Date Night
The best date night restaurants at the Jacksonville Beaches — Neptune Beach, Atlantic Beach, and Jacksonville Beach. Chef's counter dining, rooftop Japanese overlooking the ocean, and Miami-born Italian with an aperitivo-forward cocktail program. Where to eat when the evening calls for something special by the water.
Doro is a chef-owned, intimate restaurant tucked into Neptune Beach that treats every plate like a composed work. The menu changes with ingredient availability, but expect dishes built around fresh-catch fish, seasonal produce, and techniques that show real kitchen training. For the full experience, request the chef's counter. Watching the kitchen work while you eat turns dinner into a show. This is one of the most talked-about newer restaurants at the Beaches.
O-Ku brings refined Japanese cuisine to Jacksonville Beach with a rooftop setting that overlooks the ocean. The menu spans nigiri, sashimi, makimono rolls, braised short rib, and miso-glazed salmon, all prepared with a focus on sourcing and presentation. The cocktails are as photogenic as the food, and the rooftop vibe is unlike anything else at the Beaches. It works equally well as a full dinner or as a place to share a few rolls and cocktails before a boardwalk walk.
Salumeria 104 brought its Miami-born Italian concept to Atlantic Beach and quickly became a neighborhood favorite. The menu is built around house-made pastas, imported Italian charcuterie, and seafood dishes like perfectly cooked branzino. Start with an Aperol Spritz and a mortadella board, then work through the lasagna Bolognese or the catch of the day. The space seats two comfortably at cozy tables, and the cocktail program leans Italian and aperitivo-forward.
Date Night: Jacksonville
The best date night restaurants across Jacksonville — from rooftop steaks and river views downtown at Cowford Chophouse, to French brasserie and intimate wine bars in Riverside and Five Points, to chef-driven Italian and Napa-style wine dining at St. Johns Town Center. Jacksonville's dining scene covered one neighborhood at a time.
Orsay anchors Jacksonville's Five Points neighborhood with a French brasserie menu, a serious cocktail program, and an atmosphere that manages to be both elegant and approachable. The steak frites, duck confit, and seasonal specials consistently earn it a spot on every local "best of" list. The bar area is worth a visit on its own for pre-dinner drinks, and the location puts you steps from the rest of the Five Points and Riverside scene if you want to extend the evening.
Downtown Jacksonville's premier steakhouse sits in a restored 1902 building on Bay Street. Start with drinks on the rooftop bar overlooking the St. Johns River and the city skyline, then head downstairs for dry-aged cuts, a seafood tower, and one of the best wine lists in the city. The American Wagyu Spinalis with Point Reyes blue cheese butter is one of the most talked-about steaks in Northeast Florida. This is the spot when the occasion calls for something memorable.
Town Hall occupies a cozy corner of Riverside with a wine-forward menu, a well-curated charcuterie board, and a dim, romantic atmosphere that makes it one of the best low-key date spots in Jacksonville. The wine list rotates regularly, and the staff is genuinely knowledgeable about pairings. Small plates are the move here. Share a few, order a bottle, and settle in. It is the kind of place where conversations last longer than you planned.
Led by James Beard Award nominee Chef Tom Gray, Prati Italia brings handmade pastas, Roman-style pizzas, and seasonally inspired entrees to the heart of St. Johns Town Center. Wood ceilings, vintage lighting, and round-tufted leather booths set the mood. The burrata appetizer and scallops are standouts. Happy hour runs Monday through Friday, and the outdoor patio overlooking the Town Center makes for a great warm-weather evening.
Perched on the third floor of the 70,000-square-foot RH design gallery at Town Center, this rooftop restaurant pairs a curated menu of American classics with one of the most visually striking dining rooms in Jacksonville. The space alone makes it worth a visit. The brunch and dinner menus lean toward clean, ingredient-driven dishes. The wine list pulls from respected U.S. and European vintners. It is a "just because" date night spot that feels like a special occasion without needing one.
Cooper's Hawk brings the Napa tasting room experience to Jacksonville's Southside. Start in the wine bar with a tasting flight of their house-crafted wines, then move to the dining room for wood-fired dishes, handcrafted cocktails, and seasonal specials. The monthly wine club selection and the food pairing recommendations from the staff make this a date night that feels curated without being pretentious. The outdoor patio is a solid choice in cooler months.
The best restaurants for a date night on Amelia Island and in downtown Fernandina Beach. From CIA-trained chef-driven fine dining in a restored 1940s home to Spanish courtyard tapas and Southern Creole with a Louisiana twist, this stack covers where to go when the evening calls for something special on the island.
CIA-trained Chef Chad Livingston runs one of Amelia Island's most celebrated kitchens out of a restored 1940s home in downtown Fernandina Beach. The seasonal menu changes regularly, but the approach stays the same: fresh ingredients, creative preparations, and a setting that feels intimate without being stuffy. Three small dining rooms, a magnolia-shaded porch, and a short wine list that actually pairs well with whatever the kitchen is running that night. Reservations fill fast, especially on weekends.
Family-owned since 2004, Espana brings the flavors of Spain and Portugal to downtown Fernandina Beach. Chef Roberto Pestana's menu centers on shareable tapas, just-caught local seafood, and a paella that has become one of the island's signature dishes. The courtyard garden seating is open most weekends and feels like a hidden escape. Pair a pitcher of homemade sangria with the Gambas Mozambique, a spicy shrimp tapa that earned a feature in the LA Times.
Lagniappe is a chef-owned Southern Creole restaurant on the south end of Amelia Island, drawing from the culinary traditions of New Orleans, Charleston, and Savannah. Chef-owner Brian Grimley's menu features Mayport shrimp and grits, chicken-fried oysters, and pecan-crusted rainbow trout. The restaurant's name is a Louisiana French Creole term meaning a little something extra — and the kitchen delivers on that promise. The cocktail bar draws a loyal crowd on its own. Book through OpenTable as far in advance as possible, especially on weekends when tables fill quickly.
Departing from Fernandina Harbor Marina, Amelia River Cruises runs narrated sightseeing tours, eco tours, and sunset cruises to Cumberland Island and along the Amelia River. The captains are local history and wildlife experts who make the narration genuinely interesting for both kids and adults. The 1-hour family-friendly sunset cruise is the easiest entry point, running daily from March through November with departure times that shift with the season. The 2.5-hour Cumberland Island tour goes deeper into the area's Civil War history, wild horses, and dolphin sightings. BYOB is welcome on most cruises.
Amelia Adventures runs a daily sunset cruise from Fernandina Beach that heads down the Amelia River past the historic waterfront and shrimp boats, around Fort Clinch, and across Cumberland Sound to Cumberland Island. The route is timed so you catch wild horses grazing on the dunes as the sun drops behind the horizon. The 30-foot Miss Amelia holds up to 28 guests with a shaded deck and plenty of room to spread out. Private charters are also available for smaller groups or special occasions. This is one of the most talked-about family experiences on Amelia Island.
The Salty Pelican is a vibrant seafood bar and grill located in Amelia Island, offering a diverse menu of fresh seafood dishes and a lively atmosphere. Guests can enjoy outdoor seating with beautiful views, making it a perfect spot for casual dining and social gatherings.