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    Restaurant in Los Angeles, United States

    The Lobster

    310pts

    Ocean views, Michelin-noted, easy to book.

    The Lobster, Restaurant in Los Angeles

    About The Lobster

    A Michelin Plate seafood room on Santa Monica's Ocean Avenue, The Lobster holds consecutive Opinionated About Dining Casual North America rankings (#310 in 2025) and a 4.3 Google rating across nearly 2,700 reviews. At the $$$ price point with moderate booking difficulty, it's a credentialed, accessible choice for seafood in Los Angeles — book a week ahead for weekends, or walk in on a weekday lunch.

    The Verdict

    Getting a table at The Lobster in Santa Monica is easier than most Michelin-recognised seafood rooms in Los Angeles — moderate booking difficulty means you can usually secure a spot with a week's notice, sometimes less on weekdays. The question worth asking first is whether it's worth the trip. With a Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025, plus back-to-back rankings on Opinionated About Dining's Casual North America list (#326 in 2024, climbing to #310 in 2025), The Lobster has earned its place on any serious seafood itinerary in Southern California. If you're visiting Los Angeles for the first time and want credentialed seafood with an ocean setting, this is a defensible choice at the $$$ price point.

    What to Expect

    The Lobster sits at 1602 Ocean Avenue in Santa Monica, meaning the room is oriented toward the Pacific. For a first-timer, the atmosphere lands somewhere between a casual lunch destination and a proper dinner-out occasion — energetic during weekend lunch service, quieter on weekday evenings when the room has more breathing room. Noise levels track upward as the day progresses toward dinner, particularly on Fridays and Saturdays when the kitchen runs until 10 PM. If conversation matters to you, Monday through Thursday evenings offer a noticeably calmer room. Weekend lunch, when the light off the ocean is at its leading, draws crowds that make the space livelier but louder. Govind Armstrong leads the kitchen , his name carries weight in the Los Angeles dining conversation, and his presence here gives The Lobster a culinary identity beyond its address.

    For a first visit, the progression of a meal here follows a familiar logic for a serious seafood room: start with raw or lightly prepared options before moving to the kitchen's cooked preparations. The Michelin recognition and OAD rankings suggest technical consistency in execution, which is what you want from a seafood-forward kitchen where freshness and timing define quality. Because no tasting menu details are confirmed in our data, the practical advice is to ask your server about the kitchen's current direction on arrival , chef-driven casual rooms at this tier often run specials that aren't on the printed menu.

    Timing Your Visit

    The Lobster opens for lunch Monday through Thursday at noon and Friday through Sunday at 11:30 AM. Dinner service closes at 9 PM most nights, extending to 10 PM on Fridays and Saturdays. For a first-timer looking to get the full experience of the location without the weekend noise, a Friday lunch , arriving close to the 11:30 AM opening , gives you the Pacific light and a room that hasn't yet reached peak volume. If you're visiting in summer, Santa Monica's Ocean Avenue draws heavy foot traffic on weekends, which affects both parking and the general energy around the restaurant. Coming on a Tuesday or Wednesday evening sidesteps most of that pressure and tends to produce more attentive service in any high-traffic restaurant at this price tier.

    Ratings & Recognition

    • Michelin Plate , 2024 and 2025
    • Opinionated About Dining , Casual North America , Recommended 2023, #326 in 2024, #310 in 2025
    • Google Reviews , 4.3 from 2,709 reviews

    The OAD trajectory is worth noting: moving from a general recommendation in 2023 to a specific ranking, and then improving that ranking in consecutive years, signals momentum rather than a one-time citation. For a casual seafood room, that kind of upward movement on a critic-weighted list is a meaningful trust signal.

