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A wooden bowl filled with vegetables and grains.
A mushroom-focused vegetable dish at Latha.
Latha/Facebook

The 16 Hottest New Restaurants in Phoenix Right Now

The Valley’s hottest restaurants of the moment, offering everything from spicy aguachile to udon carbonara

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A mushroom-focused vegetable dish at Latha.
| Latha/Facebook

Once known for its steakhouses and mainstream Mexican food, the metro Phoenix restaurant scene has positively exploded in the past five years. These days, there are not only more restaurants but better ones, expressing the city’s range and sophistication.

Although there are more high-end steakhouses than ever before (they’re a thing in this former cowboy and cattle town), Phoenix also boasts a growing cultural diversity. Now restaurants serving Caribbean, Modern Mexican, regional Thai, and sophisticated Indian cuisines dot the Valley landscape.

This map focuses on the newest, most exciting restaurants metro-Phoenix has to offer, including a brand new yakitori-ya and sushi restaurant in Gilbert (Shimogamo Gilbert), a winsome all-day restaurant in Old Town (Beginner’s Luck), and a high-end Mexican-influenced hangout in Arcadia (Santo Arcadia).

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Eater maps are curated by editors and aim to reflect a diversity of neighborhoods, cuisines, and prices. Learn more about our editorial process.

Course Restaurant

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Chef and owner Cory Oppold brings delicious choices to his classy but comfortable Central Scottsdale restaurant, where diners may select a five-course prix fixe menu with options for each course ($135 per person) or a 10-course, chef’s-choice tasting menu ($190 per person). Each plate is a study in Modernist cuisine, featuring foams, powders and deconstructed dishes. On Sunday, the restaurant takes the name Morning Would and offers a seven-course tasting menu for $75 per person.

Ravioli with tomato and squash.
Tomato and herb-infused raviolo stuffed with ratatouille.
Nikki Buchanan

Fire At Will

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Created by Dom and Holly Ruggiero of Hush Public House, Fire at Will is the best thing to happen to the dining desert around Shea and Tatum Boulevards in North Phoenix. Like Hush, it specializes in sophisticated comfort food, but the menu here is broader and more eclectic, featuring influences from Spain, Italy, and the Middle East. The clean-lined space is dimly lit and moody, while still maintaining a sense of irreverence. This is a neighborhood hangout, after all, offering good cocktails and the straightforward Hush burger, as well as less conventional selections such as lamb tartare and soba noodles with gochujang.

Crusty bread next to pickled onions and smoked salmon rillettes topped with a dollop of orange salmon roe.
Smoked salmon rillettes with salmon roe, pickled onion, and toasted Noble bread
Nikki Buchanan

Billed as a Parisian steakhouse, this well-appointed but somewhat casual French restaurant, housed in The Global Ambassador (Sam Fox’s luxe new hotel), offers the French classics Americans know and love: quiche, salade Nicoise, French onion soup, steak tartare, beef Bourguignon, and steak frites. And because Fox wanted it, there’s a short list of Jewish classics such as a pastrami sandwich and matzo ball soup.

Beginner's Luck

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Chef Bernie Kantak and his longtime business partner Andrew Fritz of Citizen Public House and The Gladly have opened a winsome all-day restaurant in a tiny, tucked-away space in the heart of Old Town. Expect exceptional coffee (thanks to coffee nerd Fritz) and Kantak’s ridiculously good savory kolache (don’t miss the birria when they have it). Other offerings include an unlikely but delicious chia pudding-blue corn grits combo (festooned with berries and coconut-pecan granola), a light, summery crab and shrimp roll, Kantak’s legendary chopped salad, and the best French toast in town.

Chia pudding and blue corn grits with berries and coconut-pecan granola.
Nikki Buchanan

Shimogamo Sushi and Grill

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This smaller, sexier-looking sibling to the original Shimogamo in Chandler is not just a second location but rather a different and slightly more casual version, offering creative sushi rolls, bite-size, taco-like hand rolls, okonomiyaki, robatayaki, and yakitori in many splendored permutations, including skewered chicken thighs, wings, meatballs, hearts, and soft bones. The dinner menu also features a few favorites from the Chandler location such as udon carbonara, hirame usuzukuri (a sashimi presentation), and A5 Miyazaki Wagyu steak.

