13 Best Restaurants in Santiago, Chile

Blue Jar

$$$ | Santiago Centro Fodor's choice

Simple but creative dishes using the best and freshest Chilean ingredients appeal to local office workers and visitors alike at this popular downtown spot, where lunch patrons often enjoy a sandwich or soup-salad combo. The menu changes seasonally, with dishes like chicken cashew curry and venison with caponata sharing menu space with grilled bass and chia polenta cake. The restaurant has a good cocktail list, and a short yet decent wine list and does upper-crust business lunches. It is open for early dinners (until 9 pm). Reservations are advisable for lunch, particularly for an outside table.

Amanda Labarca 102 at Moneda, Santiago, Santiago Metropolitan, 8340488, Chile
2-96155–4650
Known For
  • specialty coffee
  • early dinners (closes at 9 pm except first Thursday of each month)
  • reservations necessary for busy lunches
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed weekends

Bocanariz

$$$ | Lastarria Fodor's choice

A haven with wine aficionados, trendy Bocanariz in Lastarria has Chilean fare, but it's best known as a superior place to sample vino chileno. Waitstaff at this tastefully designed and somewhat romantic venue are all sommeliers, and they serve 300 wines on any given evening, many by the glass or small pour. Sample a themed flight of wine, such as huaso named for the Chilean cowboy. The menu separates out food types by notes such as smoky, spiced, citrus, light, creamy, herbed, and sweet. Ask to see the cellar.

José Victorino Lastarria 276, Santiago, Santiago Metropolitan, 8320152, Chile
2-2638–9893
Known For
  • wine by the glass
  • tapas
  • wine flights
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun., Reservations essential

Como Agua Para Chocolate

$$$ | Bellavista Fodor's choice

Originally inspired by Laura Esquivel's romantic 1989 novel Like Water for Chocolate, this Bellavista standout focuses on Chilean dishes made with "life, love, vigor, and passion" as per the book. Reserve the "bed table" if you want to be showy (it has a headboard but is not actually a bed).

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Confitería Torres

$$$ | Santiago Centro Fodor's choice

Opened in 1879, this is the oldest restaurant still operating in Chile and remains one of the city's most traditional dining rooms, with red-leather banquettes, mint-green ceramic floors, and huge chandeliers with tulip-shaped globes. Classic dishes such as lomo al ajo arriero (sirloin sautéed with peppers and garlic) are menu staples; if you're after a quick bite, order the Sandwich Barros Luca, as this is where it was created. This restaurant also has a branch for snacks in the Centro Cultural La Moneda, and another on upscale Isidora Goyenechea in El Golf (Las Condes).

Bristol

$$$ | Santiago Centro

This restaurant inside the sophisticated Hotel Plaza San Francisco serves creative seafood dishes like marinated scallops over octopus carpaccio and cold tomato-and-pepper sauce. Frequented by local business people, Bristol has won several awards and often makes it onto top lists in local media. It's not as well illuminated as it could be and doesn't have much of a view, but what you've got on your plate should make up for it.

Castillo Forestal

$$$ | Parque Forestal

French fare is on the menu at this spacious national heritage converted castle with a turret room and gorgeous terrace. At lunch, sample the set brasserie menu with seafood tartare and duck, or for something lighter and also less expensive, try a turkey club or Mediterranean sandwich on focaccia with fresh Chilean mozzarella. It attracts a well-heeled clientele, so you'll want to make a reservation.

Cardenal José María Caro 390, Santiago, Santiago Metropolitan, 8320054, Chile
9-4444–8531
Known For
  • park views
  • French cuisine
  • great wine list
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon.

El Mesón Nerudiano

$$$ | Bellavista

Evoking another time and place, El Mesón Nerudiano centers around traditional recipes, poetry, music, and live theater, all in homage to Chile's greatest poet, Pablo Neruda. A stone's throw from La Chascona, Neruda's house-turned-museum, this restaurant has a menu with Chilean favorites, including caldillo de congrio, a fish soup cooked from the recipe given in one of Neruda's poems.

Dominica 35, Santiago, Santiago Metropolitan, 8420339, Chile
2-2737–1542
Known For
  • traditional ambience
  • popular with tourists
  • literary inspiration
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon.

La Bodeguilla

$$$ | Bellavista

Stop by this authentic Spanish restaurant after visiting Cerro San Cristóbal for tasty tapas like chorizo riojano (a piquant sausage), pulpo a la gallega (octopus with peppers and potatoes), and queso manchego (a mild white cheese) or for the house specialty—cabrito al horno (oven-roasted kid goat). Wine aficionados will appreciate the extensive list of vino chileno.

Av. Domínica 5, Santiago, Santiago Metropolitan, 8420339, Chile
9-6769–2872
Known For
  • small bites to share
  • extensive wine list
  • casual vibe
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon., Reservations essential

Le Fournil

$$$ | Vitacura

This restaurant features Mediterranean fare and is a great place for a carry-out breakfast or a light quiche and salad lunch. Le Fournil also offers a unique version of pizza, known as tartine, which uses its own homemade bread as a base. Unusual for Chile, the restaurant includes a children's menu. There are four other branches of Le Fournil around Santiago, including at the Parque Arauco shopping mall and Patio Bellavista, as well as at the international arrivals area in the airport.

Les Assassins

$$$ | Parque Forestal

Although at first glance this appears to be a rather somber bistro, nothing could be further from the truth. The service is friendly and the Provence-influenced food---such as the mouthwatering steak au poivre and beef Bourguignon---is first-rate.

Merced 279B, Santiago, Santiago Metropolitan, 8320115, Chile
2-2638–4280
Known For
  • exceptional French fare
  • great service
  • tasty meat dishes
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun., Reservations essential

Mercado Central

$$$ | Santiago Centro

Where better than to sample fresh Chilean seafood and eat where the locals eat than at Santiago's fish market? Bustling and loud, the market has an ambience you'll want to soak up, whether you visit Donde Augusto and La Joya del Pacífico in the center or at a smaller, less touristy, and cheaper spot such as Marisol or Francisca. The tables may be rickety, but the fish couldn't be fresher and cheaper or the service friendlier. Credit cards are accepted at larger restaurants. The mercado and its restaurants close at 5 pm.

Buy Tickets Now
San Pablo 967, Santiago, Santiago Metropolitan, 8320009, Chile
No phone
Known For
  • fantastic seafood
  • casual dining
  • cash-only at smaller restaurants
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No dinner

Mestizo

$$$ | Vitacura

Sporting views over Parque Bicentenario, this is a great spot for a leisurely lunch or a generous pisco sour as the sun sets between the hills in summer. The eclectic menu brings together some of the best of Chilean and Peruvian cuisine, with an emphasis on fish, as well as plateada, a slow-cooked cut of beef on a bed of mashed potatoes and basil.

Peumayén

$$$ | Bellavista

Taking inspiration from ancestral dishes made in all the regions of Chile, there's a historical theme at Peumayén, where every meal starts with a colorful "bread basket," a slate plate with examples from the north to the south of Chile. Entrées designed for sharing include guanaco meat; horse meat, lamb, fish, and the much-celebrated potato continue the ancestral theme. The restaurant interior is part romantic, part rustic, and there's an agreeable plant-filled courtyard for outside dining in warmer months.

Constitución 136, Santiago, Santiago Metropolitan, 7520367, Chile
9-4958–0141
Known For
  • unique and tasty meat dishes
  • traditional decor
  • outdoor seating
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon.