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Best Restaurants in Houston 2026

Explore Houston's diverse culinary scene. From Vietnamese to Nigerian cuisine, discover exceptional international restaurants alongside Texas BBQ and Cajun seafood.

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By Houston News Desk · Published 3 July 2026, 2:50 am

2 min read

Updated 8 h ago· 12 July 2026, 3:00 pm

AI-assisted · human-reviewed where required

AI may assist with research, summarising and drafting. Where public source links underpin the article, they are shown below. Sensitive material is held for human review, and people oversee the standards and corrections process. The Daily Houston covers Houston news. It is provided for general information only and is not professional, legal, financial, or medical advice. Read our editorial standards →

Best Restaurants in Houston 2026
Photo by TexasDarkHorse / flickr (by)

Houston is quietly one of the most exciting food cities in the United States, a claim that surprises those who associate the city only with its petrochemical industry and Tex-Mex staples. As the most ethnically diverse major city in America, Houston's restaurant landscape reflects a culinary spectrum that is almost impossible to find elsewhere, with Vietnamese, Nigerian, Indian, Lebanese, and Venezuelan restaurants of exceptional quality sitting alongside the traditional Texas BBQ joints and Cajun seafood shacks that define the city's comfort food soul.

Underbelly Hospitality, founded by chef Chris Shepherd, has become the emblem of Houston's modern food identity, with multiple concepts that celebrate the city's multicultural DNA. The ethos remains unchanged: cook what Houston actually eats, drawing from the pantries of every community that calls this city home. Meanwhile, establishments like Xin Chao in Spring Branch bring Vietnamese cooking to a level of refinement that earns national recognition without losing any of the neighbourhood authenticity that makes it matter.

Houston BBQ deserves its own paragraph. Killen's Barbecue in Pearland is frequently mentioned in the same breath as Austin's Franklin Barbecue, with brisket that has been refined over decades of pit mastery. Closer to the city centre, Blood Bros. BBQ fuses Texas smoke tradition with Korean and Tejano influences in ways that feel entirely natural rather than gimmicky, earning loyal queues every weekend.

The Montrose neighbourhood remains Houston's most restaurant-dense precinct, with a concentration of LGBTQ-friendly establishments, craft cocktail bars, and independent eateries that rewards extended exploration on foot. Midtown and EaDo (East Downtown) are the emerging frontiers, with younger chefs opening ambitious small-plate spots that are rapidly building strong reputations of their own.

This article was compiled by AI and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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Published by The Daily Houston

Covering lifestyle in Houston. This article was generated by AI from the linked sources, under human oversight and our editorial standards. Sensitive material is held for human review before publication. See our editorial standards.

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