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The Atlanta Food Halls Defining the City’s Dining Scene Right Now

From historic markets to chef-driven newcomers, these are the spots reshaping how Atlanta eats, gathers, and goes out
Written By: author avatar Sarah Bisacca
author avatar Sarah Bisacca
Sarah Bisacca is an Atlanta-based freelance journalist with more than a decade of experience covering travel, food, and hospitality. Her work has appeared in Forbes Travel Guide, Eater Atlanta, Southern Living, and Atlanta Magazine, and more. You can find more of her writing at SarahBTravelin.com and follow along on Instagram @sarahb_travelin, where she documents both global adventures and local eats.
Indoor food hall with large white columns and orange beams; diners sit at tables near a Minero taco shop sign.
Scenes from inside Ponce City Market. | Photo by Jamestown

Atlanta has always had an appetite for the next big thing, but the food hall boom that’s reshaped the city’s dining landscape over the past decade feels less like a trend and more like a permanent fixture. The best ones have shed the generic food-court template entirely—no national chains, no sad salad counters—replacing it with a reflection of the A itself: independent operators, chef-driven concepts, and the kind of variety that ends any group dinner argument before it starts.

From a converted Westside warehouse to a sprawling Art Deco anchor on the Eastside, these are the Atlanta food halls worth going out of your way for. 

Krog Street Market

Krog Street Market set the template. Opened in 2014 inside a century-old brick warehouse straddling Inman Park and Cabbagetown, it was among the first in Atlanta to prove that a food hall could function as a neighborhood anchor and not just a tourist amenity. The tenant mix has evolved over the years—Superica, Fred’s Meat and Bread, and Ticonderoga Club are among the current draws—but the covered open-air corridor and craft beer bar still make it one of the most pleasant places in the city to not be in a hurry. 99 Krog St. NE, Atlanta, thekrogdistrict.com

Ponce City Market

Sweeping views atop the Roof at Ponce City Market. | Photo by Slater Hospitality
Sweeping views atop the Roof at Ponce City Market | Photo by Slater Hospitality

This restored 1920s Sears distribution center anchoring the BeltLine’s Eastside Trail is less a food hall than a vertical neighborhood—retail, residences, rooftop, and a dining floor that has somehow become both a must-visit attraction for first-time visitors and a local hangout. Minero, Botiwalla, and H&F Burger are among the central food hall’s highlights, and the recently opened Market East wing adds an Asian-inspired bar and array of street food stalls to the mix. The building does a lot of the work, but the food earns its place. 675 Ponce De Leon Ave. NE, Atlanta, poncecitymarket.com

Southern Feed Store 

Named for a 1930s business that once occupied its walls, Southern Feed Store is a reflection of its East Atlanta Village address: unpretentious, eclectic, and alive well past midnight. Six independent kitchens share a roof with a Brazilian-accented full bar and a stage showcasing live music. Expect Philly cheesesteaks from Woody’s, wood-fired Brazilian pizza, Colombian-style loaded fries, indulgent sliders, and small-batch ice cream. But the real draw is the late-night kitchen that makes this food hall just as essential at last call as at lunch. 1245 Glenwood Ave. SE, Ste. 6, Atlanta, sfseav.com

Marietta Square Market

Visitors take to the patio at Marietta Square. | Photo by Marietta Square
Visitors take to the patio at Marietta Square | Photo by Marietta Square

Opened in 2019 inside a converted warehouse just a short walk from the Square, this OTP food hall sets the tone with a restored antique trolley jutting from its facade. The architecture and interiors lean into Marietta’s railroad history, while the stalls tell the city’s current story: wood-fired pizza, Cuban cuisine, BBQ, and vegan Jamaican all under one roof. On a Saturday afternoon, with the farmers market just outside and families filling the patio, it feels less like a food hall and more like the town square of your Hallmark dreams. 68 North Marietta Pkwy. NW, Marietta, mariettasquaremarket.com

Chattahoochee Food Works 

The celebrity curator credit—Andrew Zimmern, James Beard winner and co-curator alongside New York’s Gansevoort Market creator Robert Montwaid—could easily be the whole story here. It isn’t. Twenty-six stalls fill the 26,000-square-foot Makers Building at the Works on the Upper Westside, and the tenant list reads like a dispatch from Atlanta’s food truck and pop-up circuit: sweet potato curry puffs at Tyde Tate Kitchen, fried chicken from Delilah’s Everyday Soul, Mochinut’s soft and chewy donuts, the list goes on. The indoor-outdoor bar (look out for themed pop-ups) and covered patio do the rest. 1235 Chattahoochee Ave. NW, Ste. 130, Atlanta, chattahoocheefoodworks.com