Uchi Scottsdale

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The buzziest Phoenix-area restaurant of the year thus far is Austin-based chef-owner Tyson Cole’s seventh rendition of Uchi (“home” in Japanese), a high-end Japanese restaurant whose cozy space is softened by curving wood-paneled walls and hanging lamps. The extensive menu features cool tastings (think crudo, carpaccio, and usuzukuri), hot tastings (wagyu beef hot rock, oak-grilled escolar), daily specials, rare fish specialties from Japan’s famed Toyosu Market, nigiri and sashimi, and a 10-course, ultra-seaonal omakase menu (market price).

Santo Arcadia

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Nadia Holguin and Armando Hernandez, the husband-and-wife team behind Tacos Chiwas and Cocina Chiwas, have partnered with Roberto Centeno of Espiritu to offer a modern, decidedly upscale take on Mexican Cuisine at this lovely (but noisy) hotspot in Arcadia. The bar cranks out clever riffs on cocktail classics, while starters include lobster tostadas, seasonal ceviche, and birria dumplings. Large format entrees, cooked on a Santa Maria grill, include rib chop, mackerel al pastor, and grilled lobster with pork belly, all ample enough to feed two.  

Birria dumplings in salsa macha and beef broth.
Nikki Buchanan

Hai Noon

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After working for an international food import company for over a year, 2007 James Beard Award winner Nobuo Fukuda is back in the kitchen, presiding over an intimate, 60s-era space that feels more like a bar than a restaurant, but never fear. Fukuda’s extraordinary East-meets-West version of Japanese cuisine, including his signature sashimi spoons, is as brilliant as ever — and remarkably affordable. Sip on Japanese-influenced cocktails, make a meal of share plates such as panko-fried tofu skewers and pork belly bao buns, and get ready for the exceptional omakase Fukuda will begin to offer in the months to come. 

Four spoons filled with spoonfuls of fish and fruit.
Yellowtail, grapefruit, and avocado in Fukuda’s signature sashimi spoon.
Nikki Buchanan

Lom Wong

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Alex and Yotaka (“Sunny”) Martin, the couple who got their start by hosting pop-up style dinner parties in recent years, moved into a Roosevelt Row restaurant in spring 2022. The dimly lit, sophisticated space makes a fitting backdrop for Thai food that doesn’t feel like the same old, same old. Sunny and crew hand-pound Thai red chiles to make various curries and squeeze their own coconut milk rather than open a can. Each dish is light and fresh tasting, as much as it is herbal and complex. The emphasis here is on texture and flavor, not necessarily heat; get the meal off to a brilliant start with a less sweet Thai-style pina colada.

Fried chicken with Thai red chile sauce at Lom Wong.
The fried chicken dish from Lom Wong.
Nikki Buchanan

Sottise

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T.J. Culp and Esther Noh of Restaurant Progress opened this French-style bistro and wine bar in a vintage bungalow in Roosevelt Row in 2021, and it’s been packed ever since. One draw is the small, farmhouse-chic space equipped with an old-school stereo and plenty of vinyl, another is the global wine list, and a third is a French menu, which hews to bistro classics such as pate, escargot, steak tartare, and croque-madames. Get there early to snag a seat on the front porch overlooking a verdant lawn.

This baked Camembert, drizzled with Calvados honey and hazelnut vinaigrette is sweet and nutty, crunchy and oozy all at once.
Baked Camembert with Calvados honey and hazelnut vinaigrette.
Nikki Buchanan

Huarachis Taqueria

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Can’t get a reservation at Rene Andrade’s tiny, insanely popular Bacanora? His new pink-painted taqueria makes a fun alternative. Get the party started with creative cocktails, Mexican beer, excellent ceviche, and elote before moving into tacos (the chicharron is outstanding), huaraches, tortas, and daily specials — maybe an enormous pollo asado platter heaped with accompaniments, including Andrade’s famous beans and disco potatoes.

The monstrous pollo asado platter at Huarachis Taqueria.
Nikki Buchanan

Lawrence Smith and Aseret Arroyo moved from their popular food truck to this adorably kitschy, light-filled space in the rehabbed Egyptian Motor Hotel, where they’re cranking out new wave street food. His frequently changing menu delves into the heart of Mexico yet represents a thoroughly modern viewpoint, incorporating delicacies such as roasted grasshoppers, Oaxacan ants and mushroom-like corn smut (huitlacoche). Sip cocktails on the patio overlooking Grand Avenue, and if the pan de elote cheesecake is available, order it. 

Explore the culinary connections among Africa, Brazil, the Caribbean, and the American South at this modern African restaurant, which honors the African diaspora via food. Owner Evelia Davis, and GM/barman Will Brazil fuel this lively place with Afrobeats, wildly colorful cocktails and positive energy, while Digby Stridiron dishes out his own brand of fun via piri piri chicken wings, pimiento cheese with coconut bread rolls, and shrimp escabeche. 

