Restaurant in Seattle, United States
Walrus & Carpenter
170Pearl PointsBallard's oyster bar, no reservations needed.

About Walrus & Carpenter
Renée Erickson's Ballard oyster bar has earned sustained recognition from Opinionated About Dining — ranked #68 in North American Gourmet Casual Dining in 2023 — and delivers on that reputation consistently. It's a strong call for solo diners and couples who want well-sourced Pacific Northwest seafood and a wine list worth engaging with, in a casual room that doesn't require a special occasion to justify the visit.
Should you go back to Walrus & Carpenter? Yes — and here's when.
A second visit to Walrus & Carpenter in Ballard tends to confirm the first impression rather than complicate it. Chef Renée Erickson's oyster bar on Ballard Avenue is one of Seattle's most consistently rewarding seafood spots, and its staying power in the Seattle dining scene is backed by verifiable evidence: Opinionated About Dining ranked it #68 in Gourmet Casual Dining across North America in 2023, then continued recommending it through 2024 and 2025. That kind of sustained recognition in a category as competitive as casual seafood dining is worth taking seriously. If oysters, well-sourced Pacific Northwest ingredients, and a thoughtfully assembled wine list are what you're after, book it.
Leading Time to Visit
Friday and Saturday are the high-energy nights, with service from 17:30 — go then if you want the full room buzzing. Thursday through Sunday evenings all work, but if you're coming for depth over atmosphere, Thursday at 18:00 is your leading entry point: the room is slightly quieter and you'll spend more time with the menu and less time competing for staff attention. The restaurant is closed Tuesday and Wednesday, so don't plan a midweek stop. There's no lunch service, making this a dinner-only destination , which also means the wine list matters more here than at a venue splitting its energy between daytime and evening formats.
The Wine Program at the Center
For a food-and-wine explorer, Walrus & Carpenter rewards the approach you'd bring to a serious wine bar. Erickson's broader restaurant group has built a reputation in Seattle for treating wine as a genuine companion to the food rather than a revenue afterthought, and that sensibility carries into this room. The New American seafood format , oysters, Pacific Northwest catches, clean preparations , is exactly the kind of cooking that opens space for mineral whites, skin-contact wines, and light-bodied reds to perform at their leading. You won't find the cellar depth of a destination like Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg or the sommelier infrastructure of Le Bernardin in New York City, but for a casual-format room in Ballard, the wine program punches above its category weight. Bring curiosity and ask for guidance , this is a room where doing so pays off.
What to Know About the Format
Walrus & Carpenter operates as an oyster bar with a broader New American seafood menu. The format is casual, not formal , this is a neighborhood room that happens to have earned national recognition, not a special-occasion restaurant that requires a tie. The address is 4743 Ballard Ave NW, Suite 300, in the heart of Ballard's walkable stretch of independent restaurants and bars. If you're building an evening around the neighborhood, Seattle's bar scene nearby gives you solid pre- or post-dinner options. Google reviewers rate it 4.5 across more than 2,100 reviews, which at that volume indicates genuine consistency rather than a spike from a single wave of press coverage.
For solo diners and couples, the bar or counter format works well , this is one of the more comfortable single-diner seafood rooms in the city. For groups of four or more, confirm the reservation setup in advance, as oyster bar configurations don't always seat larger parties cleanly.
How It Compares
See the full comparison below for how Walrus & Carpenter stacks up against other Seattle options.
Know Before You Go
- Address: 4743 Ballard Ave NW #300, Seattle, WA 98107
- Hours: Mon, Thu: 18:00–22:00 | Fri–Sat: 17:30–22:30 | Sun: 18:00–22:00 | Closed Tue–Wed
- Cuisine: New American , Seafood (oyster bar format)
- Price range: Not published , budget mid-range to upper-casual for Seattle seafood
- Booking difficulty: Easy , reservations recommended but not weeks-in-advance hard
- Leading for: Couples, solo diners, food and wine explorers, Friday or Saturday evenings
- Awards: Opinionated About Dining , Gourmet Casual Dining North America #68 (2023); Casual North America #498 (2024), #635 (2025)
- Google rating: 4.5 (2,119 reviews)
- Chef: Renée Erickson
Seattle Context
Walrus & Carpenter is one reference point in a city with genuine range. If you're building a Seattle itinerary, our full Seattle restaurants guide covers the broader field. For accommodations, our Seattle hotels guide has current options. Wine-focused visitors should also check our Seattle wineries guide and experiences guide for the wider Pacific Northwest picture.
