Restaurant in San Francisco, United States
Tacubaya
210ptsSerious Mexican cooking, serious value.

About Tacubaya
Tacubaya in Berkeley earns back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition (2024 and 2025) at a single-dollar price tier, making it the clearest value case in the Bay Area's Mexican dining set. A 4.3 rating from over 900 Google reviewers confirms consistent execution. Easy to book, casual in format, and low-cost enough to reward multiple visits — book it as a repeat anchor, not a one-time stop.
Tacubaya: The Verdict
Book Tacubaya if you want serious Mexican cooking at a price point that undercuts virtually everything else worth eating in the East Bay. Two consecutive Michelin Plate recognitions (2024 and 2025) confirm this is not a casual taqueria that got lucky — it is a kitchen doing disciplined, considered work at a dollar-sign price tier that makes repeat visits not just possible but logical. For food-focused visitors to the San Francisco Bay Area, this is one of the clearest value propositions on the map.
Portrait
Tacubaya sits at 1782 Fourth Street in Berkeley, a retail corridor that draws a mix of neighborhood regulars and destination diners crossing the Bay. The address puts it close enough to San Francisco to justify a trip, but far enough that it operates without the hype pressure of a Mission or Hayes Valley room. Walk in and the visual register is functional and unfussy: a counter-service or casual table format rather than white tablecloth formality, which is exactly the right setting for food at this price. The room communicates that the money went into the kitchen, not the fit-out.
The Michelin Plate is a credential worth parsing here. It does not signal star-level ambition or tasting-menu theater. What it does signal is consistent technical execution: the kitchen is cooking at a level the Michelin inspectors considered worth flagging to readers making dining decisions. For Mexican cooking in the Bay Area at this price, that distinction matters. A 4.3 rating from 903 Google reviewers reinforces the consistency point — that is a large sample size for a neighborhood-scale restaurant, and the score holds up across it.
For the food-focused visitor building a multi-visit strategy across the Bay Area's Mexican options, Tacubaya earns a specific and useful place in the rotation. On a first visit, the priority is understanding the kitchen's range: what the menu defaults are, how the proteins are handled, where the salsas and sauces sit on the spectrum from accessible to complex. The format rewards this kind of attention. At a single-dollar price point, you can order broadly without the bill becoming a decision point.
A second visit is where Tacubaya pays off differently. Once you know the menu's structure, you can go deeper: compare preparations, push toward the items that showed the most technical intent on visit one, and use the low per-dish cost to run a proper side-by-side across the menu. This is the kind of eating that usually requires either a cheap omakase format or a very generous expense account , here it's available to anyone who crosses the bridge.
If you are mapping Mexican cooking across the broader region for context, Tacubaya sits at a very different point on the axis from Pujol in Mexico City or Animalón in Valle de Guadalupe , both of which represent the high-investment, high-ceremony end of the Mexican dining spectrum. Tacubaya's value is the opposite: low ceremony, serious cooking, low financial commitment. That combination is genuinely rare in a Michelin-recognized context.
Within the Bay Area's Mexican options, the comparison set is instructive. Comal and Donaji are the closest comparators in terms of serious intent. Bombera and Flores occupy a slightly different register, leaning into the wine-program and sit-down-dinner format more explicitly. El Buen Comer competes on the value tier. Tacubaya's distinction within this group is the Michelin recognition at the lowest price point , that combination is not replicated elsewhere in the immediate set.
For the explorer building a Bay Area Mexican itinerary, the sequencing suggestion is: start with Tacubaya early in the trip when appetite and curiosity are freshest, use it as a benchmark for what serious Mexican cooking looks like at the accessible end of the market, then move up the price and format spectrum toward Bombera or Donaji on subsequent meals. Return to Tacubaya before leaving if the first visit identified dishes worth revisiting , the price makes that a rational rather than choice.
The Fourth Street location also positions Tacubaya as a practical anchor for a Berkeley day that might include the Achenbach Ferry Building market approach from San Francisco, or a broader East Bay restaurant run that combines Tacubaya with other Berkeley and Oakland spots. If you are planning around the Bay Area more broadly, see our full San Francisco restaurants guide, hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide for the full picture.
Timing matters here more than at a reservation-only room. The lunch window on weekdays is likely the lowest-competition slot , come early in service before the neighborhood lunch crowd fills the space. Weekends draw more foot traffic from the Fourth Street shopping corridor, which means longer waits and a livelier but noisier room. For a first visit where you want to eat attentively rather than at speed, a weekday lunch or early dinner is the practical call.
Practical Details
Address: 1782 Fourth St, Berkeley, CA 94710. Price range: $ (single-dollar tier , among the most accessible Michelin-recognized Mexican options in the Bay Area). Awards: Michelin Plate 2024 and 2025. Rating: 4.3 from 903 Google reviews. Reservations: Booking difficulty is rated Easy , walk-in format is likely viable, though arriving early in service reduces wait time on busy weekend slots. Dress: Casual; the room and price point signal no dress expectations. Leading timing: Weekday lunch or early weekday dinner for the most focused eating experience. Groups: Check capacity before bringing large parties , no seat count is confirmed in available data, and counter-casual formats can constrain group sizes. Further context: For high-investment Mexican comparators at the other end of the spectrum, see Pujol and Animalón. For the broader fine dining context in the Bay Area, The French Laundry in Napa and Single Thread in Healdsburg anchor the leading of the market.
