Dan Tana’s

Dan Tana's on Santa Monica Boulevard has anchored West Hollywood's Italian dining scene since the 1960s, drawing a loyal crowd of industry regulars who return less for novelty and more for consistency. Ranked by Opinionated About Dining in 2024, it occupies a specific tier of LA Italian: red-booth, no-apology comfort cooking that has outlasted a generation of trendier rivals.

The Room Before the Food
Walk into Dan Tana's after 7pm on any night of the week and the first thing you register is noise — productive noise, the kind that signals a room operating at full capacity by design rather than accident. Red leather booths line the walls. Chianti bottles dangle from the ceiling in the manner of a thousand Italian-American joints, except here the gesture reads as institutional rather than decorative. The room is small, the tables close, and the lighting low enough to flatten the difference between a Tuesday and a Saturday. This physical environment is not an accident of age — it is the entire argument. Dan Tana's at 9071 Santa Monica Boulevard has been making that argument since the 1960s, and the crowd that files in nightly between 5pm and 11pm is largely composed of people who already agreed with it years ago.
What Keeps Regulars Returning
The regulars' economy at a place like this operates on terms that are rarely explained to first-timers. The staff know the room. Return visits tend to get better seats, faster acknowledgment, and occasionally the sense that the kitchen is paying attention. For LA's entertainment industry, which has fed at these booths for decades, Dan Tana's functions less as a restaurant than as a standing appointment , a place where a deal or a conversation can happen in a setting that exerts no competitive pressure on the participants. The décor does not demand to be photographed. The menu does not require interpretation. The food arrives at a pace that accommodates conversation rather than interrupting it.
This is a different proposition from the Italian dining that has defined LA's more recent ambitions. Osteria Mozza brought Italian regionalism and serious wine programming to the city in the late 2000s. Angelini Osteria operates on the authority of classical Roman technique. Antico Nuovo and Bestia represent the industrial-chic, ingredient-forward generation that followed. Dan Tana's does not compete with any of them on those terms. It competes on tenure, familiarity, and the specific comfort that comes from a room that has not tried to reinvent itself.
The Italian-American Tradition It Belongs To
Italian-American cooking in the United States split some time ago into two broad streams: the white-tablecloth adaptation that pursued European regionalism and fine-dining credibility, and the older, less self-conscious tradition of red-sauce hospitality that predates the distinction entirely. Dan Tana's belongs to the second stream, but without the defensiveness that sometimes accompanies that positioning. The kitchen, under Chef Neno Mladenovic, does not frame itself against the trends around it. Veal, pasta, chicken prepared in ways that have been on the menu for decades , these are not revival items or nostalgic footnotes. They are the menu.
That approach has its own critical standing. Opinionated About Dining, which applies a data-driven methodology to casual dining across North America, ranked Dan Tana's at number 751 in its 2024 Casual North America list, following a Recommended designation in 2023. OAD's casual list aggregates assessments from a network of experienced diners rather than professional critics operating in isolation, which means a ranking there reflects sustained appreciation from repeat visitors over time , exactly the audience Dan Tana's has always served. A Google aggregate of 4.3 across 919 reviews reinforces the same point: this is not a place that generates polarized reactions. It generates consistent ones.
West Hollywood and Its Dining Character
West Hollywood's dining strip along Santa Monica Boulevard has absorbed a great deal of turnover over the decades. Concepts open with press attention and close within two years. Dan Tana's has watched this cycle from the same address across multiple restaurant generations. The neighborhood now holds a mix of industry-adjacent hotels, bar-forward venues, and newer chef-driven formats that pull from the same professional crowd that has always populated the area after dark. For anyone mapping LA's Italian options across the city, Bianca represents the more contemporary end of the spectrum; Dan Tana's sits at the other, where continuity is the credential.
The broader LA dining scene has spent the past decade accruing serious fine-dining infrastructure, with venues like Kato, Hayato, Vespertine, and Camphor building a Michelin-recognized tier that puts the city in conversation with Le Bernardin in New York City, Alinea in Chicago, and The French Laundry in Napa. Dan Tana's occupies none of that tier, and does not attempt to. Its peer set is restaurants that have survived long enough to become irreplaceable fixtures rather than options , venues like Emeril's in New Orleans, which carries its own weight of institutional memory regardless of critical fashion.
Italian cooking that has moved across borders and taken root in new cities tends to evolve toward local conditions over time. In Tokyo, you find Italian discipline applied to Japanese produce, as at cenci in Kyoto. In Hong Kong, the format reaches toward spectacle, as at 8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana. What Italian-American cooking preserved in the United States is something different: the original hospitality logic of feeding people generously in a room designed to make them comfortable. Dan Tana's is an unmodified example of that logic, operating in a city that has tried most other approaches.
Planning Your Visit
Dan Tana's opens at 5pm seven days a week and closes at 11pm. The address is 9071 Santa Monica Boulevard, West Hollywood. The room fills quickly, and the peak window from around 7pm to 9:30pm reflects the entertainment industry's working schedule. Arriving earlier or later than that window gives you a materially different experience of the space. For anyone building a broader West Hollywood or Los Angeles evening, the full range of options appears in our full Los Angeles restaurants guide, our full Los Angeles bars guide, our full Los Angeles hotels guide, our full Los Angeles wineries guide, and our full Los Angeles experiences guide. For alternative Italian formats in the city, Lazy Bear in San Francisco and Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg offer useful comparison points for how the northern California fine-dining model differs from the LA hospitality tradition.
Know Before You Go
- Address: 9071 Santa Monica Blvd, West Hollywood, CA 90069
- Hours: Monday to Sunday, 5pm to 11pm
- Chef: Neno Mladenovic
- Cuisine: Italian-American
- Recognition: Opinionated About Dining Casual North America #751 (2024); Recommended (2023)
- Google Rating: 4.3 from 919 reviews
- Booking: Contact details not publicly listed , walk-in or call ahead where possible
- Peak Hours: 7pm to 9:30pm fills fastest; earlier or later sittings are quieter
Frequently Asked Questions
Comparable Spots, Quickly
A short peer set to help you calibrate price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dan Tana’s | Italian | Opinionated About Dining Casual in North America Ranked #751 (2024); Opinionated… | This venue | |
| Kato | New Taiwanese, Asian | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star | New Taiwanese, Asian, $$$$ |
| Hayato | Japanese | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Star | Japanese, $$$$ |
| Vespertine | Progressive, Contemporary | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Star | Progressive, Contemporary, $$$$ |
| Camphor | French-Asian, French | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star | French-Asian, French, $$$$ |
| Gwen | New American, Steakhouse | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star | New American, Steakhouse, $$$$ |
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