. It is a practical pick for a group that wants a shared, low-cost New Orleans lunch without the coordination overhead of a sit-down booking.
Can I eat at the bar at Parkway Bakery & Tavern?
Yes — it is a bakery and tavern, so bar seating is part of the setup. This is a casual, neighbourhood spot in Mid-City, not a cocktail bar with a food programme attached. Come for the po-boys first; the tavern side is a bonus, not the draw.
What are alternatives to Parkway Bakery & Tavern in New Orleans?
For po-boys specifically, Parkway is the most decorated option in the city right now based on its 2025 Michelin Bib Gourmand and OAD rankings. If you want a seafood-focused New Orleans meal at a similar price ceiling, Pêche Seafood Grill is the comparison to consider. For a full sit-down experience with serious cooking, Bayona or Commander's Palace are the step-up options.
Does Parkway Bakery & Tavern handle dietary restrictions?
The menu is built around po-boys, which are sandwich-format by definition — bread, protein, and traditional New Orleans toppings. Gluten-free and vegan options are not typical in this format, and nothing in the available venue data suggests Parkway is an exception. If dietary restrictions are a hard constraint, check directly before visiting; this is not the venue to assume flexibility.
What should a first-timer know about Parkway Bakery & Tavern?
It is in Mid-City at 538 Hagan Ave — not walkable from the French Quarter, so budget for a rideshare. The format is casual and counter-service, so there is nothing to book in advance, but expect a queue at peak times. Parkway has held a Michelin Bib Gourmand since at least 2025 and has ranked in OAD's North America Cheap Eats list three years running, which gives it more documented credibility than most po-boy shops in the city. Order, eat, and keep expectations correctly calibrated: this is a great sandwich, not a tasting menu.
Recognized By
More restaurants in New Orleans
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- Commander’s PalaceCommander's Palace is the reference point for serious Creole dining in New Orleans: seven James Beard Awards, a 2,800-selection wine list, and kitchen sourcing that is genuinely place-specific. At the $$ cuisine price tier, it delivers more ambition per dollar than almost any comparable address in the city. Book well in advance — this is not a walk-in restaurant.
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- The Grill RoomThe Grill Room at The Windsor Court is downtown New Orleans' most practical choice for a special-occasion dinner with serious wine. Chef Vlad Kogan's American Creole menu runs from foie gras and scallops to wagyu and duck, backed by a 1,060-bottle list. Sunday jazz brunch is the signature session; food pricing sits at $$ with wine adding considerably at $$$ depth.
- Pêche Seafood GrillPêche Seafood Grill is the strongest case for booking a seafood restaurant in New Orleans right now. A 2014 James Beard Best New Restaurant award and a 2025 Michelin Plate confirm chef Ryan Prewitt's kitchen has sustained its quality. The open wood-hearth format and sustainably sourced Gulf Coast focus make it the right call for a serious dinner without formal-dining pressure.
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