Restaurant in Los Angeles, United States
Sunnin
150ptsNo reservation needed. Just show up.

About Sunnin
Sunnin is the Westside's go-to for consistent, affordable Middle Eastern food with no booking hassle. Three consecutive years on the Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats North America list and a 4.5 Google rating across 1,180+ reviews back up the reputation. Walk in for a weekday lunch or a Friday dinner — either works, no reservation needed.
Who Should Book Sunnin — and When
If you want reliable, affordable Middle Eastern food on the Westside of Los Angeles without a reservation, Sunnin at 1776 Westwood Blvd is the answer. This is the kind of place that works leading as a regular habit rather than a one-off occasion: the kind of spot you bring a colleague for a quick lunch, return to on a Friday night when you want something satisfying without a long wait, or default to when you're in the Westwood area and don't want to spend time deliberating. Booking is easy — walk-ins are the norm here , and the hours run daily from 11am through 9pm Sunday to Thursday, extending to 10pm on Fridays and Saturdays.
Lunch vs. Dinner at Sunnin
The lunch-versus-dinner question at Sunnin is less about quality and more about pace and practicality. Lunch is the stronger call for value: the crowd tends to be lighter on weekday afternoons, you're in and out efficiently, and the food is the same as what you'd get at dinner. If you've been once and came for a quick meal, try returning for a Friday or Saturday evening when the kitchen stays open an extra hour. The atmosphere on weekend evenings is livelier, and it's a more relaxed experience than fighting lunchtime traffic in the Westwood corridor. Neither meal is dramatically different in terms of what's on the table, but dinner on a weekend gives the visit a slightly more unhurried feel. If you're on a tight schedule, lunch wins on logistics.
Why Opinionated About Dining Keeps Recommending It
Sunnin has appeared on the Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats in North America list in 2023 (Recommended), 2024 (ranked #277), and 2025 (ranked #301). OAD's Cheap Eats list is one of the more credible signals in this category because it's driven by a community of serious eaters rather than a single editorial voice. Three consecutive years of recognition means this isn't a fluke , the kitchen is consistent. That matters for a regular, because you're not gambling on whether it'll be as good as the first time. A Google rating of 4.5 across more than 1,180 reviews reinforces the same point: the quality holds across a wide range of visits and diners.
For context on what this kind of recognition means at the price point: the OAD Cheap Eats list places Sunnin in the same conversation as places like Holbox, which ranks in a similar tier of affordable but genuinely well-regarded LA eating. These aren't destinations built around spectacle , they're places worth returning to because the food earns repeat visits.
How It Fits the Westside Middle Eastern Scene
On the Westside, Sunnin occupies a specific and useful position. If you're comparing it to other Middle Eastern options in Los Angeles, Adana Restaurant skews more toward Armenian-inflected grilling and a slightly more formal sit-down experience. Dune in Echo Park is a counter-service falafel and shawarma operation that works better as a grab-and-go stop. Mizlala West Adams brings a more polished, sit-down Israeli approach. Saffy's in Los Feliz has a strong wood-fire Middle Eastern focus but requires more of a plan. Sunnin's advantage is consistency and access: it's in Westwood, it's open seven days, and you don't need a reservation or a special occasion to make it work. For a broader view of where Middle Eastern fits into the LA dining picture, Kismet on Hillhurst is the Westside-adjacent benchmark for California-inflected Middle Eastern cooking, though it skews more produce-forward and trendier.
If you're planning a wider trip around LA's food scene, our full Los Angeles restaurants guide covers the full range. For where to stay, drink, and explore, see our Los Angeles hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide.
For reference points on what Middle Eastern dining looks like at higher price brackets internationally, Baron in Doha and Bait Maryam in Dubai represent the fine-dining end of the spectrum. Sunnin is not competing in that tier , it's competing on accessibility and reliability, and on those measures it performs well.
Booking and Practical Details
Walk in. There's no booking complexity here: Sunnin operates as a come-as-you-are operation, open Monday through Thursday from 11am to 9pm, Friday and Saturday to 10pm, and Sunday to 9pm. The accessible price point and casual format make it a low-commitment choice whether you're solo, with a partner, or part of a small group. Price range data isn't on file, but the OAD Cheap Eats listing and the consistent positioning across three years makes clear this is an affordable option by any LA standard. If you need to be somewhere by a specific time, lunch on a weekday is your safest bet for the fastest turnaround.