Green and red-swirled hummus in a bowl.
Fava bean hummus and watermelon salad at LATHA.
Nikki Buchanan

Wren & Wolf

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When it comes to offbeat decor, this bougie new venue from Teddy and Katie Meyers (who also own Chico Malo in CityScape) corners the market. To some, the cavernous, dimly lit space is gorgeous, to others a bit bizarre, given that every nook and cranny is filled with taxidermied wolves, exotic stuffed birds, and otherworldly murals of those same creatures. It’s a cool downtown haven for whiling away the time over excellent cocktails (devised by consulting mixologists Libby Lingua and Mitch Lyons) and on-trend dishes such as beef carpaccio, ceviche, hiramasa crudo, and a three-pound hunk of bone marrow that brings dinosaurs to mind. For a splurge, try A5 wagyu, cooked on Japanese charcoal at a table-side hibachi, which ranges in price from $125 to $210, or a 16-ounce beef Wellington for two that requires 24-hours notice.

A frothy pink cocktail in a coup at Wren & Wolf.
A cocktail from Wren & Wolf.
Nikki Buchanan

Espiritu Mesa

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The talented crew behind Bacanora also gets the credit for lively Espiritu, a seafood-centric Mexican restaurant in Mesa, recently named one of the best new restaurants of the year by Eater. At first blush, the emphasis seems to be on drinking, given the lengthy (and humorously written) cocktail menu devoted to beverages both “stirredeth” and “shakeneth,” as well as a selection of Mexican spirits such as sotol and raicilla. But chef Robert Centeno’s short but provocative menu features hiramasa tostada, spicy aguachile, and sharp, bright ceviche brimming with shrimp, fish, and octopus. If the market special happens to be whole deep-fried snapper, don’t hesitate to order it — it’s probably the best fried fish in town. There’s also a brunch menu featuring chilaquiles, pozole, and lemon curd pancakes.

A bar with a pale green background and several domed bottles.
The magical bar at Espiritu.
Nikki Buchanan

Feringhee Modern Indian Cuisine

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Feringhee, which means “foreigner” in Hindi, catches attention with its blinged out bar and its beautiful and sophisticated food, which celebrates India’s many regions and culinary traditions. This is Indian fine dining, replete with tuiles, foams, flowers, and other haute-cuisine touches. It’s the delicious handiwork of chef Karan Mittal, who makes the ordinary extraordinary. For proof, try the chaat — India’s favorite snack food — elevated by glistening yogurt mousse foam, dried raspberry powder, and crisp-fried shiso leaves. 

A bed of crispy noodles with yogurt mousse foam, dried raspberry powder, and crisp-fried shiso leaves. 
Feringhee’s fancy version of chaat.
Nikki Buchanan

Course Restaurant

Chef and owner Cory Oppold brings delicious choices to his classy but comfortable Central Scottsdale restaurant, where diners may select a five-course prix fixe menu with options for each course ($135 per person) or a 10-course, chef’s-choice tasting menu ($190 per person). Each plate is a study in Modernist cuisine, featuring foams, powders and deconstructed dishes. On Sunday, the restaurant takes the name Morning Would and offers a seven-course tasting menu for $75 per person.

Ravioli with tomato and squash.
Tomato and herb-infused raviolo stuffed with ratatouille.
Nikki Buchanan

Fire At Will

Created by Dom and Holly Ruggiero of Hush Public House, Fire at Will is the best thing to happen to the dining desert around Shea and Tatum Boulevards in North Phoenix. Like Hush, it specializes in sophisticated comfort food, but the menu here is broader and more eclectic, featuring influences from Spain, Italy, and the Middle East. The clean-lined space is dimly lit and moody, while still maintaining a sense of irreverence. This is a neighborhood hangout, after all, offering good cocktails and the straightforward Hush burger, as well as less conventional selections such as lamb tartare and soba noodles with gochujang.

Crusty bread next to pickled onions and smoked salmon rillettes topped with a dollop of orange salmon roe.
Smoked salmon rillettes with salmon roe, pickled onion, and toasted Noble bread
Nikki Buchanan

Le Ame

Billed as a Parisian steakhouse, this well-appointed but somewhat casual French restaurant, housed in The Global Ambassador (Sam Fox’s luxe new hotel), offers the French classics Americans know and love: quiche, salade Nicoise, French onion soup, steak tartare, beef Bourguignon, and steak frites. And because Fox wanted it, there’s a short list of Jewish classics such as a pastrami sandwich and matzo ball soup.

