Where To Eat In Dartmouth: The Best Restaurants In Dartmouth

Looking for the best restaurants in Dartmouth? You’ve come to the right place to find them. No, not Dartmouth, silly, but IDEAL Magazine…

Sure, Dartmouth’s got the kind of aesthetic that makes amateur photographers look like they know what they’re doing – all tumbling technicolor houses, bobbing boats and that magnificent river slicing through the heart of town. But there’s another reason this historic naval port draws visitors back time and again: the food’s seriously good.

From long-established stalwarts doing the simple things right to exciting newcomers turning those simple things on their head, the dining scene in Dartmouth spans everything from star-aspiring tasting menus to natural wine bars, with plenty of stellar seafood in between. 

The result? A town where you can eat exceptionally well, whether you’re after a blow-out feast with wine to match, or simply the finest fish and chips eaten straight from the paper while dodging surprisingly athletic seagulls.

Here’s our guide on where to eat in this delicious corner of Devon: the best restaurants in Dartmouth.

The Angel, South Embankment

Ideal for when you want Devon’s finest ingredients to sing…

There’s something rather poetic about The Angel’s current incarnation. In a space where the late, great Joyce Molyneux once made history as one of Britain’s first female chefs to earn a Michelin star, another remarkably talented chef is now writing her own chapter. Elly Wentworth, who took the helm in 2018 at just 26, has transformed this storied riverside restaurant into something that feels both timeless and current.

The elegant dining room, occupying an enviable spot on Dartmouth’s South Embankment with floor-to-ceiling windows framing the Dart, manages to feel special occasion without being stuffy. An open kitchen lets you watch Wentworth and her team at work – a detail carried over from Molyneux’s days that feels like a pleasing, simple connection between then and now. 

Wentworth herself arrives with serious pedigree; a finalist in 2016’s MasterChef: The Professionals, she cut her teeth working alongside Michelin-starred heavyweights including The Elephant just up the road in Torquay, before taking over The Angel, showing the same courage at 26 that Molyneux did decades before. She’s since appeared on Great British Menu and turned what could have been an intimidating legacy into her own vision of modern British excellence.

The menu is a love letter to Devon’s larder, with everything sourced from within a 30-mile radius where possible. Though there’s an a la carte with starters in the mid teens and mains clocking in between £20 and £40, for the full experience the tasting menu (£95) is the way to go. Recent highlights include a heritage beetroot tart that elevates the humble root to new heights, a langoustine risotto with preserved lemon that’s pitched perfectly between piquant and luxurious, and a ruby red beef fillet with horseradish buttermilk that is cooked with such a precise wall-to-wall pink that it will have you questioning the way you cook your steaks at home from here on in. The ‘All White’ signature dessert both needs to be seen and tasted to be believed.

The wine pairings (£65, or £130 for the fine wine experience) are worth the splurge, ranging from crisp Verdicchio to a stunning Puligny-Montrachet. On the flip side of that splurge, more budget-conscious food lovers should look to lunch, where three courses of the same precision cooking will set you back just £35. 

Sunday lunch (£39 for two courses, £45 for three) is another relative bargain, featuring what might be the most elegant roast in Devon. Right now, it actually starts with that langoustine risotto, before moving on to roast beef, roasties and a Yorkshire pudding that’s so cavernous you could fall into its central vortex and never return to finish your plate.

The bar program deserves special mention – their Angel Negroni makes an ideal aperitif, while the wine list roams from accessible £30 bottles to serious treasures like a 2014 Louis Roederer Cristal (£640). They’ve even got their own gin, infused with black garlic and honey – try it in their French Seventy Five for a cool £21.95. It is good, to be fair.

The cooking here has earned Wentworth and her team a place in the 2024 Michelin Guide and two AA Rosettes. But perhaps more importantly, it’s created the kind of restaurant that makes you want to find excuses to return – a special birthday here, an anniversary there, or maybe just because it’s Thursday and they’re open for lunch.

Open: Thursday-Saturday 12-2pm, 6:30-8:30pm; Sunday 12-3pm

Price: Lunch £35 for 3 courses, Tasting Menu £95, Sunday lunch from £39

Wine: By the glass from £8, bottles from £30

Book ahead: Essential, especially for weekend dinner and Sunday lunch

Website: theangeldartmouth.co.uk

Address: 2 S Embankment, Dartmouth TQ6 9BH


The Seahorse, South Embankment

Ideal for sublime seafood cooked over fire with an Italian soul…

If you’re looking for proof that simple things done perfectly are often the most impressive, spend an evening at The Seahorse. Since 2008, this waterfront gem has been showing Dartmouth how to cook fish with both precision and soul, and nowadays, it’s very much keeping it in the family – with Ben Tonks (yes, that’s the son of seafood ambassador Mitch) heading up the kitchen.

