Thanksgiving Restaurant Prices Revealed: What Americans Pay in 29 Cities
For many Americans, Thanksgiving has long meant crowded grocery stores, hours of chopping and roasting, and a post-feast mountain of dishes. But a growing number of people are choosing a different kind of holidayโone where seasoned chefs transform the classic Thanksgiving spread into a refined, restaurant-quality experience.
This year, the convenience of dining out comes with a surprisingly wide range of price tags and, for many, the added reward of enjoying expertly crafted holiday dishes in a restaurant setting.
Chefโs Pencil analyzed Thanksgiving prix-fixe menus from over 500 restaurants across 29 major U.S. cities. We looked at everything from casual chain restaurants to Michelin-starred establishments to find out exactly what it costs to skip the cooking in 2025.
Key Findings
- The National Median: The median price for a Thanksgiving prix-fixe dinner in the U.S. is $75 per person (excluding tax, tip, and drinks).
- Most Expensive City: Los Angeles tops the list with a median price of $105, followed closely by San Francisco and New York ($95).
- Least Expensive Major City: Cincinnati and Columbus offer the best value, with median prices hovering around $41, though restaurant options are limited in both cities.
- The Price Gap: You can find a full Thanksgiving dinner for as low as $28 or splurge on a $295 Thanksgiving Michelin-star tasting menu in Miami.
The Most Expensive Cities for Thanksgiving Dinner
If youโre planning to dine out on the West Coast or in the Northeast, prepare to pay a premium. Los Angeles is the only city in our study where the median price broke the triple-digit mark ($105).
Here is the ranking of major U.S. cities by median prix-fixe price:
A few takeaways:
- Coastal hubs are the priciest. Los Angeles, San Francisco, New York, Seattle and Miami consistently sit at or near the top, with median prices between $85 and $105.
- Midwestern and Southern cities like Columbus, Cincinnati, Louisville, Detroit and Chicago remain much more affordable, with medians between $41 and $59.
- Cities like Las Vegas, Denver, and Charleston hit the overall national median sweet spot at around $75, reflecting a mix of resort dining and more accessible options.
To see how your city stacks up, explore the map below showing median Thanksgiving dinner prices nationwide.
Where to Find the Best Value
For those looking for a bargain, the Midwest and South offer significantly more affordable options. In cities like Louisville ($45), Columbus ($41), and Cincinnati ($41), dining out costs less than half of what it would in more expensive coastal citiesโalthough the options are generally fewer and skew toward mid-range restaurants.
Even in expensive metros, affordable choices exist. National chains like Mimiโs Cafe offer three-course holiday meals for around $32 in locations from Phoenix to Las Vegas, while some local spots offer turkey plates for under $30.
High-End Holiday Dining: Some of The Priciest Thanksgiving Menus of 2025
While Los Angeles is, on average, the most expensive city for Thanksgiving dinner, the single most expensive Thanksgiving menu in our research comes from the opposite coast. At LโAtelier de Joรซl Robuchon in Miami, the Thanksgiving dinner is priced at $295 per person.
The two-star Michelin restaurant offers a Thanksgiving celebration that reads more like a high-end tasting menu than a traditional holiday meal. Diners can expect:
- Foie Gras Royale with parmesan foam and Maury โVieilles Vignesโ essence
- White Truffle Comtรฉ Soufflรฉ, delicate and perfumed
- Olive OilโPoached Icelandic Halibut scented with vanilla and fig leaf
- Mishima Reserve Wagyu Striploin, finished with smoky blackberry bordelaise
- Dessert choices like an apple spiral with caramel sponge or pumpkin cheesecake mousse
This is Thanksgiving reimagined by one of the worldโs most celebrated culinary maisons and the only two-star Michelin restaurant in Miami. Optional wine pairings starting at $350 take the experience even further.
Several other restaurants also offer standout high-end Thanksgiving menus, such as:
- Eiffel Tower (Las Vegas) – between $135 and $285
- NoMI (Chicago) โ $265
- Craft and Fasano (New York City) โ $225 and $195, respectively
- Astra and MKT Restaurant & Bar (San Francisco) – $210 and $195, respectively
- The Garden Room and Atlas (Atlanta) – both at $195
- Bourbon Steak and CUT by Wolfgang Puck (Washington DC) – $185
- Le Jardinier (Houston) – $185
- Cecconi’s West Hollywood (Los Angeles) – $180
These restaurants serve elevated interpretations of holiday classicsโoffering diners a once-a-year chance to enjoy Thanksgiving through the lens of fine dining.
The Affordable Alternative
At the opposite end of the spectrum, many restaurants offer full Thanksgiving plates in the $28โ$35 range. These menus embrace the timeless comfort-food lineup of roast turkey, stuffing, mashed potatoes, vegetables, and pieโproof that enjoying a hot, festive meal doesnโt require a lavish budget.
A standout example is All Meal Prep Kitchen & Cafe in Chicagoโs Edgewater neighborhood, serving a generous Thanksgiving plate for $28 that includes:
- turkey
- mashed potatoes
- cranberry sauce
- stuffing
- steamed vegetables
- mac & cheese
- dessert
A complete, comforting holiday meal at one of the lowest price points we found.
Is It Worth It?
With the average cost of a home-cooked Thanksgiving dinner for 10 people hovering around $55 total (about $5โ$6 per person, per the American Farm Bureau Federation), dining out is undeniably a luxury.
Even in the most affordable cities, youโre paying a 500โ600% premium for a restaurant Thanksgiving.
But for diners who value their time more than their budget, the national median of $75 may feel like a fair exchange to skip the grocery runs, avoid the 6 a.m. prep, and forget the mountain of dirty dishes. Plus, the rewardโa chef-prepared holiday mealโis hard for even a skilled home cook to match.
Pro Tip: Don’t WaitโTables Are Disappearing Fast
If you’re considering dining out this Thanksgiving, our advice is simple: book now.
With only a limited number of restaurants open for the holiday, and seating capacities often reduced to ensure a relaxed service, the “wait and see” approach is risky. During our research window aloneโfrom Wednesday to Friday of last weekโwe watched availability vanish in real-time. Several venues that had prime seating available on Wednesday were completely fully booked by Friday afternoon.
To secure a table at your preferred spot (and at a reasonable hour), we recommend finalizing your reservation immediately. Waiting even another 24 hours could mean the difference between a 6:00 PM dinner and a 9:30 PM slotโor no table at all.
Methodology
Our team used OpenTable to identify restaurants in more than 500 venues across 29 major U.S. metro areasโincluding both city centers and surrounding suburbsโthat:
- are open on Thanksgiving, and
- offer a prix fixe or set Thanksgiving menu.
We recorded the per-person food price of each menu (excluding drinks, tax, and gratuity). For restaurants that priced their Thanksgiving menu per party, we divided the total cost by the minimum number of guests required (and, in some cases, added the cost of the required extra dessert).
For each restaurant, we used the listed Thanksgiving prix fixe or tasting menu price, then calculated:
- median prices by city, and
- the overall median across the full dataset.
The result is a snapshot of what Americans are paying to celebrate Thanksgiving outside the homeโfrom budget-friendly chains to some of the most ambitious dining rooms in the country.
Note*: While our team researched more than 500 restaurants, we cannot guarantee that we captured every high-end restaurant in the U.S. offering a Thanksgiving menu.
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