Restaurant in Los Angeles, United States
Tacos Y Birria La Unica
575ptsCash-only goat birria. Bring patience.

About Tacos Y Birria La Unica
Tacos Y Birria La Unica is the East LA goat birria benchmark: a cash-only, no-reservation taco stand on East Olympic Boulevard with an Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats nod (2025), a Pearl Recommended designation, and a 4.7 Google rating from over 1,000 reviews. Come for the quesavirria de chivo and handmade corn tortillas. Bring cash, expect a line on weekends, and arrive early.
Verdict
Go to Tacos Y Birria La Unica. It earned an Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats recognition in 2025 and a Pearl Recommended designation the same year, and it holds a 4.7 Google rating across more than 1,000 reviews. For goat birria in Los Angeles, this East Olympic Boulevard stand is the benchmark. Come prepared for a line, bring cash, and order the quesavirria de chivo.
What You're Booking
Tacos Y Birria La Unica is a cash-only taco stand on East Olympic Boulevard in East Los Angeles, run by Jaime Mendoza. The format is taqueria counter service: you queue, you order, you eat. There are no reservations, no dress expectations, and no bill at the end of the meal. The stand is widely credited with helping birria de chivo find its footing in LA's taco culture, long before goat stew became a menu staple across the city.
The atmosphere here is energetic and unpretentious. Weekend mornings bring the longest queues, and the energy reflects it: the smell of consomé, the press of the crowd, handmade corn tortillas coming off the comal. This is not a sit-down experience — noise, movement, and a communal sense of purpose are the texture of the place. If you want a quieter, more controlled taco experience, Loqui offers a different format. If you want the full taco-stand energy with a line that earns its keep, this is where you come.
What distinguishes La Unica from the dozens of birria spots that followed its lead is the goat. Most LA birria operations run on beef; Mendoza's version uses chivo, and reviewers consistently describe it as cleaner-tasting and less fatty than beef-based alternatives. The handmade corn tortillas are a meaningful differentiator, too. At a taco stand where the menu is short and the production is high-volume, the tortilla quality is the clearest signal of how seriously this operation takes its craft. Compared to Leo's Tacos Truck, which excels at al pastor, La Unica is the call specifically when goat birria is what you're after.
The service model is direct counter-service: fast, no-frills, efficient. There is no tableside interaction to judge and no sommelier to tip. What matters here is the food and the speed at which it reaches you. That model is entirely consistent with the price point, which is typical of East LA taco stands. You are not paying for ambiance or hospitality theater. You are paying for one of the most-discussed birria preparations in the city, executed at volume, at a price that makes it accessible on any budget. That alignment between format, price, and product is what earns La Unica its recognition — not despite the cash-only, counter-service model, but because of it.
Booking is not relevant here: there is no reservation system. The practical question is timing. Arrive early on weekends if you want to minimize wait time. The stand is cash-only, so plan accordingly before you arrive at 2840 E Olympic Blvd. Hours are not publicly confirmed in Pearl's database, so check directly before making a trip. For context on the broader East LA taco corridor, El Ruso and Ditroit are worth knowing as nearby reference points in the city's taqueria ecosystem.
For food-focused visitors building a Los Angeles itinerary, La Unica fits logically into a deeper exploration of the city's Mexican food culture. If you've visited El Farolito or El Hidalguense in Mexico City, you'll recognize the same commitment to regional specificity and high-volume consistency that defines serious taqueria work. La Unica operates in that tradition, applied to goat birria in an East LA context. Our full Los Angeles restaurants guide has more on where to eat across the city, and if you're planning a full trip, the Los Angeles hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide are useful starting points.
FAQ
- What should I order at Tacos Y Birria La Unica? Order the quesavirria de chivo. It is the dish the stand is known for: handmade corn tortillas filled with goat birria, dipped in consomé. The birria de chivo in taco form is the other obvious choice. The menu is short and purpose-built, so there is no wrong answer if you stay on the birria side of the menu. Skip La Unica if you're looking for al pastor or carne asada , for those, Leo's Tacos Truck or Trejo's Tacos are better fits.
- What should I wear to Tacos Y Birria La Unica? Wear whatever you'd wear to eat outdoors at a street stand. This is East LA counter service, not a restaurant with a dress expectation. The birria consomé dip is the main hazard , wear something you're comfortable splashing. There is no dress code and no judgment. The crowd ranges from neighborhood regulars to food-focused visitors from across the city.
- Is Tacos Y Birria La Unica good for solo dining? Yes. Counter service at a taco stand is one of the most solo-friendly formats in the city. You queue alone, order alone, eat alone, and there is no awkwardness in the format. The line is often social by default, and the communal energy of the stand makes solo visits feel natural rather than isolated. For a solo food itinerary in Los Angeles, pairing La Unica with a visit to El Ruso or Ditroit covers the East LA taqueria range efficiently.
Compare Tacos Y Birria La Unica
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tacos Y Birria La Unica | Taqueria | Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats in North America (2025); Famous Taco: Quesavirria de ChivoDescription: Famous for its 'cleaner-tasting' birria de chivo (goat stew) served in tacos, quesatacos, and birria ramen. This popular cash-only taco stand, often credited with popularizing birria in LA, is known for its long lines and handmade corn tortillas.; Pearl Recommended Restaurant (2025) | Easy | — | |
| Kato | New Taiwanese, Asian | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Hayato | Japanese | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| Vespertine | Progressive, Contemporary | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| Camphor | French-Asian, French | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Gwen | New American, Steakhouse | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
How Tacos Y Birria La Unica stacks up against the competition.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I order at Tacos Y Birria La Unica?
Order the quesavirria de chivo — it's the reason people line up. The birria de chivo (goat stew) is specifically noted for being 'cleaner-tasting' than the beef birria you'll find at most LA spots, and it's available in tacos, quesatacos, and birria ramen. If you've never had goat birria, the quesataco is the format to start with: the consommé dipping broth does most of the work. The birria ramen is worth trying if you want something different from the standard taco stand order.
What should I wear to Tacos Y Birria La Unica?
Wear whatever you'd wear to a street taco stand — this is an outdoor counter on East Olympic Boulevard, not a sit-down restaurant. Comfortable, casual clothes are the only sensible call. Birria tacos dipped in consommé will drip, so avoid anything you'd be upset to stain.
Is Tacos Y Birria La Unica good for solo dining?
Yes — it's arguably better solo. Counter-style taco stands are built for quick, individual orders, and there's no table management or group coordination to deal with. Solo diners can work through multiple taco formats (birria, quesataco, ramen) without negotiating with a group. Bring cash; this is a cash-only stand.
What is Tacos Y Birria La Unica known for?
Tacos Y Birria La Unica is primarily known for Taqueria in Los Angeles.
Recognized By
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