Guadalajara's 5 Best Seafood Spots, Ranked
Top 5

Guadalajara's 5 Best Seafood Spots, Ranked

La Panga del Impostor leads this ranking with aguachile and bone marrow ceviches that rival the coast. Here's the full top 5 for seafood in Guadalajara.

Guadalajara has no coastline. Zero. And yet the city eats mariscos like it sits on the Pacific. Shrimp rolls in from Nayarit, tuna from Baja, octopus from the Gulf coast, oysters from Sonora. A few restaurants turn those ingredients into plates that rival anything in Mazatlán or Puerto Vallarta. My number one is La Panga del Impostor in Col Americana, where the black habanero tuna toast alone is worth the trip. 1. La Panga del Impostor La Panga sits on Calle Miguel Lerdo de Tejada 2189 in Col Americana. It opens at 1pm on weekdays and closes by 6pm. On Fridays and Saturdays it stretches to 7pm, but that's it. When the fish runs out, doors shut. The aguachile here is sharp and bright, with a Sinaloan kick that clears your sinuses. The tostada de pulpo and the black habanero tuna toast are what separate La Panga from every other option on this list. Their ceviches rotate. The bone marrow, served with seafood piled on top, sounds absurd on paper and works perfectly on the plate. Plates run $100-200 pesos, and you pair everything with mezcal because this is Jalisco. At 4.4 stars across more than 1,500 reviews, La Panga isn't a secret. But it is the best. Finish with the lavender ice cream if you want something cold after all that habanero heat. 2. El Arte RESTAURANTE/CAFÉ El Arte is at Calle Maestranza 1 in Zona Centro, right in the historic quarter. The reason it's number two on a seafood list: tacos gobernador. If you haven't had them, these are Sinaloa's greatest contribution to the taco canon, a crispy tortilla stuffed with melted cheese and shrimp. El Arte's version holds up against coastal renditions. This place pulls in over 4,000 reviews at a 4.4 rating, with aztec soup, swiss enchiladas, massive portions, and a view of Centro that makes lingering easy. Open 8am to 11pm daily, plates in the $100-200 peso range. More versatile than La Panga (breakfast here is solid), but for pure seafood depth, La Panga wins. 3. Casa Bariachi Where seafood meets spectacle. Casa Bariachi on Av. Ignacio L Vallarta 2221 in Arcos Vallarta is one of the most-reviewed restaurants in the city, with over 13,000 reviews and a 4.4 rating. Live mariachi and folk dancers perform from 1pm until 3am, seven days a week. The food reason to be here: molcajetes. These volcanic stone mortars arrive at your table still bubbling. In the seafood version, expect a generous pile of mixed mariscos over melted cheese and salsa. Most regulars order the chamorro and the arrachera, but if you ask for the molcajete de mariscos, you eat better than most of them. Casa Bariachi doesn't match El Arte on seafood range, but for atmosphere, nothing on this list comes close. Prices are moderate. Go on a Friday. 4. Almaena Restaurante Almaena in Providencia (Av Providencia 2388, ground floor) is the highest-rated restaurant on this list at 4.8 stars from 778 reviews. It's primarily a brunch spot, and the chilaquiles, barbacoa tacos, enfrijoladas, and carrot waffle are what fill most tables. It doesn't specialize in seafood. But the cooking quality here ranks among the top in all of Guadalajara, and if you're spending a weekend eating mariscos through the city, Almaena is where you start your morning before the seafood spots open at 1pm. Open 8am to 10pm on weekdays, closing at 6pm on Sundays. Plates run $100-200 pesos. 5. Restaurant Café El Gato Café The wildcard. El Gato Café on Calle Francisco I. Madero 833 in Col Americana has robot cat waiters. Real michi robots delivering your food to the table. It's a cat-themed café with over 3,400 reviews, a 4.7 rating, board games at the tables, and a menu of cheesecake, frappes, carbonara pasta, and other comfort food. Is it a seafood restaurant? No. Is it one of the most entertaining dining experiences in Guadalajara, located a 10-minute walk from La Panga? Yes. After your aguachile and tuna toast at La Panga, walk over here for cheesecake and a frappe. If you only try one spot on this list, make it La Panga del Impostor. Get the black habanero tuna toast and a mezcal on the side, and show up at 1pm before the best ceviches disappear.

