Atlanta has never needed a reason to gather around a good table, and the city’s best hotel restaurants live up to that reputation. To succeed in the A, properties need to provide so much more than the standard lunch buffet or lobby afterthought. These are destination dining rooms worth checking in for, whether you’re pre-gaming before a show at the Fox or just looking for an excuse for a gussied-up night out.
The Betty at Kimpton Sylvan Atlanta
Dark woods, blue velvet, and a soundtrack cycling through Cab Calloway and Diana Ross—chef Brandon Chavannes’ supper club revival inside the Kimpton Sylvan is Buckhead at its most unapologetically glamorous. The bar crafts ice cold martinis, while the kitchen sends out smoky half chickens with bright chow chow slaw, and earthy spinach gnocchi with wild mushroom ragu. Live jazz fills the room most nights. By day, bottomless mimosa brunch draws a celebratory crowd. 374 East Paces Ferry Rd. NE, Atlanta, thebettyatl.com
The Americano at InterContinental Buckhead Hotel

Two-time James Beard Award winner Scott Conant used a 2025 fire as an unlikely gift—a chance to press reset and cook from the heart. The result is a menu that feels deeply personal: focaccia barese arrives in a cast-iron skillet heaped with heirloom tomatoes and broccoli rabe pesto, while hand-rolled tonnarelli tangles with octopus, Moroccan-cured olives, and bottarga breadcrumbs. A new build-your-own sundae board gives the Buckhead dining room its most Instagrammable moment yet. 3315 Peachtree Rd. NE, Atlanta, theamericanoatlanta.com
Atlas at The St. Regis Atlanta

The emerald green walls of this Michelin-starred Buckhead dining room set a dramatic scene, lined with works from one of the world’s largest private art collections. Chef Freddy Money’s plates hold their own: crisp pistachios and tart cherry compote cut the richness of a foie gras parfait, Australian wagyu closes the tasting menu, and a cheese cart materializes just when you think the evening has peaked. 88 W Paces Ferry Rd. NW, Atlanta, atlasrestaurant.com
Fia Restaurant at The Burgess Hotel
The name means “flickering fire” in Italian, and Fia is committed to the bit. Chef-owner Burges Jokhi built the entire restaurant around a custom wood-fired hearth, and its influence runs through nearly every plate: hummus slow-cooked over overnight embers, charred octopus kissed by the open flame, fiery shrimp saganaki still bubbling when it hits the table. A former Pierre Hotel chef who traded Manhattan for Buckhead, Jokhi still personally helms the kitchen–and it shows. 3600 Piedmont Rd. NE, Atlanta, fiaatlanta.com
Tiny Lou’s at Hotel Clermont

Named for a former hotel dancer who, legend says, refused to perform for Hitler, Michelin-recommended Tiny Lou’s wears its Atlanta folklore on its sleeve—and down a neon-lit staircase into pink velvet banquettes and marble tile. The French-American brasserie tucks into the basement of the century-old Hotel Clermont, one floor above the legendary Clermont lounge strip club, serving duck confit with crackling-perfect skin and steak frites slicked with maître d’Hôtel Clermont butter. Only in Atlanta. 789 Ponce De Leon Ave. NE, Atlanta, tinylous.com
Zephyr Southern Brasserie at Hotel Phoenix
Soaring ceilings, a bar running the length of the room, and a location anchoring Centennial Yards across from Mercedes-Benz Stadium—Zephyr makes a strong case for Downtown dining. The French-meets-Southern small plates are where the kitchen earns it: cornbread with smoky Tabasco butter, deviled eggs, and a rectangular shrimp biscuit piled with avocado and a drizzle of syrup that somehow works. Order the fried chicken for two, and don’t fight over the cheesy grits. 70 Centennial Olympic Park Dr. NW, Atlanta, hotelphoenix.com/restaurant-atlanta/zephyr-southern-brasserie
Il Premio at FORTH Hotel

Inspired by the Palio di Siena horse race, Il Premio arrives in Old Fourth Ward dressed for the occasion: equestrian art, mustard velvet, and Gothic stained glass framing views of Historic Fourth Ward Park. The Italian-leaning steakhouse doesn’t do anything halfway. Chef John Adamson’s kitchen delivers handmade bucatini all’Amatriciana and a dramatic 41-ounce bistecca alla Fiorentina porterhouse, while a baby grand piano in the cocktail lounge adds an extra touch of old world elegance. 800 Rankin St. NE, Atlanta, ilpremioatlanta.com
Brasserie Margot at Four Seasons Hotel Atlanta

Chef Jon Novak, who earned his Midtown stripes at Tiny Lou’s, brought his French brasserie sensibility to the Four Seasons when Brasserie Margot opened in late 2024. Art deco tile, marble, and a red zebra motif on every bread plate set a polished tone for butter-glazed Dover sole meunière, fork-tender boeuf bourguignon, and a tableside crepe service that will make you the envy of the room. The James Beard Foundation thought it worthy of a New York showcase. Midtown agrees. 75 14th St. NE, Atlanta, brasseriemargot.com
Nobu Atlanta at Nobu Hotel Atlanta
Buckhead’s Nobu outpost—272 seats, a backlit white onyx bar, and a 12-foot river rock installation—is anything but subtle, and the menu follows suit. Chef Nobu Matsuhisa’s Japanese-Peruvian signatures have lost nothing in translation: yellowtail jalapeño sashimi in yuzu ponzu, black cod with a lacquered miso crust, and rock shrimp tempura in creamy spicy sauce that’s as addictive here as anywhere in the world. 3520 Peachtree Rd. NE, noburestaurants.com