Kosher Restaurants in New York
New York City anchors the largest and most diverse kosher dining scene in the United States, spanning hundreds of restaurants across Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, and the surrounding suburbs. Offerings range from glatt-kosher steakhouses and sushi bars in Midtown to Chalav Yisrael dairy cafes and pizza shops in Flatbush, Borough Park, and the Five Towns. Most establishments carry certification from the OU or a local vaad, and options run the full gamut of cuisines and price points.
Kosher dining clusters in Midtown Manhattan, Flatbush/Borough Park/Crown Heights in Brooklyn, Kew Gardens Hills/Forest Hills in Queens, and the Five Towns, Teaneck, Monsey, and Lakewood suburbs. Nearly all kosher restaurants close Friday afternoon through Saturday night for Shabbat and on Jewish holidays; call ahead near sundown on Fridays.
Kosher restaurants by neighborhood
Showing 25 to 48 of 289. Filter by type using the menu above.
Dagan Pizza
Pizza · Brooklyn
Burgers Bar
Burgers Chicken · Brooklyn
Perizia Pizza
Pizza · Brooklyn
Kosher Bagel Hole
Bakery Pastries · Brooklyn
Falafel Tanami
Middle Eastern Shawarma · Brooklyn
Mazza And More
Pareve Vegan · Brooklyn
Estihana
Pareve Vegan · Brooklyn
Ostrovitsky Bakery
Bakery Pastries · Brooklyn
Falafalafa
Pareve Vegan · Brooklyn
Pizza Time
Pizza · Brooklyn
Fuji Hana
Pareve Vegan · Brooklyn
BHI Thursdays
Burgers Chicken · Brooklyn
Bay Cafe
Pareve Vegan · Brooklyn
Essen Ny Deli
Steakhouse · Brooklyn
Mendelson’s Pizza
Pareve Vegan · Brooklyn
Sprinkles Ice Cream
Ice Cream · Brooklyn
Cafe Spoons
Cafe Coffee Shop · Brooklyn
The Cookie Corner
Bakery Pastries · Brooklyn
Presser Kosher Bakery
Bakery Pastries · Brooklyn
Olympia Steakhouse
Steakhouse · Brooklyn
Hunan2go
Other · Brooklyn
Noribar Sushi Lounge
Pareve Vegan · Brooklyn
Jerusalem Steak House
Middle Eastern Shawarma · Brooklyn
The Korner
Middle Eastern Shawarma · Brooklyn
Compiled from the certifying agencies and public kosher directories. Where the specific hechsher is unconfirmed, a listing is shown as "Kosher". Kosher status can change, so always confirm the teudah on site.