14 Best Restaurants in Palm Springs and the Desert Resorts, California

Cheeky's

$ Fodor's choice

The flavored bacon flight, hangover-halting Bloody Marys, and the rest of the self-described "quirky comfort cuisine" have attracted legions to this casual breakfast and lunch joint for more than a decade, which results in epic waits on weekends (no reservations accepted for groups smaller than 10). Once seated, the well-oiled service machine is fast and furious—just pray the homemade cinnamon roll-croissant hybrids haven't sold out yet. For lunch, in addition to the morning all-star dishes, you can nosh on globally and seasonally influenced soups, sandwiches, and salads.

Tyler's Burgers

$ Fodor's choice

Since 1996, families, working stiffs, and couples have trusted Tyler's to supply simple lunch fare in a convenient downtown location, one that happens to be housed in a converted 1936 gas station. Expect mid-20th-century America's greatest hits: heaping burgers, hot dogs, tuna melts, stacks of fries, grilled cheeses, floats, and milk shakes.

149 S. Indian Canyon Dr., Palm Springs, California, 92262, USA
760-325–2990
Known For
  • house-made cole slaw and potato salad
  • feeding carnivores and vegetarians alike
  • long weekend waits
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and July and Aug.

Workshop Kitchen + Bar

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Chef Michael Beckman's Uptown Design District hot spot pairs high-quality California cuisine and classic and creative cocktails with sleek, utilitarian, concrete-and-leather design inside a repurposed historical theater and outside on a lively patio. Everything is delicious, but this team particularly excels at anything involving duck, from duck fried rice to duck breast with beet and blood orange jus.

800 N. Palm Canyon Dr., Palm Springs, California, 92262, USA
760-459–3451
Known For
  • most ingredients sourced from within a 100-mile radius
  • house-made ice cream and sorbet
  • communal seating options
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No lunch

Recommended Fodor's Video

4 Saints

$$$$

Perched on the seventh-floor rooftop of The Rowan hotel, where stunning mountain and city views unfold from nearly every table, 4 Saints serves modern American farm-to-table dishes in a distinguished dining room crafted from leather, wood, and metal and on the outdoor patio. The menu features hearty, sophisticated steak, seafood, and pasta dishes made with global flair and fresh-daily produce.

100 W. Tahquitz Cyn. Way, Palm Springs, California, 92262, USA
760-392–2020
Known For
  • creative and classic cocktails
  • see-and-be-seen scene
  • attentive service
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues. No lunch

Arnold Palmer's

$$$$

From the photos, trophies, and other memorabilia to a menu filled with The King's favorite dishes like meatloaf and Latrobe banana splits, golf champ and restaurant namesake Arnold Palmer's essence infuses the spacious dining room and pub where families gather for new American cuisine and good times. It does brisk birthday and Sunday dinner business yet the service is always attentive.

78164 Ave. 52, La Quinta, California, 92253, USA
760-771–4653
Known For
  • chopped BLT salad, double-cut pork chops, baked mac and cheese
  • top-notch wine list
  • entertainment most nights
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Reservations essential, Closed Sun. and late May–mid-Sept.

Carlee's Place

$$

Sooner or later most visitors to Borrego Springs wind up at Carlee's Place for a drink and a bite to eat, drawn by an extra-long menu with everything from burgers, salads, and sandwiches to seafood dishes and prime rib. It's an all-American place, where your server might call you "honey" while setting a huge steak in front of you, and fellow diners might play pool and dance to jukebox music.

660 Palm Canyon Dr., Borrego Springs, California, 92004, USA
760-767–3262
Known For
  • down-home atmosphere
  • martinis and classic cocktails
  • everything made from scratch

Copley's on Palm Canyon

$$$

Chef Andrew Manion Copley prepares decadent dishes with flavors and techniques he picked up at past posts in Europe, Australia, and Hawaii in a setting that's straight out of Hollywood—a hacienda once owned by Cary Grant. Dine in the clubby house or in the garden under the stars and with mountain views.

