Dick's Drive-In
Dick's Drive-In on Broadway has been feeding Capitol Hill since 1954, operating as one of Seattle's most durable fast-food institutions. The menu is deliberately narrow, burgers, fries, hand-dipped milkshakes, and the format has barely shifted in seven decades. For a city increasingly defined by its tasting-menu ambitions, Dick's functions as a useful counterpoint.
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- Address
- 115 Broadway E, Seattle, WA 98102
- Phone
- +1 206 323 1300
- Website
- ddir.com

Where Capitol Hill Meets the Counter
Broadway East on Capitol Hill runs through one of Seattle's most densely layered neighborhoods: record shops beside ramen counters, coffee roasters across from vintage clothing. In that context, Dick's Drive-In occupies a particular position. The building is low and lit with the kind of fluorescent brightness that makes no attempt at atmosphere, and that absence of pretension is precisely the point. The queue forms outside, moves quickly, and ends at a walk-up window. There are no reservations, no printed wine lists, and no tasting menus. The contrast with Seattle's more ambitious dining tier defines what Dick's is.
The Format and What It Tells You About Seattle
American cities tend to produce a few fast-food institutions that outlast their category peers by refusing to scale. Dick's, which has been operating across a small number of Seattle locations, belongs to that cohort. Where national chains expanded into hundreds or thousands of units, Dick's stayed regional, stayed simple, and stayed cheap. The menu discipline is almost editorial: burgers, fries, and hand-dipped shakes. No seasonal specials, no limited-edition collaborations, no third-wave ingredient sourcing. The menu's resistance to trend is its whole identity.
Seattle's dining culture has, in the decades since 1954, developed in directions that Dick's actively ignores. The city now supports serious tasting-menu destinations like Canlis, boundary-pushing Asian-American cooking at Joule, and a broader range of ambitious independent restaurants covered in our full Seattle restaurants guide. Dick's doesn't compete in that space. It operates in a completely different register, one defined by immediacy, affordability, and institutional familiarity rather than technique or sourcing.
On the Question of a Wine List
There is no wine list at Dick's Drive-In. There is no sommelier, no cellar, no curation philosophy to assess. The beverage program begins and ends with milkshakes, fountain drinks, and the implicit understanding that nobody arriving at this particular walk-up window is expecting a Burgundy recommendation. The dining experiences that require the deepest cellar thinking, venues like Le Bernardin in New York City, The French Laundry in Napa, or Smyth in Chicago, exist in a different tier of expectation entirely. So do West Coast destination restaurants like Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, Providence in Los Angeles, and Addison in San Diego, all of which maintain wine programs that rival their kitchen ambitions.
Dick's inverts every assumption those venues are built on. That is not a criticism. It is a categorisation. A reader planning an evening that requires cellar depth, sommelier dialogue, and wine-to-course pairing should look elsewhere. A reader who wants a cold shake and a hot burger at 11pm on Capitol Hill has found the right address.
How It Compares in Practice
The fast-food category in the United States has split over the past two decades between national chains competing on scale and price, and a smaller segment of regional independents that trade on local loyalty and menu consistency. Dick's sits in the latter group. Its reputation is Seattle-specific, which places it among long-running regional institutions rather than the fine-dining independents that define the city's critical conversation.
Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Blue Hill at Stone Barns in Tarrytown, Emeril's in New Orleans, and The Inn at Little Washington represent the kind of destination dining that Dick's exists entirely apart from. The gap is even wider: Atomix in New York City and Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler in Brunico are operating in a register that shares almost nothing with a walk-up burger window except the fact that people queue for both.
Planning Your Visit
| Venue | Format | Booking Required | Price Tier | Wine Program |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dick's Drive-In (Broadway) | Walk-up window, fast food | No | Low | None |
| Canlis | Sit-down, full service | Yes, advance required | High | Extensive |
| Joule | Sit-down, full service | Recommended | Mid-High | Curated |
| 1415 1st Ave | Sit-down | Recommended | Mid | Available |
| 1744 NW Market St | Sit-down | Recommended | Mid | Available |
| 2963 4th Ave S | Sit-down | Recommended | Mid | Available |
Dick's Broadway location is at 115 Broadway E, Seattle, WA 98102. The format is walk-in friendly.
At-a-Glance Comparison
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dick's Drive-InThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Classic American Fast Food Burgers | $ | , | |
| Linda's Tavern | American Dive Bar | $ | , | Pike/Pine |
| Brave Horse Tavern | American Gastropub | $$ | , | South Lake Union |
| Currant Bistro | American Gastropub Bistro | $$ | , | Denny Triangle |
| Emma's BBQ | Southern Barbecue | $$ | , | Columbia City |
| Lil Woody's Capitol Hill | Seattle Burger Joint | $$ | , | Pike/Pine |
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Retro mid-1900s drive-in atmosphere with no tables or chairs, designed for quick takeout or standing counter eating under nostalgic signage.



