Compare Tacubaya
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tacubaya | Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024) | $ | — |
| Lazy Bear | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
| Atelier Crenn | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
| Benu | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
| Quince | Michelin 3 Star | $$$$ | — |
| Saison | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
How Tacubaya stacks up against the competition.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I wear to Tacubaya?
Casual clothes are fine. Tacubaya is a $ price-range spot on a Berkeley retail strip, and nothing in its Michelin Plate recognition suggests any dress formality. Come as you are — jeans and a t-shirt will not raise an eyebrow here the way they would at a Michelin-starred room like Benu or Quince.
Is Tacubaya good for solo dining?
Yes, and the $ price point makes it low-commitment. A solo meal here costs a fraction of what you'd spend eating alone at a Saison or Atelier Crenn, with none of the awkwardness that can come with solo tasting-menu formats. The Fourth Street location in Berkeley is accessible and walkable, which helps.
Can Tacubaya accommodate groups?
The venue database does not document a private dining room or group reservation policy, so contact them directly before planning a large party. For groups that just want to eat well without coordinating a tasting menu or splitting a $400 check, the $ pricing at Tacubaya makes shared ordering easy and low-stakes.
Is Tacubaya worth the price?
Yes, straightforwardly. Two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) at a $ single-dollar price tier is a rare combination in the Bay Area. You are getting recognized culinary quality at a price point that undercuts nearly every other Michelin-acknowledged option in the region — that gap is the value case.
Is Tacubaya good for a special occasion?
It works if your occasion calls for a relaxed, low-formality setting rather than a white-tablecloth room. The back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition gives it credential without ceremony. For a milestone where the room and the ritual matter as much as the food, Quince or Benu will fit the moment better — but for a celebration centered on great cooking without the price pressure, Tacubaya delivers.
Recognized By
More restaurants in San Francisco
- SaisonSaison is the right call for a serious San Francisco celebration dinner: 2 Michelin stars, an OAD #3 North America ranking for 2025, and a personalised open-hearth tasting menu built around your preferences. The wine list — 2,540 selections with deep Burgundy holdings — is among the strongest in the country. Dinner only, Tuesday to Saturday. Book far in advance and contact the team before arrival to shape your menu.
- Atelier CrennAtelier Crenn is San Francisco's most decorated tasting-menu restaurant: three Michelin stars, a World's 50 Best ranking, and a 14-course pescatarian menu built around Dominique Crenn's Poetic Culinaria concept. At $$$$ with near-impossible reservations, it is the right booking for a milestone occasion — but confirm the pescatarian-only format suits your table before you commit.
- QuinceQuince holds 3 Michelin Stars in San Francisco's Jackson Square and earns them with a pasta-forward tasting menu grounded in Northern California produce and Italian technique. The wine list runs to 1,700 selections and the 2023 remodel produced a room worth the $$$$ price point. Book two months out minimum — this is one of the hardest tables in the city to secure.
- BenuThree Michelin stars, a No. 7 ranking in Opinionated About Dining's North America list, and nearly 20 courses of Corey Lee's technically precise Asian-inflected cooking make Benu one of the most credentialed tables in the country. Book at least six to eight weeks out — closer to three months for a weekend date. The quiet, contemplative room suits serious food travellers over groups seeking a convivial night out.
- Lazy BearLazy Bear holds two Michelin stars and a Pearl Recommended designation, and it earns both through a genuinely distinctive dinner-party format — menu booklets, communal energy, and a James Beard-nominated wine program with over 10,500 bottles. Book the upstairs mezzanine, arrive ready to participate, and plan well ahead: reservations run near impossible and the 2024 remodel has only increased demand.
Similar venues by awards
Related editorial
- Asia's 50 Best Restaurants 2026: The Chairman and Wing Go 1-2 from the Same BuildingThe Chairman takes No. 1 and Wing climbs to No. 2 at Asia's 50 Best Restaurants 2026. Both operate from the same Hong Kong building. Here's what it means.
- Four Seasons Yachts Debut: 95 Suites, 11 Restaurants, and a March 2026 Maiden VoyageFour Seasons I launches March 20, 2026, with 95 suites, a one-to-one staff ratio, and 11 onboard restaurants. Worth tracking if you want hotel-grade service at sea.
- LA Michelin Guide 2026: Seven New Restaurants from Tlayudas to Uzbek DumplingsMichelin's March 2026 California Guide update adds six LA restaurants and one Montecito newcomer, spanning Oaxacan tlayudas, Uzbek manti, and Korean-Italian pasta.
Save or rate Tacubaya on Pearl
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.