621 N. Palm Canyon Dr., Palm Springs, California, 92262, USA
760-327–9555
Known For
  • romantic patio dining
  • fresh seafood and meats bathed in rich sauces
  • sweet and savory herb ice creams
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed July and Aug. No lunch, Reservations essential

Coyote Steakhouse

$$$

This upscale restaurant at the Palms at Indian Head hotel caters to those who want a fancy dinner, particularly hunks of filet mignon or rack of lamb served at candlelit tables with white tablecloths overlooking the pool. Pet owners will appreciate the canine menu, whose treats include house-made peanut-butter dog cookies.

2220 Hoberg Rd., Borrego Springs, California, 92004, USA
760-767–7788
Known For
  • romantic candlelit dining room
  • pork tenderloin and prime rib
  • classic mid-century setting
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No breakfast or lunch., Reservations essential

Crossroads Cafe

$

Egg dishes, griddle items, and hearty Mexican breakfasts like huevos rancheros are the morning draw at this Joshua Tree institution, but plenty of people sing the praises of its sandwiches, burgers, salads, and tacos for lunch or early dinner. Taxidermy animals, framed newspaper clippings, old photos, and beer-can lights decorate the interior, and tattooed waitresses and the quirky regulars make it clear that the high desert is unlike anywhere else in San Bernardino County.

Eight4Nine Restaurant & Lounge

$$$

No matter what time or day it is, this swanky restaurant in the Uptown Design District buzzes with pals toasting promotions and celebrating birthdays, couples on dates sharing beet carpaccio and oysters, singles mingling in the lounge, and tourists who were lured from the street by the jovial sounds and tantalizing smells wafting out of the polished white (with pops of Barbie pink) rooms and expansive patio. The look may be a little late-'90s, early-aughts Miami, but the menu is pure Pacific Coast with favorites like ahi tuna poke with house-made kimchi, steelhead niçoise salad, mesquite-smoked carne asada, and curried-cauliflower steak.

849 N. Palm Canyon Dr., Palm Springs, California, 92262, USA
760-325–8490
Known For
  • colorful plates made from scratch
  • energetic scene
  • Brandini toffee s'mores fondue will knock your socks off

Spencer's Restaurant

$$$$

The swank steak house and Sunday-brunch stalwart occupies a historic mid-century modern structure in the Palm Springs Tennis Club at the base of the San Jacintos. Between the club connection, ritzy ambience, and selection of old-fashioned fancy food (veal chops, duck, creamed spinach), Spencer's clientele skews toward power lunchers and socialites. If you do find yourself craving crisp-skin whitefish or liver and bacon with raspberry vodka essence, try for a table on the low-lit and dreamy deck.

701 W. Baristo Rd., Palm Springs, California, 92262, USA
760-327–3446
Known For
  • French–Pacific Rim influences
  • loyal waitstaffers who know the menu up and down
  • high prices
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Reservations essential for Sunday brunch and dinner, Closed Tues. and Wed.

The Arches

$$$

On the edge of the Borrego Springs Resort's golf course, set beneath a canopy of grapefruit trees, The Arches is a pleasant place to eat. For breakfast you'll find burritos alongside French toast, omelets, and eggs Benedict; lunch (best enjoyed on the patio) and dinner options include sandwiches and salads, as well as hearty pasta, seafood, grilled meats, and fish entrées.

The Pink Cabana

$$$

The pink-and-green palette, botanical wallpaper, oversize globe pendants, gold trim, tile floor, and velvety banquettes draw the pretty people and those who follow them on social media to this Martyn Lawrence Bullard–designed gem at the Sands Hotel. But it's the Mediterranean-Moroccan cuisine—think lamb tagine or harissa chicken—and punchy drinks that keep them happy and snapping.

Vue Grille and Bar

$$

This not-so-private restaurant at the Indian Wells Golf Resort offers a glimpse of how the country-club set lives. The service is impeccable, outdoor tables provide views of mountain peaks that seem close enough to touch, and happy hour is a lively scene of golfers bragging and griping about their day on the fairways.

44500 Indian Wells La., Indian Wells, California, 92210, USA
760-834–3800
Known For
  • specialty nights like Prime Rib Friday and Sangria Sunday
  • house-roasted chicken daily
  • classed-up comfort food