5 Best Restaurants in Austin, Texas

Pinthouse

$$ | North Austin Fodor's choice

This approachable pizza place and brew pub is a great addition to the burgeoning Burnet Road food scene. The parking lot can fill up fast on weekends, but an award-winning selection of beers makes it easy to wait for signature house-made pies, like the Armadillo, with artisan sausage and poblano peppers, or the Shroomin' Goat, with local goat cheese and roasted mushrooms. 

4729 Burnet Rd., Austin, Texas, 78756, USA
512-436–9605
Known For
  • long waits and crowds on weekends
  • staggering selection of draft beer
  • popular lunch special of a pizza roll, salad, and drink

Via 313 Pizza

$$ | Downtown Fodor's choice

Detroit lives in Austin at the capital city's delicious purveyor of deep-dish pies. Its original location, a tiny trailer at the back of an east-austin dive bar, is still slinging pizzas for late-night crowds, but they have recently expanded with another trailer and brick-and-mortar locations popping up all over town, including here on Rainey Street. Long wait times can be expected because of the depth of Via 313's goodness, so try to plan ahead of your cravings. 

96 Rainey St., Austin, Texas, 78701, USA
5122-609–9405
Known For
  • the city's heavyweight champion of Detroit-style deep dish
  • long wait times
  • simple favorites like the Detroiter (a pepperoni deep-dish topped with pepperoni casing)

40 North

$$ | West Austin

Situated in a charming cottage just northwest of downtown, 40 North is a standard for classic Neapolitan pizza and light Italian fare. It's a lovely neighborhood setting with cozy patio seating and bright white interiors. The pies are the main draw, but the house burger and spicy chicken sandwich along with their other small plates are equally tasty. 

900 W. 10th St., Austin, Texas, 78703, USA
512-660–5779
Known For
  • signature pizzas like the Hot Honey and Dandelion
  • minimalist interior
  • original food truck still outside, along with more seating
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon.

Recommended Fodor's Video

Bufalina

$$ | East Austin

A bevy of new pizza places debuted in Austin over the past couple of years and one of the best is this hip eastside eatery, specializing in authentic Neapolitan pies. The rotating menu is simple and compact—the wine list is actually longer—but what they offer is expertly prepared. The classic margherita is just as impressive as the calabrese (salami, roasted peppers and mozzarella). The space itself is cozy, seating about 40 diners at large communal tables and a handful of private two-tops and counter seating. The white-bricked pizza oven (shipped from Italy) takes up a majority of the dining room. Fresh seasonal salads, traditional Italian starters and simple desserts, like homemade vanilla ice cream doused with sherry, are worth trying.

the backspace

$$ | Downtown

This stylish pizzeria, another hit from chef/restaurateur Shawn Cirkiel, is one of Austin’s best bets for classic Neapolitan pizza and authentic Italian antipasti. Tables are hard to come by in this intimate downtown space, but the service and menu are laid-back and approachable. Antipasto selections, like baked ricotta and eggplant caponata, rival the main attraction: thin-crust, wood-fired pizzas, from margherita to the popular fennel sausage. Desserts, like ricotta cheesecake and salted caramel panna cotta, are artful—served in small mason jars—and delicious.

507 San Jacinto Blvd., Austin, Texas, 78701, USA
512-474--9899
Known For
  • cozy date-night ambience
  • seasonal antipasto selections
  • classic Neapolitan pizzas fired in an Italian brick oven
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon., Reservations essential