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Best Margaritas in Dallas: 13 Legendary Sips From Frozen Icons to $250 Flexes

Dallas brings big marg energy—from the world’s first frozen margaritas to a pinot noir-laced icon and table-sized showstopper
Written By: author avatar Desiree Gutierrez
author avatar Desiree Gutierrez
Spicy margarita at Las Palmas. | Photo by Las Palmas
Spicy margarita at Las Palmas. | Photo by Las Palmas

In Dallas, margaritas are serious business. The Big D is the birthplace of the frozen margarita, a welcome invention in the sweltering Texas heat, and it still lives by the old adage that everything is bigger here.

The city’s devotion to the citrusy staple cocktail goes beyond tequila, triple sec, and lime. Here, margarita enthusiasts will find icon-status drinks, sips served with a side of agave education, and high-dollar pours that will tap into Dallas’ old money bankrolls without a blink. These are Dallas’ best margaritas. 

Mariano’s Hacienda

It would be blasphemy to leave out the OG of frozen margaritas: Mariano’s Hacienda. In 1971, Mariano Martinez opened the restaurant and, by popular demand, repurposed a soft-serve ice cream machine to create the world’s very first frozen margarita machine. That innovative contraption now lives inside the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History, cementing Dallas’ place in cocktail history. More than five decades later, the Original Margarita still hits just the same: slightly sweet, boozy, and icy. Multiple locations, laharanch.com

Mi Cocina

The Mambo Taxi at Mi Cocina. | Photo by Mi Cocina
The Mambo Taxi at Mi Cocina | Photo by Mi Cocina

On the Mount Rushmore of margaritas sits the iconic Mi Cocina Mambo Taxi. The Dallas original builds on the city’s margarita pedigree with a swirl of fruity, housemade pinot noir and brandy-laced sangria folded into a frozen Sauza Silver tequila and fresh lime juice. Since debuting in 1991, the cult favorite has inspired two in-demand spin-offs: the Skinny Mambo, made with Dallas-based Socorro Tequila Blanco, and the Spicy Mambo, a fiery version with jalapeño heat and Tajín. Multiple locations, micocina.com

Beto and Son 

Margarita cheers at Beto & Sons. | Photo by Beto & Sons
Margarita cheers at Beto Sons | Photo by Beto Sons

At Beto and Son, margaritas come with full-blown theatrics. The Liquid Nitrogen Margarita is crafted tableside with Avión Reposado tequila, lime, agave, and orange liqueur, then flash-chilled in a cloud of nitrogen vapor billows dramatically across the room. After a quick whisk, the enchanting, spoonable cocktail is ladled into a margarita glass and finished with fruit pearls. Its equal parts science project and showstopper. 3011 Gulden Ln., Dallas, betoandson.com

Las Palmas

Some of Dallas’ buzziest cocktail havens trace back to the Heidari brothers, the duo behind Bowen House, Mike’s Gemini Twin Lounge, and Las Palmas. The Routh Street Tex-Mex magnate draws lines that spill out onto the street, thanks to the LP Spicy Margarita. The amped-up margarita is full on swicy (sweet and spicy), with blanco tequila, agave, lime, and dry curacao, a sharper swap for syrupy triple sec. Jalapeño gives the cocktail its edge, rounding out the trifecta of sweet, spice, and bright citrus tang.2708 Routh St., Dallas, laspalmasdallas.com

El Molino

Flaming frozen margaritas at El Molino. | Photo by El Molino
Flaming frozen margaritas at El Molino | Photo by El Molino

Subtle isn’t in Vandelay Hospitality Group’s vocabulary. The team behind Hudson House, Drake’s Hollywood, and D. L. Mack’s made its Mexican debut with El Molino. Its World Famous Flaming Frozen Margarita arrives in a cactus-stemmed glass crowned with a flaming half lemon. Consider it a permission slip to play with fire. 6818 Snider Plaza, Dallas, elmolinofajitas.com

