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Highest-rated steak restaurants in the Flagstaff area by diners
Highest-rated steak restaurants in the Flagstaff area by diners
The French have their bistros. The English have their pubs. And the Americans have their steakhouses.
Going out for a steak has been a pivotal part of American culture for more than a century, but it wasn't always considered a high-class, expensive meal. In New York City in the 1800s, working-class folks would down pints of ale and feast on slices of beefsteak (usually without utensils and atop white or French bread) for celebratory meals. Sometimes, the "beefsteak banquet," as it was known, would be put on as a political fundraiser.
Soon, fine-dining establishments opened up to take those steak dinners up a notch, like Delmonico's in 1837, Old Homestead Steakhouse in 1868, and Carl Luger's Café, Billiards and Bowling Alley (now Peter Luger) in 1887. One thing has remained the same though: Dining at a steakhouse is still synonymous with celebration. It's the kind of meal used to mark milestone moments on the path to the American dream—get a job, buy a house, go out for steak.
The steakhouse experience has certainly modernized from the days of eating beef with your hands and slugging beers. Ordering a steak involves choosing the best cuts, like rib-eye, filet mignon, and New York strip. Then there are the starters—a shrimp cocktail, oysters Rockefeller, or a classic house salad with your choice of dressing. And of course, you can't forget all of the accoutrements—the potato (baked, mashed, or au gratin?), the vegetable (creamed spinach, sautéed asparagus, or roasted broccoli?), and a slice of classic New York cheesecake to finish it off.
More than a century after the steak dinner got upgraded in New York City, chain steakhouses started bringing this central part of the American culinary tradition cross-country in the 1980s and '90s with spots like Texas Roadhouse, LongHorn Steakhouse, Outback Steakhouse, and The Capital Grille. Today, with so many steakhouses to choose from, it takes high-quality service, top-of-the-line cooking, and of course, the best cuts of beef to stand out from the rest.
How will you choose where to live out this iconic American meal? To help, Stacker compiled a list of the highest-rated steakhouses in the Flagstaff area, according to diners' reviews on Yelp as of February 2025. Restaurants tagged as "steakhouses" on Yelp within a 10-kilometer radius of Flagstaff were included. As a result, some restaurants featured may primarily serve other food items. Only restaurants with at least 20 reviews were considered.
#6. Black Bart's RV Park
- Rating: 2.6/5 (77 reviews)
- Price level: $$
- Address: 2760 East Butler Ave. Flagstaff, Arizona
- Categories: Campgrounds, Steakhouses
- Read more on Yelp
#5. Sizzler
- Rating: 2.7/5 (226 reviews)
- Price level: $$
- Address: 2105 South Milton Road Flagstaff, Arizona
- Categories: Seafood, Steakhouses, American
- Read more on Yelp
#4. Texas Roadhouse
- Rating: 3.0/5 (412 reviews)
- Price level: $$
- Address: 2201 East Route 66 Flagstaff, Arizona
- Categories: Steakhouses, Barbecue, American
- Read more on Yelp
#3. Outback Steakhouse
- Rating: 3.2/5 (319 reviews)
- Price level: $$
- Address: 2600 East Lucky Lane Flagstaff, Arizona
- Categories: Steakhouses
- Read more on Yelp
#2. 1899 Bar & Grill
- Rating: 3.4/5 (223 reviews)
- Price level: $$
- Address: 307 West Dupont Ave. Flagstaff, Arizona
- Categories: Bars, New American, Steakhouses
- Read more on Yelp
#1. Black Bart's Steakhouse
- Rating: 3.9/5 (820 reviews)
- Price level: $$$
- Address: 2760 East Butler Ave. Flagstaff, Arizona
- Categories: Steakhouses, American, Seafood
- Read more on Yelp
This story features data reporting by Wade Zhou, writing by Kiersten Hickman, and is part of a series utilizing data automation across 302 metros.