Top 13 Restaurants Along Washington’s Coast To Visit In 2026

They say you can’t buy happiness, but you can certainly buy a plate of fish and chips by the sea in Washington, and honestly, that’s close enough for me.

My quest to find the best coastal eats has led me to some truly hidden gems, ranging from hole-in-the-wall shacks to breezy patios with views that steal the show. I’m picky, I’m hungry, and I’ve tried just about everything on the menu so you don’t have to.

I’ve finally finalized my list of the top thirteen restaurants that you simply cannot miss. So, grab a napkin, leave your diet at home, and get ready to eat your way through my favorite seaside kitchens.

Your taste buds are about to be very, very happy.

1. The Depot Restaurant

The Depot Restaurant
© The DEPOT Restaurant

Some restaurants carry history in their walls, and The Depot does exactly that. Housed inside a genuine railway depot at 1208 38th Pl, Seaview, WA 98644, this charming dining room has been serving guests who appreciate a meal with real character.

The building’s heritage adds something special that a brand-new restaurant simply cannot replicate. The menu leans into classic Northwest favorites, offering seafood, steaks, and seasonal dishes that highlight the region’s finest ingredients.

Portions are satisfying without being overwhelming, making it a solid choice for both casual dinners and slightly more special occasions. Locals and visitors alike keep coming back for the familiar comfort of well-executed dishes.

The official website remains active in 2026, so checking current hours before visiting is always smart. Seaview is a small, quiet town, and The Depot fits perfectly into its unhurried, welcoming atmosphere.

2. 42nd Street Cafe And Bistro

42nd Street Cafe And Bistro
© 42nd Street Cafe and Bistro

Breakfast lovers, your coastal dream spot exists. The 42nd Street Cafe And Bistro at 4201 Pacific Way, Seaview, WA 98644 has built a loyal following thanks to its hearty morning plates that genuinely fuel a full day of beach exploring.

Fluffy stacks, generous portions, and freshly brewed coffee make early risers feel very well rewarded.

When dinnertime rolls around, the menu shifts toward seafood-focused dishes that showcase the best of the Pacific Northwest. Regional specialties like freshly shucked oysters and Northwest cioppino give the evening menu a distinctly coastal personality.

You will not find these flavors replicated at a chain restaurant down the highway.

On a personal note, stopping here for a lazy Saturday breakfast before hitting the Long Beach Peninsula is practically a ritual for anyone who visits more than once. The cafe’s relaxed pace and reliable quality make it genuinely hard to skip.

3. Pickled Fish

Pickled Fish
© Pickled Fish

Perched on the fourth floor of the Adrift Hotel at 409 Sid Snyder Dr, Long Beach, WA 98631, Pickled Fish earns its reputation with a combination of breathtaking ocean views and a menu built around genuinely local ingredients.

Watching the Pacific stretch out to the horizon while waiting for your food is a mood-setter that no interior dining room can match. The kitchen takes coastal cooking seriously, sourcing regional ingredients and letting them shine without over-complicating things.

Expect dishes that feel rooted in the landscape surrounding the restaurant rather than imported from a generic playbook. Seafood is naturally the star, but the seasonal menu keeps things fresh and interesting throughout the year.

Reservations are highly recommended, especially during peak summer months when demand for that view skyrockets. Getting a window table at sunset is the kind of experience that makes the whole trip feel worth every mile driven.

4. MyCovio’s Italian Inspired Kitchen

MyCovio's Italian Inspired Kitchen
© MyCovio’s

Tucked into the quiet town of Ocean Park at 1311 Bay Ave, Ocean Park, WA 98640, MyCovio’s Italian Inspired Kitchen is the kind of chef-owned gem that travelers share in hushed, enthusiastic tones. The small dining room creates an atmosphere that feels genuinely personal rather than manufactured.

Reservations are strongly recommended because tables fill up fast and walk-ins often face disappointment.

The Italian-inspired menu brings comfort food with real craft behind every plate. Pasta dishes, rich sauces, and carefully prepared proteins make this a satisfying stop for anyone craving something beyond standard coastal fare.

The chef’s attention to detail shows in every bite, rewarding guests who made the effort to plan ahead.

Current service runs Thursday through Monday according to the official site, so planning your visit around those days is essential. Missing MyCovio’s because you showed up on a Tuesday would be a genuinely painful mistake.

