Your browser is not supported for this experience.
We recommend using Chrome, Firefox, Edge, or Safari.
1 / 1
While it’s true that Denver is landlocked, the sea’s bounty makes a remarkably strong showing at restaurant tables across the city, and Denver chefs are obsessed with responsible sourcing, sustainability, fishery management and reeling in fresh-caught specimens that are flown in daily, often because of partnerships and connections with the nation’s best seafood suppliers.
From longstanding oyster bars to new coastal seafood sanctuaries, Denver’s fish houses are a real catch, in particular, the following restaurants that serve oceanic creatures that don’t have to fish for compliments. By the way, this list doesn’t include sushi. For the city’s best sushi spots, sail on over to our international restaurant guide to Denver.
When Midwest-based 801 Restaurant Group brought its upscale seafood concept to downtown Denver in early 2023, it unleashed an ocean of barramundi, whole fried branzino, live lobster and chilled caviar on hungry diners. (Besides the more traditional seafood offerings, 801 Fish also has more creative takes, like the uni toast on squid ink milk bread and roasted oysters “Oaxaca-feller” with roasted poblanos and cojita cheese.) Everything makes the journey from ocean to white tableclothed table within 36 hours. For one of the best seats in the house, get there early and snag a spot at the stunning stained-glass bar.
Water Grill is Las Vegas-level flashy. We’re talking giant saltwater tanks lining the wall, tufted leather booths and a shimmering, copper-topped bar. Naturally, this is the place to go big, like with the towering iced shellfish platters loaded up with lobster, crab, shrimp, mussels, clams and scallops. Or the 15-plus varieties of oysters stocked daily in the live bar. Or if you’re there at the right time, treat yourself to the blink-and-you’ll-miss-them seasonal spot prawns and spiny lobster. The behemoth LoDo restaurant is certainly special occasion worthy, but it’s just as great on a random Tuesday night when you feel like shelling out for a glitzy seafood feast.
Founder Dave Query ignited Denver’s seafood scene with the opening of this oceanic restaurant and oyster bar in Lower Downtown that has since spawned offshoots across Colorado and beyond. From its rambunctiously energetic vibe, offset by a subtle nautical theme, to its fiercely seasonal menu of sustainable seafood sourced from passionate purveyors, it’s a fan favorite for slurping pristine oysters, although the rest of the menu—crab legs, lobster, clam chowder, charred Spanish octopus and Alaskan halibut—is every bit as crowd-pleasing, as are the spirit-forward cocktails and compelling wines and craft beers.
Denver collides with the Coasts at Stoic & Genuine, where seafood guru and head chef Paul Kennedy is captain of his domain, unleashing hauls of flawlessly fresh oysters on the half shell and raw bar classics in the shell. Binge on the seafood “tower of power” and then do a deep dive into Alaskan king crab legs, Maine lobster, caviar and main dishes like seared scallops paired with chorizo and pea puree, roasted halibut collar with sundried tomato and Meyer lemon vinaigrette and the deeply satisfying paella moderna. Residing inside Union Station, the knockout space—all up-to-the-moment razzle-dazzle and maritime splash—is offset by a hypnotizing cocktail program and lavish granita bar that spotlights shaved ice, an enlivening garnish that appears in cocktails and atop oysters.
Polished, indulgent and ornamented with elegant accents, this Larimer Square seafood eatery and self-described “modern supper club” is part of a Midwest chain from Ohio restaurateur Cameron Mitchell, who’s renowned for his diverse repertoire of restaurants. Here, amid a gorgeous entry with a sweeping staircase, a bustling bar scene and handsome wood-and-brick walls laddered with wines, experienced servers deliver the whole ocean spectrum: oysters on the half shell, whole Maine lobsters, crab cocktails, king crab legs and slabs of fish that zigzag from blackened Colorado bass and lemon-kissed swordfish to sesame-soy-glazed tuna and sea scallops married with Parmesan risotto. If you’re sharing a night out with a group, book the upstairs glass-enclosed room that harbors table 50. It seats eight, and the views overlooking Larimer Square—especially when the windows are open—are Instagram-worthy.
Downtown Denver is symbolic of steakhouses, but Guard and Grace isn't your typical shrine to steer. There’s the bravado of wood-fired grills, charcuterie plates and, like any great steakhouse worth its salt, a wave of seafood and fish experiences that rival its meaty counterparts: exemplary oysters, Maryland crab cakes, grilled Scottish salmon with shaved rhubarb, and the ambrosial smoke-scented octopus paired with a white bean and celery salad, Spanish chorizo and a roasted red pepper sauce. It’s a win, too, for its exhilarating wine syllabus that stretches far and deep, swanky surrounds that favor a feminine touch and a voyeuristic chef’s counter that overlooks the industrious kitchen and glistening raw bar skimmed with impeccably fresh oysters.
Ocean Prime's "Smoking Shellfish Tower"
The Cajun-style seafood at TK’s Surf & Turf Kitchen, Denver’s first Black-owned, family-operated seafood restaurant, is so picturesque that it inspired a viral TikTok video. Whether you’re doing it for the ‘gram or your tastebuds, TK’s won’t disappoint. (Especially if you get your shrimp and crawfish doused in owner Tyler Kanwai’s kicky secret sauce.) For a taste of everything, order the signature “The Works” plate, which loads you up with a dozen shrimp, a couple of crab clusters, a lobster tail and for the turf, a chopped beef sausage.
Native New Englander Drew Ryan missed the seafood he grew up eating so much that he opened his own lobster roll (and so much more) shack in his new home of Denver. This is the place for hot, buttery lobster rolls, fried whole belly clams, Maine steamers and clam chowder—New England style, of course. The lobster here is legit; sourced from a fleet of lobstermen in Stonington, Maine, you can get it in the six varieties of rolls, melted onto a grilled cheese, packed into a Ritz cracker-crusted pie and tossed into the mascarpone and cheddar-rific mac and cheese.
