From a James Beard Award-winning chef’s modern Japanese hotspot to opulent hotel steakhouses and intimate neighborhood standbys, Dallas restaurants promise a memorable time no matter the celebration.
LessThis chic Italian spot is steered by chef and owner Danny Grant, who once led Chicago’s RIA to two MICHELIN-Star status. At Monarch, Grant serves wood-fired favorites from the hearth. The pasta is housemade, the cocktails are expertly crafted, and diners get the best view of downtown in the city: Monarch is perched on the 49th floor of the National skyscraper. Wrap-around windows frame a 360-degree look at Dallas.
This elegant, long-standing Park Cities seafood spot is a go-to for intimate anniversary dinners. Though celebration meals usually mean crab remoulade and grilled Texas Gulf red snapper, Café Pacific also serves excellent steaks. Attentive but never stuffy service completes the flawless fine-dining experience. Don’t miss the restaurant’s signature dessert, a toasted pecan-encrusted ball of vanilla bean ice cream with housemade chocolate sauce and an almond tuile.
Tucked into the Star District, a 91-acre development in Frisco, Lombardi is where you go for Italian classics with a luxe twist. Venetian chandeliers and faux olive trees give the glam dining room a special-occasion feel. Start with raw East Coast oysters flown in daily before feasting on decadent pastas like lobster-topped green fettuccine. Toast with a glass of wine from the pitch-perfect, Italian-leaning list.
Uchiko Plano is the latest Japanese-forward restaurant from James Beard Award-winning chef Tyson Cole. Grab a seat at the stunning wrap-around sushi bar to dig into nigiri and sashimi or wood-fired delights like hearth-roasted oysters and bone-in ribeye with kimchi vinaigrette. Or go all in with the chef’s omakase tasting menu. Either way, the sleek, lively space is what celebratory dreams are made of.
One of the fancy restaurants in Dallas, this glam, Italian-inspired steakhouse aces the ambiance test—making it perfect for anniversaries or any other romantic evening. Mood lighting, cozy booths, jewel tones, and a stunning bar set the romantic scene. So do elegant mains like dry-aged wagyu New York strip glazed with a silky béarnaise sauce. Bonus points for a daily oyster and caviar hour in the restaurant’s bar and lounge.
Snuggle up in a secluded booth at this steakhouse on the seventh floor of Hôtel Swexan. At Stillwell’s, steaks are products of zero-waste beef, and the wine list is full of rare and exciting bottles, including a Bordeaux from 1900. The whole experience at this special occasion go-to feels lavish and celebratory, from the warm service to the rich leather interiors to the baked Alaska flamed tableside.
At Radici, Top Chef alum and Roots Southern Kitchen’s Tiffany Derry brings classic Italian fare to Farmers Branch. An open kitchen with a massive woodfire grill anchors the inviting, industrial-chic space, where Derry whips up elegant dishes like a lasagna bianca and linguine with littleneck clams. A clever drinks list—including house-made limoncello and zero-proof cocktails—and stellar desserts like a playful tiramisu with fried phyllo dough make this one of the best birthday restaurants.
Dallas restaurateur and chef Kenny Bowers grills everything to perfection at this bustling, occasion-friendly bistro. The elegant, chophouse-style menu leans toward fancy surf-and-turf—think oysters, premium steaks, and a crab- and shrimp-topped wood-fired redfish. With warm hospitality and a top-notch wine list, the celebratory staple lives up to its motto: every day’s a holiday and every meal’s a feast.
Restaurateur Al Biernat opened his flagship Oak Lawn steakhouse in 1998, and it’s only gotten better through the years. Known for celeb sightings, one of the city’s largest wine lists, and world-class steak and seafood, the restaurant is a special-occasion classic. In addition to chophouse faithfuls, expect dishes like Japanese horseradish-crusted halibut. Don’t skip a pre-dinner drink at the bar, where a mesmerizing glass art-inspired painting spans the domed ceiling.
One of the most beautiful restaurants in Dallas, this Southwestern spot in The Ritz-Carlton is a sought-after backdrop for popping the question or a celebratory cocktail at the Rattlesnake Bar. The restaurant’s open kitchen serves up a mix of innovative dishes like achiote-glazed antelope served with a braised rabbit enchilada, plus namesake chef Dean Fearing’s renowned tortilla soup. More likely than not, Fearing himself will pop by your table in his cowboy boots to say hi.