Politan Row at Colony Square

A central bar anchors the expansive space at Politan Row at Colony Square. | Photo by Politan Row at Colony Square
A central bar anchors the expansive space at Politan Row at Colony Square | Photo by Politan Row at Colony Square

This food hall at the corner of Peachtree and 14th isn’t readily visible from the street; you have to go looking for it. Inside Colony Square’s ground-floor gathering space, 11 stalls ring a U-shaped central bar, the whole room warm and low-lit enough to make you forget you’re in a mixed-use development. Pretty Little Tacos, Zaddy’s, and 26 Thai Kitchen are among the draws. Somewhere in the back is Jojo’s Beloved, a speakeasy with cathedral ceilings and an all-vinyl soundtrack that’s worth seeking out. 1197 Peachtree St. NE, Ste. 150, Atlanta, colonysquare.politanrow.com

Municipal Market 

Every food hall in Atlanta owes this place something—institutions like Grindhouse, Bell Street Burritos, and Arepa Mia all launched here. Founded in 1918 on a fire-scarred lot in Sweet Auburn and anchored by its current brick building since 1924, the Curb Market predates the food hall trend by about 90 years, but is somehow still effortlessly cool. The smell of smoked meat and fresh-cut produce does the marketing. Thirty vendors pack the floor: butchers, fishmongers, and eateries serving everything from soul food to Ethiopian to Venezuelan. 209 Edgewood Ave. SE, Atlanta, municipalmarketatl.com

Halidom Eatery

Guests gather at Bar La Rose inside Halidom. | Photo by Halidom
Guests gather at Bar La Rose inside Halidom | Photo by Halidom

Opened in May 2024, Halidom fills a 14,000-square-foot space with 11 chef-driven stalls—Colombian loaded fries at Buena Papa, wood-fired pizza, sushi and ramen, Philly cheesesteaks, tandoor-grilled meats, and island eats—with South Beach-inflected Bar La Rose setting the mood. Step outside and the two-acre grounds open onto a restored stretch of Intrenchment Creek that the ownership team cleared of five dumpsters’ worth of debris to reclaim as green space. A food hall with a nature preserve out back. This is Atlanta. 1341 Moreland Ave. SE, Atlanta, halidomeatery.com

Ph’east 

The Battery’s sea of national chains makes Ph’east feel like the discovery that it is. Modeled after Southeast Asia’s hawker markets, the 5,000-square-foot food hall pulls from Atlanta’s own deep bench: Poke Burri’s sushi doughnuts draped in salmon and eel sauce, Lifting Noodles’ ramen bowls, 26 Thai’s pad see ew, and Fan T’Asia’s Cantonese roast duck and mapo tofu, all under paper lantern light. Taps @ Ph’east pours 40 taps spanning craft beers, wines, cocktails, and sakes, offering a pregame setup that has nothing to do with nachos. 925 Battery Ave. SE, Ste. 1100, Atlanta, pheastatl.com

Roswell Junction 

The building used to be a Baptist church. Now it pours cocktails from a nearly 40-foot bar and serves Creole-Mexican street tacos. Roswell Junction gives new purpose to a historic landmark—industrial design, multiple outdoor patios, a live music stage, and seven food conceptsranging from Cleaver & Co. burgers and Shawarma Shack to Across the Coast Seafood and Pretty Little Tacos.The Trailer Park Bar serves from a retro camper out back, where yard games spill across the greenspace. Just south of Roswell Square, and worth the drive up. 340 S. Atlanta St., Roswell, roswelljunction.com

author avatar
Sarah Bisacca
Sarah Bisacca is an Atlanta-based freelance journalist with more than a decade of experience covering travel, food, and hospitality. Her work has appeared in Forbes Travel Guide, Eater Atlanta, Southern Living, and Atlanta Magazine, and more. You can find more of her writing at SarahBTravelin.com and follow along on Instagram @sarahb_travelin, where she documents both global adventures and local eats.

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