Best Restaurants With a View in Monterey

Picture of Mark C. Anderson

Mark C. Anderson

Mark is a serial explorer and award-winning columnist based in both Bay Areas who serves on the Monterey County Food System Coalition.

Here are our top picks for Monterey restaurants with a View, selected by our editors.

Featured Photo: Beach House Restaurant & Bar at Lovers Point

A scenic patio with wooden tables and chairs under large umbrellas, overlooking an expansive view of the ocean and distant hills. Several people are seated at the tables, enjoying the best restaurant view on the Monterey Peninsula under a clear, blue sky.
Photo: Courtesy of Bayonet & Black Horse Grill

Bayonet & Black Horse Grill

This place commands a powerful presence among golf nerds. Among gourmands, not so much. But don’t sleep on the innovative action happening out of the kitchen, which provides food that’s well above par. Or views that reach from the highlands of Seaside across soothing fairways to the Peninsula and the Pacific beyond. The happy hour is strong too. bayonetblackhorse.com

A group of people sitting around a table at a cozy restaurant, considered to have the best restaurant view on the Monterey Peninsula, are illuminated by an outdoor heater. They are enjoying dinner while looking at their food and conversing. The background shows large windows with a view of the evening sky and a body of water.
Photo: Courtesy of Beach House Restaurant + Bar

Beach House Restaurant + Bar at Lovers Point

Perched on the second story high above Lovers Point Park and the cove below, the Beach House commands an awesome perspective on a famous place from a Pacific Grove landmark. Sunsets are particularly nice, especially paired with the Locals Sunset Menu and dishes like panko-sand dabs almondine or bacon-wrapped meatloaf for around $14. beachhousepg.com

A plate of spaghetti topped with meatballs and marinara sauce garnished with shredded cheese and parsley. The dish is placed on a red tablecloth with folded white napkins, wine glasses, and a bottle of wine in the background, all set against the best restaurant view on the Monterey Peninsula.
Photo: Courtesy of Cafe Fina

Cafe Fina

Fina is one of the restaurants superficial locals sleep on because they assume — incorrectly — that it’s a Fisherman’s Wharf tourist trap. Instead it’s a farm-fresh treasure and a full-on seafood destination with Dungeness crab four different ways (when in season), robust seafood cioppino and dynamite mesquite-grilled wild salmon. Plus the harbor views are relaxing. Choose a seat wisely. cafefina.com

An outdoor restaurant by the sea at dusk, featuring string lights overhead and colorful, illuminated tables. Named the best restaurant view on the Monterey Peninsula, several tables with bouquets of flowers and chairs are set up, with the distant shoreline visible under a clear, deep blue sky.
Photo: Courtesy of Coastal Kitchen/Schooners

Coastal Kitchen/Schooners

Monterey Plaza Hotel enjoys a ledge on the edge of the Pacific that helps protect a little pocket of sand called Secret Beach, a great launch point for scuba diving and kayaking. Not many know about it. In contrast, the word is out on Schooner’s (a great place for lunch) and the fine-dining destination that is Coastal Kitchen because the food is that good and the dramatic positioning on top of the water is outright epic. montereyplazahotel.com/dining

A restaurant interior with several neatly set tables, each featuring folded white napkins, wine glasses, and silverware. Large windows provide a view of the ocean along the Monterey Peninsula, creating a serene and elegant dining atmosphere that boasts the best restaurant view in the area.
Photo: Courtesy of Monterey Bay Aquarium Restaurant

Monterey Bay Aquarium

The days of the full-service restaurant with binoculars and wildlife ID guides on the table have migrated away. But the biggest visitor attraction on Monterey Bay has an underrated food operation, with spectacular views (grab a table next to the window). Executive Chef Matthew Beaudin leads a culinary cafe scene that’s overachieving in sustainability and flavor, with items like Baja fish tacos and rockfish burritos. Bonus points and inspiring al fresco views come with eating out in the amphitheater seating next to the Great Tide Pool. montereybayaquarium.org

Outdoor dining area on a wooden dock overlooking a marina filled with various boats and yachts. Tables with umbrellas and guests are visible, with string lights adding ambiance. Calm water extends towards the horizon, with a hazy sky and distant mountains offering the best restaurant view on the Monterey Peninsula.
Photo: Courtesy of Osteria Al Mare

Osteria Al Mare

The least understood of Monterey’s three piers has one of its most intriguing restaurants. On a second story down by the San Carlos Beach on the end of the pier awaits Osteria Al Mare (In Italian, “restaurant at the sea”). Sublime Italian food like fettuccine ai funghi, fritto di calamari, beer braised pork shank and pollo piccato make this place a perpetually underrated destination. osteriaalmare.com

A cozy fire pit burns brightly in the foreground, surrounded by outdoor wicker seating. Beyond the fire, people can be seen standing and walking near a tranquil body of water, with a dramatic, cloudy sky and distant hills completing what could be the best restaurant view on Monterey Peninsula.
Photo: Courtesy of The Bench

Stillwater Bar & Grill/The Bench

This pair of Pebble Beach Lodge spots shares a slot here because they’re so close to one another, but despite their proximity the feel of their views take on disparate character. Stillwater serves its raw bar items, seared sea bass and braised lamb shank floating above the iconic 18th fairway and the cove that gives it its name. The Bench does butter chicken flatbread, wood-grilled hanger steak and steamed clams at ground level with patios that border the wide swaths of green. Two great choices, zero chance of going awry. pebblebeach.com/dining

A wooden table with a small vase of flowers is set next to a large window showcasing a beautiful ocean view at sunset—the best restaurant view on the Monterey Peninsula. The sky glows with soft orange and pink hues, and gentle waves can be seen in the distance. A chair is partially visible beside the table.
Photo: Courtesy of Tides Waterfront Kitchen

Tides Waterfront Kitchen

For years this was a locals secret as a homey Best Western with a dynamite top floor perch for an underrated restaurant. Two different boutique hotel chain owners later, plus several makeovers and a star turn as part of HBO’s Big Little Lies, and the place is gussied up. But the real star remains the views of the adjacent Del Monte Beach break and the dolphins that frequent it, viewable from on high or in the comfortable lobby-bar-lounge through floor-to-ceiling windows. montereytides.com

More Please!
For more suggestions on the best restaurants on the Monterey Peninsula, the best things to do on the Monterey Peninsula and the best places to stay on the Monterey Peninsula, click here.
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