5. Salt

Salt
© Salt Pub

Overlooking the working marina at 147 Howerton Ave, Ilwaco, WA 98624, Salt delivers exactly what its name promises: honest, hearty food served in a spot where the smell of saltwater drifts right through the atmosphere.

Watching fishing boats come and go while enjoying a bowl of chowder is a coastal experience that feels deeply authentic.

This is not a restaurant trying to impress you with fancy tricks. The menu focuses on coastal fare that satisfies without pretense, featuring the kinds of dishes that working harbor towns have relied on for generations.

Generous portions and straightforward preparations keep the focus where it belongs: on good ingredients and real flavor. Salt Pub remains listed by the region’s official tourism bureau as a recommended dining stop.

Ilwaco itself is a charming, underrated town worth exploring beyond the meal. Pairing a Salt Pub lunch with a visit to the nearby Cape Disappointment State Park makes for an excellent full day.

6. Bennett’s Fish Shack

Bennett's Fish Shack
© Bennett’s Fish Shack

Harbor-side dining does not get more satisfying than Bennett’s Fish Shack at 2581 Westhaven Dr, Westport, WA 98595. Sitting right beside the water, this casual spot specializes in the seafood classics that coastal visitors crave most: fish and chips, crab dishes, creamy chowder, and freshly prepared oysters.

The menu is not trying to reinvent anything, and that confidence in simplicity is exactly what makes it work.

A friend once described eating fish and chips at Bennett’s as “the platonic ideal of a harbor lunch,” and after one visit, it is difficult to argue. The portions are generous, the batter is crispy, and the setting does all the heavy lifting for atmosphere.

Currently listed as operating daily, it is one of the most accessible stops along the Westport waterfront. Showing up hungry is highly advisable. The portions here have a way of catching first-timers pleasantly off guard in the best possible way.

7. Merino’s Seafood Market And Cannery

Merino's Seafood Market And Cannery
© Merino’s Seafood Market

Part seafood market, part casual restaurant, Merino’s Seafood Market And Cannery at 301 Harbor Ave, Westport, WA 98595 operates at the intersection of commerce and cuisine in the most satisfying way.

The catches served here are directly connected to Westport’s active commercial fishing industry, meaning the fish on your plate likely came off a boat that morning. Freshness at this level is genuinely rare.

Browsing the market before ordering gives the whole experience an interactive quality that standard sit-down restaurants cannot replicate. You can see exactly what the local waters are producing and then enjoy it prepared simply and skillfully.

The city’s 2026 dining directory lists Merino’s as open daily, making it a reliable anchor for any Westport visit.

Westport is one of Washington’s most productive commercial fishing ports, which makes Merino’s connection to that industry feel meaningful rather than just a marketing angle. Eating here supports real working fishermen.

8. Blue Buoy Restaurant

Blue Buoy Restaurant
© Buoy 35

Morning people and midday wanderers alike have a solid friend in Blue Buoy Restaurant at 2323 Westhaven Dr, Westport, WA 98595.

This harbor-side spot keeps things refreshingly classic, serving generous breakfast plates that could fuel a fishing expedition, alongside burgers, sandwiches, and rotating seafood specials for the lunch crowd.

Nothing on the menu is trying to be something it is not. The straightforward approach is part of the charm. Blue Buoy understands that sometimes the best meal is a well-made plate of eggs with a harbor view rather than a complicated tasting menu.

Westport’s current official dining directory continues to include it as a recommended stop, which speaks to its consistent performance over time.

Early risers visiting Westport would do well to make Blue Buoy their first stop of the day. Fueling up here before a morning at the docks or along the beach sets an excellent tone for everything that follows.

9. Hot Mama’s Cambodian Kitchen

Hot Mama's Cambodian Kitchen
© Hot Mama’s Kitchen

Coastal Washington is full of seafood shacks and clam chowder bowls, which makes Hot Mama’s Cambodian Kitchen at 806 Ocean Shores Blvd NW, Ocean Shores, WA 98569 feel like a genuinely exciting curveball.

Cambodian cooking arrives at the beach with noodle dishes, boldly seasoned curries, fragrant fried rice, and specialties that bring completely different flavor profiles to the Pacific coast. The contrast is delightful.

Cambodian cuisine is known for its use of fresh herbs, lemongrass, and complex seasoning combinations that create layers of flavor in every dish.

