From a gold-trimmed steakhouse to a royal Cantonese banquet hall, these San Francisco spots promise a memorable time no matter the celebration.
LessLast year, AKIKOS moved to a dazzling space in SOMA, where it continues to serve raw fish sourced from Japan’s famed Toyosu Fish Market and local purveyors. Pull up a seat at the chef’s counter to watch chef Ray Lee’s impeccably choreographed knife skills while digging into delights like crab dumplings topped with truffle shavings and compressed caviar. The seasonal omakase menu includes six to seven small courses and ten pieces of nigiri, plus dessert—a meal worthy of any special occasion.
One of the most beautiful restaurants in San Francisco, The Empress by Boon is a modern Cantonese destination from acclaimed chef Ho Chee Boon, formerly executive chef of clubstaurant favorite Hakkasan. Located in a historic Chinese banquet hall, the 7,500-square-foot space dials up the wow factor with geometric screens and royal blue sofas with skyline views. Come for the five-course prix fixe menu, with decadent, Cantonese-inspired hits like steamed dumplings and a scallop and caviar roll.
Women-led Greens made a name for itself as an iconic vegetarian restaurant—but you don’t have to be an herbivore to celebrate here. The seasonal menu stars dishes with locally grown organic produce (including from the restaurant’s farm), like zucchini-lentil griddle cakes and Brentwood corn pizza. Grand wooden sculptures make dining indoors feel like you’re at an art gallery. Grab seats by floor-to-ceiling glass windows for prime bay views.
Thanks to an ever-changing menu, you can try something new each time you celebrate at this MICHELIN-Starred hotspot. The casual but refined Californian restaurant treats New American dishes to Asian accents, like a pork belly salad with stone fruit and fish sauce vinaigrette. No matter what else you order, round out your special night with faithfuls like a big platter of the restaurant’s claim-to-fame Californian quail for the table, plus housemade peanut milk for dessert.
In 1999, John Clark and Gayle Pirie transformed a struggling movie theater into a bohemian Cali Mediterranean restaurant. Today, Foreign Cinema is still home to one of SF’s most dramatic spaces—and memorable meals. The heart of the restaurant is the outdoor patio brightened with twinkle lights and old movies flickering in 35mm. And the plates match the spectacle: Feast on housemade pop tarts for birthday brunches and massive seafood towers and caviar, just because.
This Argentinean steakhouse in the Mission District is a favorite for group get-togethers, making it one of the best birthday restaurants in San Francisco. Expect meat cooked on a wood-fired grill, like asado mixto (barbecue mix for two) with chorizo, morcilla, flap loin, short ribs, potatoes, and peppers. Grab a seat at a communal table in the spacious dining room with medieval-esque wagon wheel chandeliers, then stretch the celebration upstairs at the open-air rooftop El Techo.
Bansang is the rising star in Daeho Dining Group’s growing portfolio and recently scored MICHELIN Bib Gourmand status. Expect bold dishes that pair Korean ingredients with Japanese and French flavors. Expect artful small plates designed for sharing, like decadent uni scallop toast and galbi ribeye. It’s all served in a modern wood-lined space with fermentation jars on display in the open kitchen.
Celebrity chef Tyler Florence leads the kitchen at this glamorous modern steakhouse in Thrive City. Ascend the stairs to a handsome dining room decked with tan leather booths and mid-century-style brass details. Suited servers roll through with trolleys, so you can watch them toss Caesar salads tableside or select from a few bottles of bubbles on ice. But the main event is the steak, and nothing says happy birthday, anniversary, or promotion quite like a 52-ounce wagyu tomahawk.
San Francisco rejoiced when chefs Laura and Sayat Ozyilmaz returned to the city and opened this stunning new restaurant with bright Mediterranean tiles and custom murals that take their cues from the Presidio. The party of a menu is inspired by Sayat’s hometown of Istanbul. Live it up over dishes like a 12-hour lamb shank falling off the bone and a Californian spin on tahdig topped with uni and trout roe.
This Cali Italian neighborhood gem shines after 25 years in the Mission, especially after a 2023 makeover that added a full bar and metal-vaulted ceiling. Delfina slings the best classic spaghetti in San Francisco, plus seasonal treats like beef cheek agnolotti with morels, cherry tomato pizza, and charred Jimmy Nardello peppers with anchovies. The warm dining room is still cozy enough for a date—and memorable enough for a birthday.