The Mexican

No margarita stuns quite like the Pancho Villa at the Mexican. The upscale Design District restaurant nods to the revolutionary with a lavish pour of Clase Azul Ultra Añejo tequila and Grand Marnier Cuvée 1880, blanched with lime, and a citrus-gold salt rim. The luxurious margarita’s price tag? $250. It’s an eye-popping splurge, but Dallas’ most extravagant margarita flex. 1401 Turtle Creek Blvd., Dallas, themexican.com

Crown Block

The El Chingon margarita at Crown Block. | Photo by Brenden Williams
The El Chingon margarita at Crown Block | Photo by Brenden Williams

As dazzling as the the views that surround it, the El Chingón Margarita at Crown Block is high-altitude opulence in a glass. Located atop Reunion Tower, the restaurant pairs panoramic views with Patrón El Alto Reposado, Grand Marnier, St-Germain, lime, and agave. The citrus-forward cocktail lands with a smoked salt rim and turns heads. The sophisticated cheeky cocktail is presented tableside beneath a rosemary smoke bubble, all against 400-foot-in-the-sky views of the sparkling Dallas skyline.300 Reunion Blvd. E, Dallas, crownblockdallas.com

Ritual

Polished, yet playful, Ritual checks every box, including making room for the sober margarita lovers. The sultry lounge’s Ritual Marg delivers a crisp snap without the buzz, built with Seedlip Notas de Agave, an agave-forward, non-alcoholic tequila alternative. The zero-proof drink swaps traditional orange for the berry-bright complexity of blood orange, sharpened with lime. It’s the quintessential sip for Dallas rituals, that skips the morning-after regret. 1623 N. Hall St., Dallas, ritualdallas.com

 El Carlos Elegante

Tajin-rimmed margaritas at El Carlos Elegante. | Photo by El Carlos Elegante
Tajin rimmed margaritas at El Carlos Elegante | Photo by El Carlos Elegante

The team at El Carlos Elegante knows the power of a good collaboration. The Tio Rosso margarita is deeply Dallas-rooted, crafted around a special-edition of Socorro Joven Duro Edition tequila, a release from Dallas-founded Socorro Tequila. The joven expression is aged in Casa Madero Gran Reserva Syrah French oak barrels, adding a whisper of rich red-wine to the spirit. It’s combined with grapefruit soda and piney rosemary for a margarita that’s equally as thoughtful as it is Dallas. 1400 North Riverfront Blvd., Dallas, elcarloselegante.com

Vidorra 

At Vidorra, everything is bigger, including the margaritas. The energetic Mexican restaurant pours a Texas-sized margarita that quenches up to four drinkers, instantly transforming the table into a party. Made with Sauza Blue, triple sec, and plenty of lime, the massive cocktail dominates the room and kicks off any celebration with a boozy bang. Multiple locations, vidorracocina.com

Billy Can Can 

The Sonora Showdown at Billy Can Can. | Photo by Billy Can Can
The Sonora Showdown at Billy Can Can | Photo by Billy Can Can

At the forefront of modern Texas cuisine, Billy Can Can tips its hat to the state’s margarita devotion with the Sonora Showdown. The Victory Park saloon goes double barrel with Arette tequila and Ojo de Tigre mezcal. The duo is fused with housemade tepache, a fermented indigenous Mexican beverage made of pineapple and piloncillo, nodding to Texas’ Mexican roots. Completed with lime and Tajín, the margarita is an ode to the Lone Star State’s rich cultural heritage, served with a satisfying buzz. 2386 Victory Park Ln., Dallas, billycancan.com/

Las Almas Rotas

No one takes agave more seriously than Las Almas Rotas. The Exposition Park mezcalería stocks a library of artisanal bottles and hosts educational tastings that dive into tequila, mezcal, sotol, raicilla by region and expression. With a wealth of knowledge behind the bar, it’s no surprise that the classic margarita ranks among Dallas’ best. The classic cocktail is masterclass, shaken with a choice of Arette Tequila or smoky Rey Campero Espadín mezcal. 3615 Parry Ave., Dallas, lasalmasrotas.com

author avatar
Desiree Gutierrez

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