For comparable seafood-forward casual dining in other cities, The Ordinary in Charleston is the closest American peer in format and ambition. At the more ambitious end of the national seafood spectrum, Le Bernardin sets a different standard entirely , useful context for calibrating expectations across price tiers.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Walrus & Carpenter good for solo dining?
Yes — the oyster bar format at Walrus & Carpenter suits solo diners well. Counter seating at an oyster bar lets you eat at your own pace and engage with the room without feeling out of place. The casual format (OAD has ranked it in its Casual North America list for three consecutive years) makes it a lower-stakes solo stop than a formal tasting-menu room like Canlis.
What should a first-timer know about Walrus & Carpenter?
It's dinner only, Thursday through Sunday, with Friday and Saturday service starting at 17:30 — go early on a weekend if you want to avoid a wait. Chef Renée Erickson runs this as a neighborhood oyster bar with a broader New American seafood menu, so expect a casual room, not a formal one. Opinionated About Dining has ranked it in its North America Casual list each year from 2023 to 2025, which is a useful signal for calibrating expectations.
What should I order at Walrus & Carpenter?
Oysters are the anchor of the menu — this is an oyster bar first, broader seafood restaurant second, so start there. Beyond that, the New American seafood format means the menu shifts with availability. No specific dishes are documented in Pearl's current data, so check recent diner reports before you go rather than locking in expectations.
What are alternatives to Walrus & Carpenter in Seattle?
For a step up in formality and price, Canlis is the obvious answer — it's a special-occasion destination rather than a neighborhood drop-in. Joule and Altura offer serious cooking in a more intimate setting if you want a sit-down dinner with a tighter menu. Ba Bar is the right call if you want a casual seafood-adjacent meal at lower spend. Bakery Nouveau is a different category entirely — pastry and café, not dinner — but worth knowing for a Ballard-area morning.
Is lunch or dinner better at Walrus & Carpenter?
Dinner only — Walrus & Carpenter does not serve lunch. Hours run Thursday and Sunday from 18:00, Friday and Saturday from 17:30. Plan accordingly; there is no midday option here.
Location
4743 Ballard Ave NW #300, Seattle, WA 98107
Seattle, United States
Compare Walrus & Carpenter
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Walrus & Carpenter | Easy | — | |
| Canlis | Unknown | — | |
| Joule | Unknown | — | |
| Altura | Unknown | — | |
| Ba Bar | Unknown | — | |
| Bakery Nouveau | Unknown | — |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Also Consider
- Canlis — New American, New American
- Joule — New Asian, New Asian
- Altura — New American, New American
- Ba Bar — Vietnamese, Vietnamese
- Bakery Nouveau — Bakery, Bakery
How It Compares
Walrus & Carpenter sits in a different lane from Seattle's formal fine-dining options. Canlis is the city's reference point for a special-occasion New American dinner — better service infrastructure, harder to book, and priced accordingly. If you're planning a significant dinner and budget is secondary, Canlis is the call. Walrus & Carpenter is the right choice when you want serious seafood in a neighborhood setting without the ceremony or the price premium that comes with it.
Among casual and mid-register options, Altura offers New American cooking with an Italian-influenced approach — the two restaurants share a commitment to ingredient quality but diverge in format and flavor direction. Joule is the call if you want bolder, Korean-inflected flavors rather than the clean, seafood-focused preparations at Walrus & Carpenter. Neither is a direct substitute — they serve different appetites. If Pacific Northwest seafood and oysters are specifically what you're after, Walrus & Carpenter has no close rival in the casual tier within Seattle.
For a completely different experience on the same evening out, Archipelago shares a Pacific Northwest orientation and ingredient-led ethos, making it the most natural alternative if Walrus & Carpenter is fully booked. Booking difficulty at Walrus & Carpenter is relatively easy compared to the city's harder-to-secure tables, which is one more practical argument in its favor for visitors building a Seattle itinerary without weeks of lead time.
Hours
- Monday
- 18:00-22:00
- Tuesday
- Closed
- Wednesday
- Closed
- Thursday
- 18:00-22:00
- Friday
- 17:30-22:30
- Saturday
- 17:30-22:30
- Sunday
- 18:00-22:00
Recognized By
Explore Seattle
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