· The Inside Track · For the Curious Traveler ·

Where Aspen Locals Eat.

The Aspen most travel publications write about is real, but it is not the only Aspen. The town has another half — the kitchens locals book on Tuesday, the lunch counters the hotel staff actually go to, the bars where you might recognize the chef from a marquee restaurant decompressing after his shift. This is that map.

First, an honest disclaimer: "where locals eat" is one of the most overused phrases in travel writing, and most articles that use it are written by people who flew in for the week. We are not going to pretend that locals are some mysterious tribe that avoids every famous restaurant — many of us eat at Cache Cache and White House Tavern with regularity. But there is a different category of restaurant in Aspen — the ones the dishwashers and ski instructors and hotel front-desk staff actually go to on their day off. Those rooms exist. They are not Instagram destinations. They are mostly affordable. They are the answer to a question travelers rarely think to ask.

The list below is organized by what time of day you might be eating. It is not exhaustive. It is curated by people who live and work here, and it leans toward the rooms that meet four criteria: (1) we go regularly, (2) we send our friends there, (3) the bill is not the point of the visit, and (4) you can usually walk in.

The Locals' Breakfast.

· Morning Spots ·
· Where to Start the Day ·

The Locals' Lunch.

· Where the Workday Stops ·

This is where locals diverge most from tourists. The famous lunch rooms — Ajax Tavern, Meat & Cheese — get the visitors. The rooms below get the locals.

· Counter and Casual ·

The Locals' Dinner — Tuesday Through Thursday.

· The Working Week ·

The big-name restaurants book up on Friday and Saturday. The locals tend to eat out earlier in the week, when the rooms are calmer and the kitchen has more attention to give. The rooms below are well-known but rarely written about as "local" destinations.

· Weeknight Locals' Picks ·

The Locals' Bar — After the Shift.

· Where Restaurant Workers Decompress ·
· Industry Hangouts ·

The Off-Menu Orders.

· What Locals Ask For ·

Some dishes that locals order, that visitors often do not:

· At White House Tavern ·
The pastrami sandwich — many regulars rate it above the Honor Burger.
· At Meat & Cheese ·
The Thai chicken salad. Not the obvious order. Quietly the best on the menu.
· At Ajax Tavern ·
Truffle fries at the bar, not at the patio table — they come out faster.
· At Matsuhisa ·
Omakase if budget allows — the chef puts dishes on it that are never on the menu.
· At Hickory House ·
Ribs and corn bread. Skip the trendy items.
· At BUCK ·
The mac & cheese eggrolls. Unusual. Genuinely good.

The Rules of Eating Like a Local.

· Patterns Worth Adopting ·

Eat earlier in the week. Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday are when the rooms are calm and the kitchen has full attention. Friday and Saturday are for tourists; the food is the same but the room feels different.

Sit at the bar. If you are dining solo or as a two-top, the bar at almost any restaurant in this guide is faster, friendlier, and often more interesting than the dining room. You also tend to meet locals there — the people whose job it is to be in the dining room go to the bar on their off-night.

Don't ignore the strip-mall rooms. Some of the best food in the valley is in places that do not look like Aspen — the Bangkok Happy Bowl in a strip plaza, the Phatt Pho off a side street, the Hickory House in a place that looks like every other Western roadside. Aspen's polish can be a distraction.

Tip well, always. Service-economy workers in Aspen commute from downvalley because they cannot afford to live in town. Tip 20% minimum. Tip 25% when service is good. Cash tip if you can.

Greet the staff like people. Restaurant workers in Aspen — bartenders, servers, hosts — see thousands of tourists every season who treat them as functions, not people. The travelers who slow down, ask a question, and listen for the answer are the ones who end up with a real recommendation, a comp drink, or a seat at a booked-up restaurant the next night.

The Aspen most visible to visitors is real, but it is also constructed for visitors. The Aspen below the surface is where the food gets honest, the bills get reasonable, and the conversations get longer. The town is small enough that you can find it in a week — if you stop reading the same five articles every travel publication writes, and start asking the people who work the dining rooms what they actually eat.

The list above is most of what they would tell you.

· Read Next ·

The full 50-restaurant guide.

The institutions, the new openings, and the kitchens locals book on Tuesday — organized by cuisine, with the bar seating notes.

View all restaurants →