The dining room feels like you’ve stumbled into a particularly lovely corner of coastal Italy – all warm woods, leather banquettes, and vintage menus on the walls. An open kitchen lets you watch as the day’s catch meets the flames of the charcoal grill, while the hospitality, overseen by General Manager Bronte Story, makes you want to linger all afternoon. Oh, how we’ve lingered…

Putting basically every other seafood restaurant in the country’s claims of maximum freshness to shame, the fish at the Seahorse is delivered twice daily from Brixham just a few miles down the coast, and the menu changes accordingly.

Recent highlights include charcoal roasted Torbay scallops with garlic and white port that demonstrate exactly why this place has been in the National Restaurant Awards top 100 for over a decade – simplicity, reverence of the key ingredient, and just a little knowing flair. Their regularly changing fisherman’s soup, rust-coloured and redolent, is so good it makes you forget about your white shirt and dive right in.

For the full experience, keep an eye on the specials board for their whole fish cooked, of course, on the bone; it’s the highlight of any meal here. A recent John Dory roasted over fire and dressed in garlic and Cava vinegar (at £42 per person for two, several notes cheaper than those served in London) shows exactly why The Seahorse has maintained its reputation as one of Devon’s finest restaurants. Just so good.

Regardless of how you play things order-wise, start with a Seahorse martini at Joe’s Bar next door – this intimate drinking den feels like it’s been transported straight from a backstreet in Venice – then settle in for some seriously good cooking. If you’re watching the pennies, their Menu del Giorno (available at lunch until 2:45pm) offers three courses of the same precision cooking for £35. A recent offering included stracciatella with roasted delica pumpkin to start, followed by ray wing with artichokes and datterini tomatoes, finishing with vanilla affogato – a steal at this level.

The wine list deserves special mention, roaming from accessible house wines to serious Italian and French heavyweights. Their house Tonnix wines, a collaboration between Mitch Tonks and Mark Hix, are decent value at £48 a bottle.

Speaking of seafood, the restaurant’s connection with Italy goes beyond just culinary influence – they’re officially twinned with Al Gatto Nero in Burano, sharing a philosophical approach to cooking fish that emphasises simplicity and respect for ingredients.

Open: Tuesday-Saturday 12-2:30pm, 6-9pm (Closed Sunday/Monday)

Price: Menu del Giorno £35, whole fish and seafood specials from £40 per person

Wine: By the glass from £6.50, bottles from £30

Book ahead: Essential, especially for dinner and weekend lunch

Website: seahorserestaurant.co.uk

Address: 5 S Embankment, Dartmouth TQ6 9BH


Andria, Lower Street

Ideal for small plates that effortlessly blend French finesse with Italian soul…

In a town that’s rightfully obsessed with seafood, Andria carves out its own compelling niche. Awarded a Bib Gourmand in the Michelin Guide in 2022 (that coveted award for ‘good quality, good value cooking’), this modern bistro is where head chef Luca Berardino’s fascinating culinary heritage – born in Paris, raised on Italian home cooking, trained in the UK – comes together on the plate.

The dining room, with its laid back, bare boards bistro vibes, sets the scene for what’s to come: cooking that’s both precise and a touch playful. The menu revolves around small plates that demand (well, the waiter demands) to be shared – they suggest three per person, but you might want to order more once you see what’s emerging from the kitchen. Brixham crab (just can’t get enough of this stuff ‘when in Devon’) paired with apple, lemon and ginger shows a keen understanding of points-of-difference making a dish, while the hand-dived Dartmouth scallops with roe satay, cucumber and daikon demonstrates the kitchen’s ability to think globally while sourcing locally. It’s a fine balance, indeed.

Even seemingly simple dishes arrive with a twist – their stir-fried sprouts come alive with aleppo chilli, whipped tahini and that ubiquitous miso caramel, while wild mushrooms are bathed in umami via 26-month aged parmesan and a golden, bursting egg yolk. The Black Angus fillet (a bargain at £19) arrives with alongisde a beef fat hash brown that has us resenting every roast potato we’ve ever eaten. This is top, top cooking, and in a town where plain seafood dishes rule supreme, a few flourishes and a bit of gentle innovation are so welcome.

For the full experience, book the Chef’s Table upstairs in their purpose-built kitchen dining room. Here, Berardino cooks exclusively for up to 8 guests (10 for private events) around a communal table, with dishes emerging from a wood-fired BBQ. The tasting menu (£90, with optional wine flight at £55) might feature anything from those scallops and roe satay to Hereford fillet with chasseur sauce, ending with a rich vanilla gelato topped with zabaglione espuma. Ooft.