    Booking & Practical Details

    Reservations: Moderate difficulty , book 5–7 days ahead for weekends, walk-ins more viable on weekday lunch. Dress: No confirmed dress code, but the $$$ price point and Michelin recognition suggest smart casual is the appropriate baseline. Budget: $$$ per head , expect mid-range to upper-mid spend for a full meal with drinks. Hours: Mon–Thu 12–9 PM, Fri 11:30 AM–10 PM, Sat 11:30 AM–10 PM, Sun 11:30 AM–9 PM. Location: 1602 Ocean Ave, Santa Monica. Street parking on Ocean Avenue is limited on weekends; the city parking structure on 2nd Street is the practical alternative.

    How It Compares

    See the comparison section below for how The Lobster stacks up against Los Angeles's leading dining rooms.

    LA Seafood Alternatives

    If The Lobster's Santa Monica location doesn't work for your itinerary, several strong alternatives cover the seafood category across Los Angeles. Found Oyster is the go-to for raw bar depth in East Hollywood, lower price point, and a more neighbourhood-casual feel. Crudo e Nudo brings a lighter, crudo-forward approach that suits diners who prefer minimal intervention over a full cooked menu. EMC Seafood & Raw Bar offers a broader, more accessible menu across multiple locations. For a more scene-forward room with seafood on the menu, Catch LA serves that function at a similar or higher price point. Little Fish Melrose Hill is worth knowing for casual, well-sourced fish in a lower-key setting.

    For broader Los Angeles planning, see our full Los Angeles restaurants guide, our full Los Angeles hotels guide, our full Los Angeles bars guide, our full Los Angeles wineries guide, and our full Los Angeles experiences guide.

    If you want a benchmark for what serious seafood tasting menus look like at the leading of the format, Le Bernardin in New York City remains the reference point in North America. For a different coastal register, Alici Restaurant on the Amalfi Coast and Gambero Rosso in Marina di Gioiosa Ionica show what a seafood-forward kitchen can do when the catch and the cuisine are tightly aligned. Domestically, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg and The French Laundry in Napa represent the Northern California fine dining ceiling for comparison. Lazy Bear in San Francisco is a useful West Coast tasting menu reference at a different price tier. Further afield, Alinea in Chicago and Emeril's in New Orleans provide context for what OAD-recognised kitchens can look like across American dining.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    • What should I wear to The Lobster? Smart casual is the right call. No confirmed dress code is on record, but the $$$ price point, Michelin Plate status, and Ocean Avenue address all point toward a room where jeans and a clean shirt work fine and beach attire would feel underdressed for dinner.
    • What should I order at The Lobster? No confirmed signature dishes are in our data, so the most practical advice is to ask your server what's running as specials , Govind Armstrong's kitchen at this recognition tier tends to run market-driven preparations that outperform the static menu. The cuisine type is seafood, so lead with whatever the kitchen is highlighting from the sea that day.
    • Is lunch or dinner better at The Lobster? For a first visit, Friday lunch at 11:30 AM opening is the most rewarding combination: you get the Pacific light, a quieter room than weekend dinner, and the full menu. If your schedule only allows dinner, Wednesday or Thursday evenings offer the leading noise-to-service ratio. Weekend dinner is busier and louder, with service stretched thinner.
    • Can I eat at the bar at The Lobster? Bar seating is not confirmed in our data, but most casual-format Michelin Plate rooms at this price tier in Los Angeles offer some form of bar or counter dining. Call ahead or check on arrival if solo bar dining is your preference , it's worth confirming before you show up expecting it.
    • Is The Lobster worth the price? At $$$ in a Michelin Plate-recognised room with consecutive OAD rankings and 4.3 stars across 2,709 Google reviews, the answer is yes for a seafood-focused dinner in Santa Monica. It is not the place to go if you want the sharpest value-per-dollar seafood in Los Angeles , Found Oyster and Crudo e Nudo both deliver more value at lower prices. The Lobster earns its price through the combination of location, credentials, and a kitchen with a named chef.
    • Is the tasting menu worth it at The Lobster? No confirmed tasting menu is in our data for The Lobster. If a tasting format is what you're specifically seeking in Los Angeles, Kato and Hayato are the stronger choices at the $$$$ tier. The Lobster is better approached as a well-credentialed à la carte seafood room than as a tasting menu destination.
    • Is The Lobster good for solo dining? Yes, with the caveat that bar seating availability isn't confirmed. Solo dining at a $$$ casual-format room in Santa Monica is direct , the main practical consideration is noise level on weekend evenings, which makes it a less comfortable solo experience. A weekday lunch solo visit works well.
    • Can The Lobster accommodate groups? No confirmed private dining or group booking details are in our data. For groups of 6 or more at the $$$ price point in Santa Monica, call the restaurant directly to confirm availability and whether large-party reservations require a set menu or deposit. Weekend group bookings at any Michelin-recognised room in Los Angeles should be made at least 2–3 weeks in advance.