Beginner's Luck

Chef Bernie Kantak and his longtime business partner Andrew Fritz of Citizen Public House and The Gladly have opened a winsome all-day restaurant in a tiny, tucked-away space in the heart of Old Town. Expect exceptional coffee (thanks to coffee nerd Fritz) and Kantak’s ridiculously good savory kolache (don’t miss the birria when they have it). Other offerings include an unlikely but delicious chia pudding-blue corn grits combo (festooned with berries and coconut-pecan granola), a light, summery crab and shrimp roll, Kantak’s legendary chopped salad, and the best French toast in town.

Chia pudding and blue corn grits with berries and coconut-pecan granola.
Nikki Buchanan

Shimogamo Sushi and Grill

This smaller, sexier-looking sibling to the original Shimogamo in Chandler is not just a second location but rather a different and slightly more casual version, offering creative sushi rolls, bite-size, taco-like hand rolls, okonomiyaki, robatayaki, and yakitori in many splendored permutations, including skewered chicken thighs, wings, meatballs, hearts, and soft bones. The dinner menu also features a few favorites from the Chandler location such as udon carbonara, hirame usuzukuri (a sashimi presentation), and A5 Miyazaki Wagyu steak.

Uchi Scottsdale

The buzziest Phoenix-area restaurant of the year thus far is Austin-based chef-owner Tyson Cole’s seventh rendition of Uchi (“home” in Japanese), a high-end Japanese restaurant whose cozy space is softened by curving wood-paneled walls and hanging lamps. The extensive menu features cool tastings (think crudo, carpaccio, and usuzukuri), hot tastings (wagyu beef hot rock, oak-grilled escolar), daily specials, rare fish specialties from Japan’s famed Toyosu Market, nigiri and sashimi, and a 10-course, ultra-seaonal omakase menu (market price).

Santo Arcadia

Nadia Holguin and Armando Hernandez, the husband-and-wife team behind Tacos Chiwas and Cocina Chiwas, have partnered with Roberto Centeno of Espiritu to offer a modern, decidedly upscale take on Mexican Cuisine at this lovely (but noisy) hotspot in Arcadia. The bar cranks out clever riffs on cocktail classics, while starters include lobster tostadas, seasonal ceviche, and birria dumplings. Large format entrees, cooked on a Santa Maria grill, include rib chop, mackerel al pastor, and grilled lobster with pork belly, all ample enough to feed two.  

Birria dumplings in salsa macha and beef broth.
Nikki Buchanan

Hai Noon

After working for an international food import company for over a year, 2007 James Beard Award winner Nobuo Fukuda is back in the kitchen, presiding over an intimate, 60s-era space that feels more like a bar than a restaurant, but never fear. Fukuda’s extraordinary East-meets-West version of Japanese cuisine, including his signature sashimi spoons, is as brilliant as ever — and remarkably affordable. Sip on Japanese-influenced cocktails, make a meal of share plates such as panko-fried tofu skewers and pork belly bao buns, and get ready for the exceptional omakase Fukuda will begin to offer in the months to come. 

Four spoons filled with spoonfuls of fish and fruit.
Yellowtail, grapefruit, and avocado in Fukuda’s signature sashimi spoon.
Nikki Buchanan

Lom Wong

Alex and Yotaka (“Sunny”) Martin, the couple who got their start by hosting pop-up style dinner parties in recent years, moved into a Roosevelt Row restaurant in spring 2022. The dimly lit, sophisticated space makes a fitting backdrop for Thai food that doesn’t feel like the same old, same old. Sunny and crew hand-pound Thai red chiles to make various curries and squeeze their own coconut milk rather than open a can. Each dish is light and fresh tasting, as much as it is herbal and complex. The emphasis here is on texture and flavor, not necessarily heat; get the meal off to a brilliant start with a less sweet Thai-style pina colada.

Fried chicken with Thai red chile sauce at Lom Wong.
The fried chicken dish from Lom Wong.
Nikki Buchanan

Sottise

T.J. Culp and Esther Noh of Restaurant Progress opened this French-style bistro and wine bar in a vintage bungalow in Roosevelt Row in 2021, and it’s been packed ever since. One draw is the small, farmhouse-chic space equipped with an old-school stereo and plenty of vinyl, another is the global wine list, and a third is a French menu, which hews to bistro classics such as pate, escargot, steak tartare, and croque-madames. Get there early to snag a seat on the front porch overlooking a verdant lawn.