The wine list, curated by local expert Jon-Paul Passmore, roams from accessible house wines to some serious bottles, with an impressive selection of natural wines for those interested in something different. Cocktails are uniformly excellent, and all priced at £12 – start with their Salcombe Citron and see where the evening takes you.

Open: Daily 12-10:30pm

Price: Small plates £13-19, Chef’s Table tasting menu £90

Wine: By the glass from £7, bottles from £24

Book ahead: Essential for Chef’s Table, recommended for dinner

Read: 7 things to do on your trip to the English Riviera this summer

Website: andriadartmouth.com

Address: 5 Lower St, Dartmouth TQ6 9AJ


Circa at Sandridge Barton, Stoke Gabriel

Ideal for vineyard dining that tells the story of South Devon’s terroir (if you can snag a table)…

A half hour’s drive from Dartmouth, tucked away near Stoke Gabriel in what was once a stone milking parlour, Circa represents an intriguing partnership between kitchen and vineyard. The setting is Sandridge Barton – the new home of what was formerly Sharpham Wine, one of England’s pioneering wine estates with a heritage stretching back over 40 years.

This limited-hours dining room (currently only open for lunch Saturday and Sunday, 12-2:30pm) feels more like a destination event than a traditional restaurant. After eight celebrated years in Exeter, Circa has found an ambitious new format here among the vines, creating something that sits somewhere between a pop-up and a permanent fixture.

The menu here is a love letter to South Devon’s pantry, with an admirable commitment to hyper-local sourcing that never feels preachy. The Tully family, who’ve farmed these 450 acres for 80 years, provide wheat for the outstanding sourdough (milled just up the Dart Valley in Buckfastleigh), while their herd of South Devon cows grazing outside supplies the beef. Even the hay they feed on finds its way into dishes – these folks have “a thing for hay,” as they put it.

Small plates are the way to go – they suggest three per person, and actually that feels generous. Wild garlic dumplings with koji potato foam showcase the kitchen’s knack for combining local, foraged ingredients with contemporary techniques, while the steamed ling with BBQ leek demonstrates their way with Brixham’s daily catch – it’s so nice to see ling on the menu, and the fact it’s landed just five miles away certainly does no harm!

The coffee kombucha-marinated beef shin croquettes is the kind of dish that makes you grateful for the onset of winter. Paired with smoked celeriac and black garlic mayo, it features that promised hay. They do fish thoughtfully here, too; a sous-vide cuttlefish number, served with pickled radish rhubarb and a white soy vinaigrette, is a case in point.

The wine backdrop here isn’t just scenic – you’re drinking at the source of some of Devon’s most respected bottles. Sandridge Barton (formerly known as Sharpham) has been producing award-winning English wines since 1981, and their relocation to this spot in 2020 included building a state-of-the-art winery. The wines, still crafted by longtime head winemaker Duncan Schwab (who earlier this year made the Master Winemakers Top 100), continue to reflect and celebrate South Devon’s unique climate. Opening proceedings with their house vermouth (£9) – made using foraged estate ingredients and Sandridge Barton wines – feels almost obligatory, then.

The sustainability ethos here goes beyond buzzwords – they’re using winemaking by-products in their cooking, fermenting whatever they can get their hands on, and working with local no-dig farms like Spindlebrook in Modbury. There are plans to grow all their own veg and produce their own charcuterie, but as they say themselves, “all in good time.”

For dessert, the sticky toffee pudding with Sandridge Barton cider butterscotch and hay(!) ice cream (£9) is worth navigating the country lanes for, though the Douglas Fir parfait with pine nut brittle and gorse flower chantilly shows exactly the kind of creative thinking that makes Circa so exciting.

Open: Saturday & Sunday 12-2:30pm only

Price: Small plates £7-16, around £45pp for food

Wine: Estate wines from £9 by the glass

Book ahead: Essential – with such limited hours, tables are like gold dust

Website: circadevon.co.uk

Address: Lower Well Farm, Circa, Sandridge Barton, Winery TQ9 6RL


Taylor’s Restaurant, South Embankment

Ideal for classic dining with harbour views to remember…

There’s something rather charming about Taylor’s, even if that charm occasionally veers into the realm of provincial hotel restaurant. After 25 years on the quay, Peter and Pauline’s restaurant knows exactly what it is – a comfortable, reliable spot where the stunning views of the Dart compete for attention with some occasionally ambitious interior design choices. 

