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The Best Restaurants in Jacó, Costa Rica — A Local's Dining Guide

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The Best Restaurants in Jacó, Costa Rica — A Local's Dining Guide

Jacó has quietly become one of the best food towns on Costa Rica’s Pacific coast. What was once a surf-and-burger strip now offers everything from Japanese-fusion tapas to farm-to-table fine dining, all within a few walkable blocks. Whether you’re craving a $5 plate of rice and beans after a morning surf session or a proper date-night dinner with a wine list, Jacó delivers.

We spend a lot of time here. These aren’t recommendations scraped from a listicle; they’re places we’ve eaten at repeatedly, places where we send our guests. If you’re new to the area, check out our complete Jacó area guide for more on what to do beyond dining. Here’s the honest food guide.


Quick Reference: Jacó Dining at a Glance

RestaurantCuisinePrice Range (per person)Best For
Graffiti Restro Cafe & Wine BarFusion / Farm-to-table$25–$45Date night, foodies
El HicacoSeafood$18–$35Beachfront special occasion
El PointInternational / Seafood$15–$20Sunset drinks & dinner
AmaraMediterranean$15–$30Upscale casual, couples
Ohana Sushi Tapas BarJapanese / Fusion$12–$20Sushi lovers, creative cocktails
Zona K AtelierLatin-Asian fusion$12–$22Adventurous eaters
Jerah ThaiThai$10–$18Authentic Asian craving
The Green RoomHealthy / Fusion$10–$20Brunch, vegans, first-timers
Rioasis PizzeriaPizza / Italian$8–$15Families, groups, casual
Soda Marea AltaCosta Rican traditional$3–$10Authentic local experience

Fine Dining & Date Night

Graffiti Restro Cafe & Wine Bar

Cuisine: Fusion farm-to-table | Price: expect to pay around $25–$45 per person | Location: Jaco Walk plaza

This is the restaurant people fly into Jacó talking about, and it earns every bit of the hype. The chef-owner uses only local ingredients, and the menu changes daily, written on a blackboard. No printed menus. That’s the kind of place this is.

What to order: The blackened mahi-mahi with coconut rice and pineapple chutney is the standout dish. The poke bowl is gorgeous: colorful, fresh, generous. Their wine list is excellent, with good selections by the glass.

The vibe: Edgy-meets-refined. Graffiti art on the walls, candlelit tables, great playlist. It feels like a restaurant you’d find in Brooklyn or Melbourne, except you’re in flip-flops and nobody cares.

Best for: Romantic dinners, anniversaries, impressing someone. Reservations recommended; this place fills up.

Hours: Dinner only. Call ahead.


Amara

Cuisine: Contemporary Mediterranean | Price: expect to pay around $15–$30 per person | Location: Northern end of Avenida Pastor Díaz

Amara is the kind of restaurant where everything feels intentional: the lighting, the plating, the cocktail menu. It’s upscale without being stuffy, which is hard to pull off in a beach town.

What to order: The grilled octopus with hummus and parsley sauce is a must-try. The chicken-curry croquettes are addictive. Beef gyro with feta and yogurt dressing is comfort food elevated.

The vibe: Sophisticated but comfortable. Great cocktail menu. You could come in a sundress or a linen shirt and feel equally at home.

Best for: Couples, a nice dinner out that doesn’t require a reservation three days in advance. Also solid for small groups who want something beyond bar food.


Beachfront & Sunset Dining

El Point

Cuisine: International / Seafood | Price: expect to pay around $15–$20 per person | Location: South of Calle Morales, right on the beach

El Point has the best location of any restaurant in Jacó. You’re literally on the sand, watching the sun drop into the Pacific while you eat. And unlike many “view restaurants,” the food here actually delivers.

What to order: The tuna steak with mango sauce is the move. The tomahawk steak is enormous and well-seasoned if you’re feeling ambitious. Finish with pecan pie à la mode and a passionfruit margarita.

The vibe: Relaxed beachfront with live music on weekends. Toes-in-the-sand casual. This is peak Jacó.

Best for: Sunset dinner, weekend plans with live music, anyone who wants the “Costa Rica beach dinner” experience. Reservations accepted.


Sea Salt

Cuisine: Seafood / Caribbean | Price: expect to pay around $12–$25 per person | Location: Hotel Jaco, on the beach

Another beachfront option with serious food. Sea Salt has both sand-level seating and an open-air patio, plus a big menu that covers everything from fish tacos to Caribbean specialties.

What to order: The Mediterranean ceviche with patacones (crispy fried plantains) is outstanding. Their breakfast is also excellent if you want to start the day with an ocean view.

The vibe: Casual, breezy, all-day. This is the kind of place you wander into after a swim and end up staying for hours.

Best for: Families, lazy beach days, breakfast with a view. Open for breakfast, lunch, and dinner daily.


Creative & Fusion

Ohana Sushi Tapas Bar

Cuisine: Japanese / Seafood | Price: expect to pay around $12–$20 per person | Location: Calle El Hicaco, near the beach

Built inside repurposed cargo containers (yes, really), Ohana is one of Jacó’s most charming surprises. Owner Diego greets everyone personally, and the fish is impeccably fresh.