Is Sunnin good for solo dining?
Yes. The casual, counter-friendly format at Sunnin works well for solo diners , there's no awkwardness in eating alone here, and the quick-service pace means you're not waiting around. If solo dining at a more destination-level restaurant in LA is on your radar, the counter seats at places like Holbox offer a similar low-friction experience with a different cuisine.
Is lunch or dinner better at Sunnin?
Lunch is the practical choice for efficiency , lighter crowds on weekdays and a faster in-and-out experience. Dinner on a Friday or Saturday is worth trying if you've already done lunch and want a more relaxed visit; the kitchen stays open until 10pm on weekends, which gives you more flexibility. The food quality is consistent across both, so the decision is really about your schedule.
What should I wear to Sunnin?
No dress code. This is a casual Westwood spot where anything from work clothes to weekend attire is fine. Don't overthink it.
Can Sunnin accommodate groups?
Small to mid-size groups should be fine given the casual format, though specific seat count data isn't available. For larger groups in LA's Middle Eastern space, Adana Restaurant tends to have more structured capacity for larger parties.
Is Sunnin good for a special occasion?
Not really , and that's not a criticism. Sunnin is built for frequency and accessibility, not for milestone dinners. If you want a special-occasion Middle Eastern-adjacent meal in LA, Kismet or Saffy's are better fits. For a special occasion at the high end of the LA dining spectrum generally, consider Kato or Hayato.
What are alternatives to Sunnin in Los Angeles?
For Middle Eastern in LA: Dune in Echo Park for fast counter-service falafel; Mizlala West Adams for a more polished sit-down Israeli meal; Saffy's in Los Feliz for wood-fire cooking with more destination energy; Kismet on Hillhurst for California-inflected Middle Eastern with a stronger wine program. None of these replace what Sunnin does on the Westside specifically , proximity and no-reservation convenience is part of the value.
Compare Sunnin
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sunnin | Easy | — | |
| Kato | $$$$ | Unknown | — |
| Hayato | $$$$ | Unknown | — |
| Vespertine | $$$$ | Unknown | — |
| Holbox | $$ | Unknown | — |
| Sushi Kaneyoshi | $$$$ | Unknown | — |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Sunnin good for solo dining?
Yes, and it's one of the easier solo calls on the Westside. No reservation means no awkward single-seat availability conversations, and the walk-in format suits a quick solo lunch or dinner without any friction. Sunnin's three consecutive OAD Cheap Eats rankings confirm the food holds up on its own merits, not just as a group-friendly default.
Is lunch or dinner better at Sunnin?
Lunch is the stronger choice for most people: the pace is more relaxed, the crowd tends to be lighter, and the value case for affordable Middle Eastern food lands harder midday. Dinner on Friday and Saturday runs until 10pm if you need flexibility, but there's no meaningful difference in what you're getting on the plate.
What should I wear to Sunnin?
Come as you are. Sunnin at 1776 Westwood Blvd operates as a walk-in, come-as-you-are spot with no dress expectations implied by its format or OAD Cheap Eats positioning. Jeans and a t-shirt are fine.
Can Sunnin accommodate groups?
Small groups, yes. Larger parties should factor in the walk-in-only format: there's no reservation system to guarantee space, so arriving during off-peak hours on weekdays is the practical move. If your group needs guaranteed seating or a private dining option, Sunnin is not the right fit.
Is Sunnin good for a special occasion?
Only if your occasion is celebrating good, affordable food without pretension. Sunnin has earned back-to-back OAD Cheap Eats rankings, not fine dining recognition, so the setting and format aren't built for milestone dinners. For a birthday or anniversary on the Westside, look elsewhere; for a deliberate low-key meal worth talking about, it delivers.
What are alternatives to Sunnin in Los Angeles?
For Middle Eastern on the Westside, Adana Restaurant is the most direct comparison for sit-down dining with a broader menu scope. If you're willing to travel, the Fairfax corridor has more concentrated options across Lebanese and Israeli cuisines. Sunnin's specific advantage is its Westwood location and no-reservation accessibility, which most alternatives don't replicate.
Hours
- Monday
- 11 am–9 pm
- Tuesday
- 11 am–9 pm
- Wednesday
- 11 am–9 pm
- Thursday
- 11 am–9 pm
- Friday
- 11 am–10 pm
- Saturday
- 11 am–10 pm
- Sunday
- 11 am–9 pm
Recognized By
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