The dining room is… a lot. Grey damask wallpaper, plush upholstered chairs that wouldn’t look out of place in a regional wedding venue, and enough mirrors and chandeliers to make a cruise ship blush. But those windows. Oh, those windows. Arched and elegant, they frame a view that’s pure Dartmouth – bobbing boats, the historic waterfront, and if you’re lucky, the Britannia Royal Naval College’s magnificent training ship creating the kind of backdrop that seasons everything with an extra sense of sparkle.

The menu plays the classics with confidence. A starter of crab Thermidor with garlic toast (£17.50) demonstrates why some dishes never go out of style, while their treatment of Dartmoor ribeye, served with a cream and green peppercorn sauce, shows respect for Devon’s pantry. The cooking is precise rather than pioneering, with Peter and his team focusing on essential flavours and combinations that have stood the test of time.

The wine list is similarly well-judged, ranging from accessible house wines (their Australian Chardonnay at £32.25 does the job nicely) to more serious bottles for those pushing the boat out – the Puligny Montrachet (£90) feels appropriate for special occasions. Service strikes that pleasant balance between attentive and relaxed that comes from years of experience. Might as well as just settle in and enjoy that view.

Open: Tuesday-Saturday 6:30-11pm (Closed Sunday/Monday)

Price: Starters from £11.95, Mains £23.95-£38.50

Wine: By the glass from £7, bottles from £29.50

Book ahead: Essential for window seats

Website: taylorsrestaurant.co.uk

Address: 8 The Quay, Dartmouth TQ6 9PS


Café Alf Resco, Lower Street

Ideal for breakfasts that make early rising worthwhile (and a slice of Dartmouth life)…

Ignore the truly terrible name. Because if there’s a more cheerful way to start your day in Dartmouth, we haven’t found it. Housed in a characterful townhouse on Lower Street, Café Alf Resco (or just ‘Alf’s’ to the locals) has mastered that rare art of being both a tourist favourite and a place where the local community love to congregate. The interiors are pure Devon charm – all  wooden beams, cosy nooks, and red cushions housed under a large awning for semi-outdoor dining.

The legendary Alf’s Breakfast puts most Full English offerings to shame, featuring special-recipe sausages that’ll make you forget about supermarket versions forever. The eggs Benedict arrives with perfectly poached eggs on toasted muffins and a hollandaise sauce that achieves that elusive balance between rich and bright. Both meals are just £12. For something lighter, their house-made granola has developed something of a cult following, while the Portuguese custard tarts, baked fresh each morning are worth setting an alarm for. Yours for £4 a pop.

The commitment to local sourcing shows in every detail – bread and pastries come from Dartmouth bakers, the orange juice is squeezed fresh before your eyes, and their house-blend coffee is roasted just down the road. The heaters crank into gear on chillier mornings to create something cosy and convivial, while weekend sessions feature local musicians playing jazz, blues, or flamenco – ‘Eat to the Beats’, as they charmingly put it.

For lunch, the kitchen turns out hearty filled baguettes and toasties (from £7.50), alongside seasonal specials that might include West Country chargrilled steaks or burgers. There’s even a full bar serving Dartmouth Gin, Devon Red Cider, and local ales from Salcombe Brewery – though maybe save those for after noon, eh?

Open: Daily 7am-2pm (yes, even Sundays)

Price: Breakfast £7-£14.50, Full English £12, Light bites from £5

Book ahead: Not possible – no reservations taken, expect to queue at peak times

Website: cafealfresco.co.uk

Address: Lower St, Dartmouth TQ6 9AN


Smith Street Deli, Smith Street

Ideal for picnic provisions that elevate any impromptu feast…

A hit among locals and visitors in the know, Smith Street Deli is the kind of place that makes you rethink your carefully laid lunch plans the moment you step inside. This charming delicatessen serves up carefully curated provisions that can transform a simple picnic into something rather special.

The sandwich selection sets a high bar – think fresh Brixham crab with lemon mayo on sourdough (£8.50), or rare roast beef with punchy horseradish that’ll clear your sinuses (£7.50). The deli counter is a treasure trove of locally sourced charcuterie, artisanal cheeses, and preserves that tell the story of Devon’s impressive food scene. Their coffee, from a local roaster, is good quality too, while their salted caramel brownies have achieved near-legendary status among Dartmouth’s sweet-toothed contingent. What’s not to love?