Hot Mama’s brings that tradition to a beach town audience, offering something locals and visitors rarely find anywhere else along this stretch of coastline. The City of Ocean Shores continues to list the restaurant in its current dining guide for 2026.

Trying something unexpected on a coastal trip is always a good idea. Hot Mama’s rewards the adventurous eater with bold, memorable flavors that linger long after the meal ends.

10. La Spiaggia Ristorante

La Spiaggia Ristorante
© La Spiaggia Ristorante | Italian

La Spiaggia Ristorante at 729 Point Brown Ave NW, Ocean Shores, WA 98569 proves that you do not need to travel to Seattle for a satisfying Italian meal on a coastal getaway.

The name means “the beach” in Italian, which is a charming nod to its Ocean Shores location just minutes from the water. Pasta, seafood, chicken, and traditional comfort dishes form the backbone of a menu built for genuine satisfaction.

The locally operated nature of La Spiaggia gives it a warmth and consistency that chain restaurants simply cannot manufacture.

Regulars return because the food is reliable and the atmosphere feels like a neighborhood spot rather than a tourist trap. Its listing remains active on the city’s 2026 tourism site, confirming it is still going strong.

Pairing an Italian dinner here with a sunset walk on the beach afterward creates the kind of effortless evening that makes Ocean Shores visits memorable. Simplicity done well is always a winning formula.

11. Oyhut Bay Grill

Oyhut Bay Grill
© Oyhut Bay Grill

Found inside the Oyhut Bay development at 404 Salmonberry Ln SW, Ocean Shores, WA 98569, Oyhut Bay Grill occupies a quieter, more relaxed corner of Ocean Shores that feels removed from the busier beachfront strip.

The menu covers a satisfying range of options including seafood, steaks, sandwiches, and a weekend brunch that draws a dedicated crowd every Saturday and Sunday. Flexibility is a genuine strength here.

Weekend brunch at a coastal grill with a laid-back setting is the kind of experience that turns a quick overnight trip into a full weekend stay. The combination of morning-friendly dishes and a calm, unhurried atmosphere makes Oyhut Bay Grill a natural gathering spot for groups with varied appetites.

Seafood and steak options ensure that even the pickiest eaters at the table find something worth ordering.

The location within Oyhut Bay gives the restaurant a slightly resort-adjacent feel without the pretentious price tags that sometimes accompany that vibe. Value and setting work together nicely here.

12. Koko’s Restaurant

Koko's Restaurant
© Casa Koko Restaurant

Koko’s Restaurant made a bold move in June 2026, relocating to a larger Seabrook location at 100 Market St, Pacific Beach, WA 98571 with a brand-new ocean-view dining room that instantly elevated the whole experience.

The expanded space allows the kitchen to stretch into a modern Latin-inspired menu featuring tacos, enchiladas, ceviche, and creative seafood plates. Moving up in the world has clearly agreed with Koko’s.

Latin flavors and Pacific coastline views turn out to be an unexpectedly brilliant combination. The brightness of citrus-forward ceviche paired with the sound of ocean waves through an open window is a sensory experience worth seeking out specifically.

The new location gives Koko’s room to serve more guests without losing the personality that made the original spot popular.

Pacific Beach and the surrounding Seabrook community have developed into a genuine dining destination, and Koko’s arrival in its larger form adds serious credibility to that reputation. Booking ahead is wise.

13. Frontager’s Pizza Co.

Frontager's Pizza Co.
© Frontager’s Pizza Company

Brick-oven pizza with Northwest ingredients sounds like exactly the kind of idea that should have happened sooner.

Frontager’s Pizza Co. at 21 Seabrook Ave, Pacific Beach, WA 98571 makes it a delicious reality, firing up pizzas loaded with locally inspired toppings alongside salads, stromboli, and Italian-style starters that round out the menu nicely.

The oven does not lie: brick-fired crust has a character that no conventional oven can replicate. Seabrook is a planned coastal community with a distinct small-town charm, and Frontager’s fits right into that character.

The restaurant feels like the kind of neighborhood pizza spot that residents genuinely treasure rather than tolerate between better options. Its official website confirms the restaurant is operating in 2026, so planning a visit around a Seabrook stay is entirely feasible.

Sharing a pizza here after a long day of beach walking is one of those simple pleasures that coastal trips are genuinely made for. Good dough, great views nearby, zero complaints.