What to order: Start with the Tuna Tataki, then share a bowl of Salmon Teriyaki. It’s enough for two and arguably the best teriyaki on the coast. The vegan options are creative and genuinely good, not afterthoughts.

The vibe: Intimate, creative, eco-conscious. The recycled-material decor gives it character without feeling gimmicky.

Best for: Sushi cravings, a casual date, anyone tired of rice and beans.


Zona K Atelier

Cuisine: Latin-Asian fusion | Price: expect to pay around $12–$22 per person | Location: Northern end of town

Run by a Costa Rican chef known for inventive dishes with Latin and Asian influences, Zona K is small, unhurried, and completely worth the wait. Everything’s made from scratch.

What to order: The Cajun Tuna with Sesame is phenomenal. For brunch, the Breakfast Skillet. Don’t rush; the food takes a bit longer, and that’s the point.

The vibe: Intimate bistro. Indoor and outdoor seating. The kind of place where the chef remembers you.

Best for: Foodies, adventurous eaters, anyone who values craft over speed.


Jerah Thai

Cuisine: Authentic Thai | Price: expect to pay around $10–$18 per person | Location: Northern end of town, second floor across from Clínica Alma

If you’re craving real Thai food, not the watered-down tourist version, Jerah is your spot. The flavors are bold and authentic. They’ve recently added a small café downstairs with fresh breads and pastries.

What to order: Spring rolls to start, then the Pad Sew Yew. The cheese rolls from the café are an unexpected local favorite.

Hours: Open until 10 PM.

The vibe: Laid-back, second-floor dining room. Simple but nice.

Best for: A break from seafood, lunch with flavor, anyone who knows their Thai food.


Casual & Family-Friendly

Rioasis Pizzeria

Cuisine: Pizza / Italian | Price: expect to pay around $8–$15 per person | Location: Main strip (Avenida Pastor Díaz)

Costa Rican-owned and operated, Rioasis has been a Jacó institution for years. The pizzas are enormous, the toppings are generous, and the open-air picnic tables make it feel like a proper beach-town hangout.

What to order: Any of the loaded pizzas. They also do solid pasta, seafood, and nachos. Full bar. Pro tip: order delivery to your rental and eat pizza at sunset on your own balcony.

The vibe: Casual, lively, sometimes live music. No beach views, but the energy is great.

Best for: Families, groups, budget-friendly dinners, late-night eats.


Ridiculous Burgers

Cuisine: Gourmet burgers | Price: expect to pay around $7–$16 per person | Location: Avenida Pastor Díaz, between Calle Hicaco & Calle Alice

Nearly 50 burger options on the menu, all made with grass-fed beef from a nearby farm. The buns are baked daily, the cheese comes from a local farmer, and the portions are absurd in the best way.

What to order: The Texas Burger (Angus beef, onion ring, American cheese, bacon) is the signature. Skip the sides; the burger alone will defeat you. The giant cocktails are fun.

The vibe: Fun, loud, indulgent. Not the place for a quiet dinner.

Best for: Burger lovers, families with teenagers, anyone who wants a truly massive meal. Open late on weekends.


Authentic Costa Rican

Soda Marea Alta

Cuisine: Traditional Costa Rican | Price: expect to pay around $3–$10 per person | Location: South end of main strip

This is where the locals eat, and that tells you everything. Soda Marea Alta has zero web presence, no Instagram, no English menu, and some of the best casados, gallo pinto, and picadillos in town.

What to order: Whatever looks good. The casados are generous and perfectly seasoned. Fresh seafood when available. Go hungry.

Hours: Open 24 hours.

The vibe: Simple, authentic, welcoming. Expect mostly Spanish, huge plates, and genuine Costa Rican hospitality. The staff is wonderful with kids.

Best for: Anyone who wants the real Costa Rica food experience. Budget travelers. Families who don’t need a menu in English.


Practical Tips for Dining in Jacó

Budget: You can eat very well in Jacó at every price point. A filling traditional meal runs $5–$10. A nice dinner out with drinks is $25–$45 per person. Fine dining tops out around $50, still far cheaper than comparable restaurants in Tamarindo or Manuel Antonio.

Reservations: Only truly necessary at Graffiti and occasionally El Hicaco on weekends. Most places are walk-in friendly.

Tipping: A 10% service charge is automatically added to your bill at most restaurants in Costa Rica. An additional 5–10% for exceptional service is appreciated but not expected.

Getting around: Jacó’s restaurant scene is concentrated along Avenida Pastor Díaz (the main strip) and the beachfront. Everything on this list is walkable from central Jacó; no car needed for dinner.

Cash vs. card: Most restaurants accept cards, but carry colones or small USD bills for sodas and smaller spots.


The Bottom Line

Jacó’s dining scene punches well above its weight for a Costa Rican beach town. Whether you’re spending $5 at a soda or $45 at Graffiti, the quality is there: fresh ingredients, ocean proximity, and a food culture that keeps getting better.

Our advice? Mix it up. Do a fancy dinner at Graffiti one night, sunset at El Point the next, and a casado at Soda Marea Alta for lunch in between. That’s the Jacó dining experience at its best. For more dining options throughout the region, explore our Central Pacific dining guide.

Prices reflect typical costs as of early 2026 and may vary. We recommend checking restaurant social media pages for current hours and menus.

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