This baked Camembert, drizzled with Calvados honey and hazelnut vinaigrette is sweet and nutty, crunchy and oozy all at once.
Baked Camembert with Calvados honey and hazelnut vinaigrette.
Nikki Buchanan

Huarachis Taqueria

Can’t get a reservation at Rene Andrade’s tiny, insanely popular Bacanora? His new pink-painted taqueria makes a fun alternative. Get the party started with creative cocktails, Mexican beer, excellent ceviche, and elote before moving into tacos (the chicharron is outstanding), huaraches, tortas, and daily specials — maybe an enormous pollo asado platter heaped with accompaniments, including Andrade’s famous beans and disco potatoes.

The monstrous pollo asado platter at Huarachis Taqueria.
Nikki Buchanan

Chilte

Lawrence Smith and Aseret Arroyo moved from their popular food truck to this adorably kitschy, light-filled space in the rehabbed Egyptian Motor Hotel, where they’re cranking out new wave street food. His frequently changing menu delves into the heart of Mexico yet represents a thoroughly modern viewpoint, incorporating delicacies such as roasted grasshoppers, Oaxacan ants and mushroom-like corn smut (huitlacoche). Sip cocktails on the patio overlooking Grand Avenue, and if the pan de elote cheesecake is available, order it. 

LATHA

Explore the culinary connections among Africa, Brazil, the Caribbean, and the American South at this modern African restaurant, which honors the African diaspora via food. Owner Evelia Davis, and GM/barman Will Brazil fuel this lively place with Afrobeats, wildly colorful cocktails and positive energy, while Digby Stridiron dishes out his own brand of fun via piri piri chicken wings, pimiento cheese with coconut bread rolls, and shrimp escabeche. 

Green and red-swirled hummus in a bowl.
Fava bean hummus and watermelon salad at LATHA.
Nikki Buchanan

Wren & Wolf

When it comes to offbeat decor, this bougie new venue from Teddy and Katie Meyers (who also own Chico Malo in CityScape) corners the market. To some, the cavernous, dimly lit space is gorgeous, to others a bit bizarre, given that every nook and cranny is filled with taxidermied wolves, exotic stuffed birds, and otherworldly murals of those same creatures. It’s a cool downtown haven for whiling away the time over excellent cocktails (devised by consulting mixologists Libby Lingua and Mitch Lyons) and on-trend dishes such as beef carpaccio, ceviche, hiramasa crudo, and a three-pound hunk of bone marrow that brings dinosaurs to mind. For a splurge, try A5 wagyu, cooked on Japanese charcoal at a table-side hibachi, which ranges in price from $125 to $210, or a 16-ounce beef Wellington for two that requires 24-hours notice.

A frothy pink cocktail in a coup at Wren & Wolf.
A cocktail from Wren & Wolf.
Nikki Buchanan

Espiritu Mesa

The talented crew behind Bacanora also gets the credit for lively Espiritu, a seafood-centric Mexican restaurant in Mesa, recently named one of the best new restaurants of the year by Eater. At first blush, the emphasis seems to be on drinking, given the lengthy (and humorously written) cocktail menu devoted to beverages both “stirredeth” and “shakeneth,” as well as a selection of Mexican spirits such as sotol and raicilla. But chef Robert Centeno’s short but provocative menu features hiramasa tostada, spicy aguachile, and sharp, bright ceviche brimming with shrimp, fish, and octopus. If the market special happens to be whole deep-fried snapper, don’t hesitate to order it — it’s probably the best fried fish in town. There’s also a brunch menu featuring chilaquiles, pozole, and lemon curd pancakes.

A bar with a pale green background and several domed bottles.
The magical bar at Espiritu.
Nikki Buchanan

Related Maps

Feringhee Modern Indian Cuisine

Feringhee, which means “foreigner” in Hindi, catches attention with its blinged out bar and its beautiful and sophisticated food, which celebrates India’s many regions and culinary traditions. This is Indian fine dining, replete with tuiles, foams, flowers, and other haute-cuisine touches. It’s the delicious handiwork of chef Karan Mittal, who makes the ordinary extraordinary. For proof, try the chaat — India’s favorite snack food — elevated by glistening yogurt mousse foam, dried raspberry powder, and crisp-fried shiso leaves. 

A bed of crispy noodles with yogurt mousse foam, dried raspberry powder, and crisp-fried shiso leaves. 
Feringhee’s fancy version of chaat.
Nikki Buchanan

Related Maps