Open: Monday-Saturday 9:30am-4:30pm (Closed Sundays)

Price: Sandwiches £6-£9.50, Deli items from £4

Book ahead: No bookings – counter service only

Facebook: @SmithStreetDeli

Address: Smith St, Dartmouth TQ6 9QR


Kendricks, Duke Street 

Ideal for when you need to be humble and sit down to something other than seafood…

Running strong in the heart of Dartmouth, Kendricks is where to head when you need a break from the town’s marine-focused menus. This family-run spot near the quay, with Hannah leading the front of house and Tom commanding the kitchen, has mastered the art of satisfying those comfort food cravings. It’s actually one of two venues – there’s a sister restaurant in nearby Stoke Fleming – but the Dartmouth original remains the mothership for those seeking global comfort food done properly.

Their house burger is a masterful affair – a handmade 6oz Devon steak patty topped with streaky bacon and Emmental cheese, served with homemade coleslaw and fries that justify the climb back up Dartmouth’s hills. The West Country pork ribs emerge from the kitchen tender and sticky after a slow cook in their house marinade, with a half rack at £17.50 or a whole at £29 for the particularly peckish.

Image via @kendricks.life

The menu roams globally while keeping its feet firmly planted in Devon’s pantry – their steaks (from £26 for an 8oz rump) come from local herds and arrive with mushrooms and confit tomatoes, while the pulled beef chilli shows the kitchen’s knack for the kind of slow-cooking that fills a kitchen with a soothing sense of domesticity. The sizzling chicken fajitas arrive at the table with proper theatre and all the trimmings, and there’s a veggie version too if that’s more your thing.

Early birds should look to their Tuesday to Thursday deal (5:30-6:30pm), where £26 gets you two courses of the same hearty cooking. The bar program holds its own too – think local heroes like Bays Devon Cove and Dartmoor ales alongside a thoughtfully curated wine list. Their cocktails provide the perfect excuse for an aperitif – the Negroni hits all the right bitter-sweet notes, and is priced at under a tenner. A rare find in this economy, we think…

Open: Monday-Saturday 6pm-10pm (Closed Sundays)

Price: Starters £7-£9.50, Mains £17-£32, Early Bird Menu £26 for 2 courses 

Drink: Local ales from £6/pint, cocktails from £6.50 

Book ahead: Recommended, especially at weekends

Website: kendricks.life

Address: 29 Fairfax Pl, Dartmouth TQ6 9AB


Rockfish, South Embankment

Ideal for waterfront fish and chips when you want to keep it simple…

Part of Mitch Tonks’ seafood empire, Rockfish has embraced the simple pleasure of fish and chips without any nods to ‘refinement’ or ‘elevation’, which is just what we need to hear sometimes. Perched on South Embankment with views that’ll have you planning a permanent move to Devon, this is where tradition meets sustainability with impressive results.

The kitchen’s connection to Brixham runs deep – their own boat, Rockfisher, along with the rest of the local fleet, ensures the fish is about as fresh as you can get without catching it yourself. The daily menu changes based on the morning’s catch, with your server marking each available species directly on your tablecloth – a nice touch that lets you track your way through Devon’s marine bounty. Or, at the least, a flourish of truly fantastic marketing.

Their fish and chips set a high standard, and are priced at something of a premium accordingly – prime Brixham hake (£20.95) or line-caught Icelandic haddock (£23.95) comes in a crisp, light batter, accompanied by unlimited chips cut from their own dedicated potato crop. It’s not all deep fried; the kitchen shows its range with dishes like chargrilled sea bream with Greek island salad, too.

For the full experience, start with Portland pearl oysters (£9.95 for three) or their excellent salt and pepper Brixham ‘calamari’, then work your way up to the fritto misto – a mixed fry that shows exactly why Tonks has built such a reputation in these parts. There’s even a selection of tinned seafood available, which has been caught, processed and boxed by the Tonks team. 

The wine list is well-considered, ranging from a crisp Folle Blanche (£5.50 for a 175ml glass) to serious bottles like Pouilly Fuissé (£56). There’s local beer too, naturally. The outdoor terrace, when the weather plays nice, offers the kind of setting that makes even a simple glass of Prosecco feel like a special occasion.

Open: Tuesday-Saturday 12-9pm, Sunday 12-5pm (Closed Mondays)

Price: Fish and chips from £19.95, Specialty seafood dishes £19-£24

Wine: By the glass from £5.50, bottles from £26

Book ahead: Essential for indoor tables, no bookings for the terrace

Website: therockfish.co.uk

Address: 8 S Embankment, Dartmouth TQ6 9BH

A final note: Dartmouth gets seriously busy in summer, so book ahead for anywhere you’ve got your heart set on. And if you’re visiting during the Dartmouth Food Festival in October, prepare for the town to buzz with foodie events, tastings, and demonstrations. It’s worth braving the crowds for – just pack your stretchy trousers.

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