Ceviche, raw fish or seafood marinated in fresh citrus juices, slashed with fresh chiles and cilantro and potent with raw onions, is easily one of the best culinary gifts the States inherited from Mexico. And at Mr. Peralta Mariscos, a stuccoed corner plot in Sunnyside, the ceviches are arguably Denver’s finest. The convivial dining room, humming with patrons slurping obscenely huge platters of ceviche and equally large seafood cocktail goblets plunged with shrimp floating in a tomato broth, pulsates with Mexican music. The cooks in the open kitchen add to the clamor, the thwack of their knives an indication that you’re about to embark on a delicious feast. The long syllabus of ceviches is offset by several chile-intensive aguachiles spiked with lime, shrimp dishes served every which way, seafood tacos and soups and molcajetes pointing skyward with crab legs, fried fish filets, clams and shrimp ribboned with strips of bacon.
Tammen’s Fish Market, one of multiple tenants residing inside the Denver Central Market, a superb food hall in RiNo, doubles as a full-service fish counter and counter-service restaurant that turns out a swell of sea-centric dishes: po’boys, vibrant ceviches, fresh oysters, clam chowder and fried smelts. With its casual surrounds, community bar that serves beer, wine and cocktails, and clam and mussel shells that grin from the impressive display case, it’s a terrific spot for lunch, dinner or a grab-and-go fresh fish and seafood jaunt that allows you to experiment with cooking your own specimens at home.
To travel through the dishes that define Cafe Brazil, a sensationally charming South American restaurant from Mauricio Zorrilla and Tony and Marla Zarlenga, is to drift into a land of gypsy chiles and vibrant spices, fresh herbs and sweet plantains, passion fruit and prawns, swollen scallops and bacalhau, all beautifully harmonized in heartfelt ways that explain why the Berkeley neighborhood restaurant has such a loyal following. Against a backdrop of color and whimsy, high energy and contagious laughter, shots of rum and caipirinhas, diners socialize over plates of seafood Copacabana, a medley of shrimp and scallops in a lush coconut milk sauce and the moqueca de peixe, an irresistible stew stained sunset with dende oil and liberally enhanced with scallops, shrimp and Portuguese bacalhau.
In any neighborhood inked with upscale boutiques, swanky bars and martini-leaning residents, a sleek seafood shrine is never far away. And so it goes for Blue Island Oyster Bar and Seafood, a sophisticated dock-to-dish restaurant in tony Cherry Creek that struts a ritzy seafaring motif flanked by a centerpiece bar that pours stiff martinis and bubbles, the requisite libation to match with the restaurant’s proprietary East Coast oysters. You could spend all of your clams on the bivalves, but then you’d miss the creamy New England clam chowder—and that would be a travesty. The daily happy hour, which runs from 2 to 6 p.m., is a real catch.
Chef and owner Kevin Morrison of Tacos, Tequila, Whiskey offers a fresh syllabus of sea creatures at his diminutive River North Art District (RiNo) restaurant that’s usually packed like a can of sardines with diners drawn to the beer-friendly, fish-intensive menu. A triumphant wood-grilled whole Colorado bass is a state ballad bathed in butter and side kicked with roasted Brussels sprouts and Israeli couscous, while the king salmon filet with gnocchi, kale and crimini mushrooms is caressed with a cream sauce of butter and garlic. Oysters, mussels, peel-and-eat shrimp poached in Old Bay broth and terrific smelt fries round out the culinary roster, which pairs well with the rotating craft-beer lineup favoring Colorado breweries.
Inspiration is a-brewin’ in Denver. Fitting right in with The Mile High City’s already renowned craft food and drink scene is a new breed…
Love food? Love hands-on experiences? Make them part of your date night, weekend excursion or vacation fun. Let's get stirring, chopping, mixing…
Check out some of the best spots in Denver to satisfy a sweet tooth. Discover delicious desserts at The Greenwich, Noisette and The Bindery!
We get it: Eating out is often a comedy of errors when you’ve got tots in tow. But dining out with your kids—whether they’re babies…
How do you experience the best of Denver’s food scene? We went straight to the source — some of The Mile High City's most accomplished…
Denver’s Mexican food scene stretches from a gluttony of taco trucks and humble taquerias with sensational salsa and condiment bars to rustic…
Denver is a metropolis of ever-evolving tastes, its forward-thinking dining landscape spangled with restaurants from gifted chefs whose culinary…
When you visit The Mile High City, you'll find plenty of places conducive to sightseeing — historic landmarks, world-class museums, theaters…
On Denver’s sun-smooched days — of which there are hundreds — locals and visitors alike flock outside to enjoy the scintillating…
Indulge in a romantic date or anniversary dinner at one of Denver's most romantic restaurants. Top spots include Bistro Vendome, Table 6 and…
Denver’s dynamic dining climate has grown exponentially, making way for season-intensive restaurants commanded by celebrity chefs, international…
Denver is a metropolis of ever-evolving tastes, its forward-thinking dining landscape spangled with…
On Denver’s sun-smooched days — of which there are hundreds — locals and visitors…
We get it: Eating out is often a comedy of errors when you’ve got tots in tow. But dining out…
Indulge in a romantic date or anniversary dinner at one of Denver's most romantic restaurants…
Check out some of the best spots in Denver to satisfy a sweet tooth. Discover delicious desserts at…
How do you experience the best of Denver’s food scene? We went straight to the source…
The Mile High City’s esteemed dining scene recognized by the prestigious culinary…
Featured
Featured