Skip to Main Content

UpcomingDrink over $25,000 of Burgundy at La Paulée New York

← Collection
CuisineHot Chicken
Executive ChefDave Kopushyan
LocationLos Angeles, United States
Opinionated About Dining

Dave's Hot Chicken at 131 S Central Ave has climbed Opinionated About Dining's Cheap Eats in North America rankings three consecutive years, reaching #413 in 2025. The Los Angeles original location holds a 4.8 Google rating across nearly a thousand reviews, anchoring a format that took Nashville-style heat and reframed it for the West Coast fast-casual market.

Dave's Hot Chicken restaurant in Los Angeles, United States
About

The Queue Before the Counter

On Central Avenue in downtown Los Angeles, the line forms before the doors open. It moves steadily, which is itself a statement about operational discipline in a city where informal restaurants either master throughput or collapse under their own demand. The physical environment is stripped down: no reservation system, no tableside service, no ambient playlist chosen to signal sophistication. What you get instead is a focused transactional format that has proven, across several years of sustained ranking on Opinionated About Dining's Cheap Eats in North America list, that restraint in concept can produce outsized recognition. The 2025 entry at #413 marks the third consecutive year Dave's Hot Chicken has appeared on that list, moving from Recommended in 2023 to #418 in 2024 before ticking upward again.

Nashville Heat, California Context

Hot chicken as a category traces its roots to Nashville's Prince's Hot Chicken Shack, a decades-old format built around cayenne-laced paste applied to fried chicken, served on white bread with pickle chips. The tradition travelled slowly at first, then all at once. By the mid-2010s, versions were appearing in Los Angeles, Chicago, and across the Pacific in Australia and Japan. What Los Angeles contributed to the format was a culinary infrastructure: a city dense with fine-dining-trained cooks who found the economics of casual formats increasingly compelling, and a food-truck and pop-up culture that lowered the barrier to testing an idea before committing to brick-and-mortar.

Dave's Hot Chicken began as a parking lot pop-up in East Hollywood before formalizing into a restaurant group. That trajectory, from informal test to scaled operation, is a recognizable Los Angeles pattern. Howlin' Ray's followed a similar arc, and the two operations now represent the dominant poles of the LA hot chicken conversation: Howlin' Ray's leaning into the Nashville lineage with a Chinatown location that has its own dedicated following, Dave's moving more aggressively into franchise territory while holding the original Central Ave address as its anchor.

The Evolution: From Parking Lot to OAD List

The editorial angle here is trajectory rather than static description. Few Los Angeles restaurants in any price tier have moved as quickly from informal pop-up to nationally recognized operation. Chef Dave Kopushyan, who holds fine-dining training as a credential, brought technical precision to a format that in lesser hands produces inconsistent fry temperatures and unbalanced heat. The result was a heat-level system that gave customers calibration options, a detail that sounds minor but solves a real problem in the category: hot chicken's intimidation factor keeps casual diners at arm's length. A structured spice ladder democratizes the format without diluting it.

The OAD Cheap Eats ranking is worth contextualizing. Opinionated About Dining is a crowd-sourced survey weighted toward food professionals and frequent diners, which means an entry on the North America Cheap Eats list carries different signal value than a Yelp aggregate. Appearing in three consecutive cycles, with an upward trend from Recommended to a numbered rank, suggests the operation has maintained consistency during a period when many pandemic-era darlings saw quality slip as they scaled. That consistency is the story, not the founding narrative.

For reference on what sits at the other end of Los Angeles's dining register: Providence holds two Michelin stars for its contemporary seafood, Kato works New Taiwanese cuisine at the Michelin one-star level, and Somni operates at the molecular-progressive end of the market. Dave's Hot Chicken competes in a different tier entirely, but the OAD recognition places it in the same critical conversation about where Los Angeles eating is genuinely good rather than merely expensive. Osteria Mozza and the broader Italian-American canon in the city occupy a middle register; the cheap-eats tier is its own distinct category of seriousness.

Where It Sits in the Hot Chicken Map

Nationally, hot chicken has bifurcated into legacy Tennessee operations and newer coastal interpretations. Bolton's Spicy Chicken and Fish in Nashville and Gus's World Famous Chicken in Memphis represent the original southern lineage, where the format is tied to specific regional food culture and decades of institutional memory. West Coast versions, including Dave's, operate without that deep roots claim but compensate with culinary technique and, in some cases, scale that has spread the format to markets that would never have encountered the original.

The comparison is not a criticism. Los Angeles has always processed imported food traditions through its own filter, producing versions that diverge from source material in ways that are sometimes reductive and occasionally generative. The OAD recognition suggests Dave's falls into the latter category: a version of hot chicken that is good on its own terms rather than merely derivative.

Planning a Visit

The Central Avenue location operates seven days a week, with extended hours on Friday and Saturday running to midnight. Weekday hours close at 11 pm. No booking method is listed, which confirms the walk-in format. Peak demand hours at fast-casual operations of this profile typically cluster around lunch and early dinner on weekends; arriving outside those windows reduces wait time without sacrificing quality, since fried chicken formats are less dependent on split-second timing than tasting-menu kitchens.

Quick Comparison: LA Hot Chicken and Peer Cheap-Eats Formats

VenueFormatPrice TierRecognitionBooking
Dave's Hot Chicken (Central Ave)Counter service, fast-casualCheap eatsOAD Cheap Eats #413 (2025), 4.8 Google (960 reviews)Walk-in
Howlin' Ray'sCounter service, fast-casualCheap eatsSeparate OAD recognition, Nashville-lineage focusWalk-in
KatoTasting menu$$$$Michelin 1 StarAdvance reservation
SomniTasting menu, molecular$$$$Michelin 2 StarsAdvance reservation

For a broader orientation to eating and drinking in Los Angeles, see our full Los Angeles restaurants guide, alongside resources for hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences across the city. If the hot chicken format interests you beyond Los Angeles, the southern anchors in Nashville and Memphis provide useful comparative context, as do the tasting-menu operations at Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Alinea in Chicago, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, The French Laundry in Napa, and Le Bernardin in New York for those mapping the full range of American serious eating. Emeril's in New Orleans represents a different register of American regional cuisine that similarly rewards attention.

FAQ

What do people recommend at Dave's Hot Chicken?

Based on the format and the OAD Cheap Eats recognition, the draw is the heat-level system applied to fried chicken, which allows calibration from mild through progressively intense options. The chicken tender and slider formats are the core of the menu across locations. The 4.8 Google rating across close to a thousand reviews at the Central Avenue location reflects consistent execution rather than novelty, suggesting the kitchen maintains quality across high-volume service. Specific dish names and current menu composition are not confirmed in our venue data; for current offerings, check directly with the location at 131 S Central Ave, Los Angeles.

Collector Access

Need a table?

Our members enjoy priority alerts and concierge-led booking support for the world's most difficult tables.

Access the Concierge