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Featured Places

La Panga del Impostor

star4.4

Local informal y luminoso dedicado a los mariscos crudos y cocidos, con atención en la barra, cerveza y terraza.

Casa Bariachi

star4.4

Restaurante alegre con comida clásica mexicana, show tradicional de mariachis y varios tipos de tequilas.

Restaurant Café El Gato Café

star4.7

Cafetería agradable con muchas plantas que ofrece pasta a pedido, fiambres, postres y café.

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La Panga del Impostor restaurant in Colonia Americana, GuadalajaraTop 5

The 5 Best Seafood Spots in Guadalajara, Ranked

La Panga del Impostor leads Guadalajara's seafood scene with black habanero tuna toast and aguachile worth crossing the city for.

Guadalajara sits five hours from the Pacific, but the seafood that rolls in from the Nayarit and Sinaloa coasts arrives fresh and fast. The city's dedicated mariscos spots are fewer than what you'd find in Mazatlán or Puerto Vallarta, and that scarcity breeds something interesting: the kitchens that do commit to seafood here cook with fearless creativity. My number one, La Panga del Impostor in Colonia Americana, is the best seafood experience in the city. Not one of the best. The best. 1. La Panga del Impostor (C. Miguel Lerdo de Tejada 2189, Col Americana) operates on its own clock: doors open at 1 PM, close by 6 or 7 PM depending on the day. That is both its greatest strength and its only real weakness. The kitchen cooks what's fresh and stops when it runs out. The aguachile here starts with a slow citrus burn that builds until your whole mouth is alive with heat. Their black habanero tuna toast is the best seafood dish in Guadalajara, period. Raw tuna meets habanero in a way that sounds reckless but lands with total control. The tostada de pulpo and the ceviches are excellent, and then there's the bone marrow, which has no business being this good in a seafood kitchen. Pair it all with mezcal, and finish with the lavender ice cream if you still have room, because nothing about this place is predictable. Plates run $100–200 MXN. With 4.4 stars across more than 1,500 reviews, La Panga earns the top spot because seafood is the only thing it does, and it does it with an intensity that none of the restaurants below can match. 2. El Arte RESTAURANTE/CAFÉ (C. Maestranza 1, Zona Centro) earns the number two spot for one dish: the tacos gobernador. Shrimp-stuffed and cheese-melted, crisped on the griddle until the tortilla cracks when you bite down. That dish was born in Sinaloa and El Arte's version goes toe-to-toe with the coastal originals. The menu here is broad, spanning from chilaquiles and ranchero eggs at breakfast through aztec soup, swiss enchiladas, milkshakes, and crepes all day, with doors open 8 AM to 11 PM, seven days a week. Over 4,000 reviews and a 4.4 rating confirm what regulars already know: this kitchen is consistent. El Arte sits below La Panga because seafood is one chapter of a sprawling menu, while La Panga's entire identity is built on it. The downside is you have to navigate a lot of options to find the seafood. The upside is that those gobernador tacos compete with any I've eaten along the Sinaloa coast. $100–200 MXN. 3. Almaena Restaurante (Av Providencia 2388, Providencia) carries the highest rating on this list at 4.8 stars across close to 800 reviews. This is a breakfast and brunch destination at its core, loved for its chilaquiles, barbacoa tacos, enfrijoladas, and avocado toast, but the kitchen runs with a technical precision that carries through to every plate. The carrot waffle and the prosciutto croissant reveal obsessive attention to craft. Providencia's food-savvy crowd keeps this place packed from morning until close. Open 8 AM to 10 PM on weekdays, Sundays until 6 PM. $100–200 MXN per plate. 4. Casa Bariachi is the most-reviewed restaurant on this entire list, with over 13,000 reviews and a 4.4 rating. This traditional Jalisco restaurant has built its massive following through years of dependable cooking at accessible pricing. 5. Balboa Lopez Cotilla rounds out the top five in the Americana neighborhood with close to 2,000 reviews and 4.3 stars. Both anchor their neighborhoods with the kind of steady, reliable cooking that keeps locals returning week after week. If you eat at one place from this list, make it La Panga del Impostor on a quiet Wednesday afternoon. Order the black habanero tuna toast, the aguachile, a tostada de pulpo, and a cold mezcal. Five hours from the ocean, and this kitchen will make you forget it.

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