Best Restaurants
From Dragonfly's tuna tartare to Antichi Sapori's handmade Sicilian pasta — real recommendations by category, with prices, what to order, and when to go.
From $5 casados at family-run sodas to craft cocktails on rooftop terraces, Tamarindo's food and bar scene punches way above its weight for a small beach town. This is your guide — from someone who eats, drinks, and goes out here every week.
Most beach towns in Central America give you two choices: overpriced tourist traps or mystery-meat sodas. Tamarindo somehow built a real food scene. Sicilian chefs making fresh pasta by hand. Japanese-trained sushi masters working with fish that was swimming a few hours ago. Argentine grill masters who know their way around a wood fire. And yes, the local sodas are still here too — and they're excellent.
The secret is the mix. Tamarindo attracted expats from Italy, Argentina, France, the US, Israel, and Japan — and they all brought their kitchens with them. Add in Costa Rica's obsession with fresh ingredients and the Pacific Ocean delivering world-class seafood daily, and you get a food town that has no business being this good for its size.
Everything you need to eat well, drink well, and find the best night out in Tamarindo — from a local who's done the research for you.
From Dragonfly's tuna tartare to Antichi Sapori's handmade Sicilian pasta — real recommendations by category, with prices, what to order, and when to go.
Craft cocktails, sunset beers, rooftop vibes, and dive bars with character. Every bar worth your time in Tamarindo, with the vibe you can expect.
Which nights are best, where the party moves, live music spots, weekly events like Sunday Funday, and how to plan a night out that doesn't peak too early.
Tamarindo center, Playa Langosta, the main strip, the back streets — a neighborhood-by-neighborhood guide to where the best food hides.
What makes Tamarindo's food scene special isn't any one cuisine — it's the range. You can have Sicilian pasta at Antichi Sapori on Monday, fresh sushi at Bamboo Sushi Club on Tuesday, Mexican street tacos at Little Lucha on Wednesday, and a casado at a soda on Thursday — and none of them feel like they're phoning it in.
The expat community brought real skills and real standards. These aren't tourist interpretations — they're restaurants run by people who trained in their home countries and chose to cook in paradise.
Tamarindo after dark isn't just one thing. Start with sunset cocktails at a beachfront bar. Move to dinner at one of the town's serious restaurants. Then choose your adventure: rooftop drinks at Crazy Monkey, electronic beats at Rumors, or the chaos of Pacifico Bar's Wild Nights on Wednesday and Saturday.
The beauty is that it's all walkable. From chill sunset spots to dance floors, you never need a cab. And the crowd is a genuine mix of locals, expats, and travelers — not a tourist bubble.
A beach town with big-city flavor — here's what the food and nightlife scene looks and feels like.
It depends where you eat. Tourist-facing restaurants on the main strip charge $15–$40 for mains. But local sodas serve full casado plates (rice, beans, salad, protein, plantains) for $5–$8. Taco spots and food trucks land in the middle. You can eat incredibly well on $20/day if you know where to go.
For the top spots — Dragonfly, Antichi Sapori, HiR Fine Dining — yes, especially in high season (December–April). Most casual restaurants are walk-in friendly, but showing up at 7pm on a Saturday without a plan can leave you waiting.
Wednesday and Saturday are the biggest nights thanks to Pacifico Bar's Wild Nights. Friday has the Tasty CR Bar Crawl that hits multiple venues. Sunday Funday (the Beach & Pool Crawl) is legendary for day-drinking. But honestly, there's something happening every night in high season.
Costa Rica has some of the safest tap water in Central America. Ice in restaurants is made from purified water. You're fine. Drink the juice, eat the ceviche, enjoy the ice in your cocktail.
Ceviche — it's everywhere and it's fresh. A casado at a local soda for the authentic experience. The tuna tartare at Dragonfly. A guaro sour (Costa Rica's signature spirit). And fresh tropical fruit juice from any street vendor — mango, cas, maracuyá. You won't get fruit like this at home.
Tamarindo is one of the safest beach towns in Costa Rica. The main strip is well-lit and walkable. Standard precautions apply — don't flash cash, watch your phone, and avoid wandering alone down dark side streets at 3am. But the bar and restaurant zone is busy and safe until late.
The best food and nightlife is within walking distance of these three properties. No Uber needed — just good shoes and an appetite.
Private luxury villas between Tamarindo and Playa Langosta — walking distance to both the main strip restaurants and the quieter Langosta dining scene. Full kitchens for when you want to cook with fresh market ingredients, and serious style for when you want to stay in. Our top recommendation for couples and groups.
A boutique hotel on the jungle edge of town. Quiet enough to sleep well after a big night out, close enough to walk to every restaurant and bar worth visiting. Perfect for couples who want charm with easy access.
Right in the heart of Tamarindo's action — rooftop vibes, eclectic design, and a social energy that draws an interesting crowd. Steps from the best bars and restaurants. For people who want to be where the night happens.