    Compare The Lobster

    How The Lobster Compares
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    The LobsterSeafood$$$Opinionated About Dining Casual in North America Ranked #310 (2025); Michelin Plate (2025); Opinionated About Dining Casual in North America Ranked #326 (2024); Michelin Plate (2024); Opinionated About Dining Casual in North America Recommended (2023)Moderate
    KatoNew Taiwanese, Asian$$$$Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    HayatoJapanese$$$$Michelin 2 StarUnknown
    VespertineProgressive, Contemporary$$$$Michelin 2 StarUnknown
    CamphorFrench-Asian, French$$$$Michelin 1 StarUnknown
    GwenNew American, Steakhouse$$$$Michelin 1 StarUnknown

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I wear to The Lobster?

    No confirmed dress code is on record, but at the $$$ price point and with a Pacific-facing room on Ocean Avenue, most diners lean toward neat casual — clean jeans and a collared shirt or equivalent. Beachwear is likely out of place. Overdressing in a suit is equally unnecessary.

    What should I order at The Lobster?

    Specific menu items are not confirmed in available records, but the restaurant's name and its Michelin Plate recognition since 2024 signal that seafood — and lobster specifically — should be the focus of your order. Skip this venue if you're not there for the seafood.

    Is lunch or dinner better at The Lobster?

    Lunch on a weekday is the lowest-friction visit: the room is easier to book, the Pacific light through the windows is at its best, and the Monday-Thursday noon opening makes it a practical midweek option. Friday-Sunday dinner extends to 10 PM and likely draws a fuller room, which suits the atmosphere but means booking 5-7 days ahead is advisable.

    Can I eat at the bar at The Lobster?

    Bar seating availability is not confirmed in the venue record. For guaranteed walk-in options, weekday lunch is the more reliable route — reservation difficulty is moderate overall, so calling ahead is the safer play if bar seating matters to your visit.

    Is The Lobster worth the price?

    At $$$, The Lobster is priced above casual but delivers Michelin Plate recognition (2024 and 2025) and a top-310 ranking from Opinionated About Dining for casual North America. For a seafood meal with an actual ocean view in Santa Monica, that's a defensible spend — more so than paying the same at a landlocked seafood room with comparable credentials.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at The Lobster?

    A tasting menu is not confirmed in the venue data. The Lobster's OAD Casual ranking and Michelin Plate suggest a la carte is the primary format here. If a structured tasting progression is what you're after in Los Angeles, that category is better served elsewhere.

    Is The Lobster good for solo dining?

    Moderate booking difficulty and a $$$ price point make solo visits workable rather than awkward — this isn't a high-pressure omakase counter where a single seat is hard to justify. Weekday lunch is the path of least resistance for a solo diner, and the ocean-facing room gives you something to look at.

    Hours

    Monday
    12–9 pm
    Tuesday
    12–9 pm
    Wednesday
    12–9 pm
    Thursday
    12–9 pm
    Friday
    11:30 am–10 pm
    Saturday
    11:30 am–10 pm
    Sunday
    11:30 am–9 pm

    Recognized By

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