The list of the best restaurants in St Barth is unusually deep for an island of 8 square miles. Saint Barthélemy attracts top chefs in winter, the produce flown in is exceptional, and the dining scene runs from refined French in hillside settings to barefoot lunches on the sand. This guide focuses on restaurants currently in operation and consistently delivering, organized by setting and cuisine. Reservations are essential during peak season for almost every restaurant on this list.
Fine dining in Gustavia
Gustavia, the capital and harbor town, is the densest restaurant area in St Barth. Within a five-minute walk of the port, you can move between French Mediterranean, Italian, casual chic waterfront, and elevated bistros.
Bagatelle
Bagatelle sits in the heart of Gustavia, on the harbor. Lively French Mediterranean, energetic atmosphere, with a strong dinner scene and a known wine and champagne list. The St Barth iteration of an international restaurant brand, but the local kitchen runs at a high level. Smart casual dress code.
Bonito
Bonito sits on a hill overlooking Gustavia harbor with one of the most photographed dining rooms in the Caribbean. An open kitchen turns out modern dishes with Latin and Asian influences. The view at sunset is the reason most guests come, and the cocktails and ceviches are the reason most stay. A long-time top reservation in St Barth.
La Petite Plage
La Petite Plage runs along the water in Gustavia just past the main harbor. Casual chic, with a strong lunch service that pulls yachties and locals, and an evening menu that holds up at dinner. Known for tartare, fresh fish, and a long natural wine list. One of the best lunch spots in town.
L’Isola
L’Isola has been a Gustavia institution for years. Sophisticated Italian: fresh pasta made in-house daily, ingredients imported directly from Italy, an air-conditioned dining room a short flight of steps above the street. Open evenings only. The kind of restaurant where regulars become friends with the staff over the course of a season.
Harbor-side classics
La Guérite
La Guérite occupies a striking position on the tip of Gustavia harbor, between yachts and fishing boats. The kitchen specializes in authentic Mediterranean cuisine led by a Greek-trained chef. Dinner only at the Gustavia location, with a separate beach location at St Jean Bay for daytime service that opened in 2023.
Le Select
Le Select is the oldest bar on the island, opened in 1949. Classic burger joint feel, no pretense, an institution loved by locals and yachties. The opposite of fine dining and exactly the point. Walking distance from the harbor; cash and casual welcomed.
Beach restaurants
Sand Bar (Eden Rock, St Jean)
Sand Bar sits on the sand at St Jean beach, attached to the Eden Rock hotel. Mediterranean-inspired beachfront dining with a famous truffle pizza and the best toes-in-the-sand lunch on St Jean beach. Open to non-guests with reservations. Daytime is the move; evening also serves but the daytime energy is the appeal.
La Cabane (Cheval Blanc, Flamands)
La Cabane is the relaxed beach restaurant at the Cheval Blanc hotel on Flamands beach. Fresh fish, simple preparations, refined service in a barefoot setting. Lunch is the headline meal, with the wide white beach unfolding from the table. Open to non-hotel guests with reservations.
La Case (Cheval Blanc, Flamands)
La Case is Cheval Blanc’s evening fine dining counterpart to La Cabane. Refined French cuisine with a contemporary edge. One of the most polished dining experiences on the island. Reservations essential, dress code respected.
Le Tamarin (Saline)
Le Tamarin is set in a tropical garden a few minutes from Saline beach. Lunch is the main service: the dining room sits among tamarind trees, hammocks, and shade. A long-running classic; the menu mixes French, Asian, and Caribbean influences. Pair lunch here with a beach afternoon at Saline.
Amis (Grand Cul-de-Sac)
Amis sits beachfront on the lagoon at Grand Cul-de-Sac. Casual, family-friendly, with a calm vibe and a dock for arrivals by boat. A strong daytime option for guests staying on the lagoon, and one of the best beach lunches with a view.
Nikki Beach (St Jean)
Nikki Beach occupies the western end of St Jean beach. The mainstay of daytime party-style lunches in St Barth, with DJs, champagne service, and a pool of regulars who treat it as the social anchor of the day. Open seasonally, with a high-energy program around the holidays. Not for everyone, very much the point for some.
Hillside dining
Le Toiny
Le Toiny is the dining room at the Le Toiny hotel, on the southeastern hillside above Toiny bay. One of the most refined French dining experiences on the island, with a setting that overlooks the dramatic windswept Toiny coast. Reservations essential, dress code respected, a destination dinner.
L’Esprit (Saline)
L’Esprit is led by a chef with more than 25 years of experience cooking on the island. Refined Mediterranean cuisine in a casual setting just minutes from Saline beach. A long-time critical favorite among the locals who know the dining scene best.
Italian in St Barth
Italian cuisine is well-represented in St Barth. L’Isola is the most refined option (Gustavia, fresh pasta, Italian wine list). L’Isoletta in Gustavia is the casual sister concept, popular for pizza and quick service. Isola is another solid Italian kitchen on the island. All three deliver quality, with different price points and atmospheres.
Asian and other international
Black Ginger in Gustavia delivers a Thai kitchen that has earned a steady following. Sella in the Public area runs an Israeli-influenced kitchen that mixes Middle Eastern flavors into a modern menu. Both are confident departures from the French-dominant scene and worth booking ahead in peak season.
Casual and local
Eddy’s Ghetto in Gustavia is the place to go for authentic Creole cooking. Long-running, no pretense, the kind of meal that reminds you that St Barth is still very much an island in the French West Indies. Le Cafe offers a French kitchen with regular live music and a relaxed, neighborhood feel. Grain de Sel near Saline reopened under new ownership and is back to form for casual French. Le Ti St Barth in Lorient runs as a cabaret restaurant with theatrical late-night programming.
Booking tips and timing
- Most top restaurants serve dinner from 7:30pm; peak seating is 8:30 to 10pm
- Reservations are essential at every restaurant on this list during peak season (mid-December to April)
- Christmas, New Year and Carnival weekends require booking 4 to 8 weeks ahead for the best tables
- Beach clubs serve lunch into the late afternoon and transition to dinner
- Many restaurants close in late August through October during the off-season
Booking direct is straightforward when you have time. For last-minute tables during peak season, where the published reservation systems show no availability, direct relationships with the restaurant managers usually open seats. See the restaurant reservations service for details.