Don Julio






Don Julio holds a Michelin star and a top-ten World's 50 Best ranking, placing it at the apex of Buenos Aires' parrilla tradition. Booking two months ahead is standard; walk-in queues form close to opening time. The wine cellar runs to 60,000 bottles, and the beef — Aberdeen Angus and Hereford, dry-aged in-house — is sourced from the restaurant's own regenerative farm outside the city.

Getting a Table at Don Julio: What to Know Before You Try
The corner of Guatemala and Gurruchaga in Palermo is one of the most competed-for dining addresses in South America. On any given evening, a queue forms outside Don Julio well before service begins, made up of travellers who either missed the booking window or are testing their luck. That queue is not incidental — it is part of the establishment's social contract, managed with sparkling wine and hot mini empanadas dispensed to waiting guests. It is a small but telling detail: the hospitality starts before you sit down.
The reservation picture is direct by the numbers but demanding in practice. Booking two months in advance is the working norm for anyone who wants a guaranteed table. Don Julio holds a Michelin star (awarded in both 2024 and 2025), ranks in the leading ten of the World's 50 Best Restaurants — reaching number ten in 2024 after climbing from number 34 in 2019 , and placed fourth in the Opinionated About Dining South America rankings in 2025. That trajectory of recognition has made it one of the hardest bookings in the city, sitting in a different demand tier from comparably priced peers like La Brigada or La Cabrera.
For those without a reservation, the practical advice is to arrive close to the 11:30 am lunch opening or just before the 7 pm dinner service begins. The restaurant runs split sessions seven days a week, closing between 4 pm and 7 pm. Both sittings draw queues, but the lunch service tends to be marginally less competitive than prime dinner hours on weekends.
The Fire and the Room
Entering Don Julio, the first thing that registers is not the décor but the grill. The open wood fire sits at the centre of the room's logic, and executive chef Guido Tassi's team works across a bespoke multi-level wood grill that allows different heat zones for different cuts. The smell of wood smoke and rendering fat is immediate. The walls around the dining room are lined with wine bottles carrying handwritten messages from previous guests, an accumulation of years rather than a designed feature, forming something closer to a guest book rendered in glass and label.
The space runs across two floors. Downstairs, the energy clusters around the grill and the open kitchen; upstairs is quieter, marginally more composed. Neither floor is formal in the conventional sense , the Buenos Aires parrilla tradition does not demand it , but service is considered and knowledgeable, particularly around the wine list.
The Beef: From Farm to Grill
Argentina's parrilla culture is built on the assumption that good beef, open fire, and sufficient time produce something that requires little intervention. Don Julio operates within that tradition but adds a layer of vertical integration that separates it from most of its peers. The Aberdeen Angus and Hereford cattle are raised on the restaurant's own farm outside Buenos Aires, using regenerative farming practices. Butchering and dry-aging happen in-house, with a standard aging period of 21 days. The adjacent butcher's shop is open to visitors and sits alongside a biodynamic garden that supplies seasonal produce to the kitchen.
That degree of supply-chain control is uncommon even at this price tier in Buenos Aires. It places Don Julio in a different conversation from steakhouses that source from third-party suppliers, however reputable. The cuts available span the standard Argentine repertoire , rib-eye, T-bone, skirt steak , alongside the restaurant's own spiral sausage. The heirloom tomato salad and grilled seasonal vegetables, grown on the farm and finished on the wood fire, are frequently cited alongside the beef as ordering priorities.
For context within the Buenos Aires dining scene, the approach here sits between the traditional parrilla format , where the beef is the whole story , and the produce-driven modern Argentine kitchens represented by places like Aramburu (two Michelin stars) or Trescha. Don Julio is not a tasting-menu restaurant, but its sourcing rigour brings it closer to that world than a standard neighbourhood parrilla.
The Wine Programme
Buenos Aires' leading dining rooms have increasingly treated the wine list as a serious competitive variable, and Don Julio's cellar is among the most substantial in the country. The 60,000-bottle collection is organised to cover Argentina's producing regions comprehensively, with depth in Malbec and Torrontés alongside less common varieties. Owner Pablo Rivero oversees the wine programme directly, and it is curated to pair with the specific flavour profile of wood-grilled, dry-aged beef rather than as a general fine-wine collection. A tour of the cellar is available and worth factoring into the visit.
The wine programme is one of the signals that places Don Julio in a peer group that extends beyond Argentina. The La Liste ranking (89 points in 2025, 83 points in 2026) reflects a scoring methodology that weights service and wine alongside food, which explains why the cellar and its curation register as a distinct differentiator. For comparison, Crizia and other Buenos Aires contemporaries operate wine programmes of genuine quality, but none at this scale or depth of Argentine regional coverage.
Those interested in exploring Argentina's wine culture beyond Buenos Aires will find relevant context in Azafrán in Mendoza, Siete Fuegos in Mendoza, and Cavas Wine Lodge in Alto Agrelo, each of which approaches Argentine terroir from a different angle.
Where Don Julio Sits in the Buenos Aires Parrilla Hierarchy
Buenos Aires' steakhouse market spans an unusually wide range. At the lower end, neighbourhood parrillas operate with modest price points and no reservation system. In the mid-range, places like La Carniceria ($$ price tier) and El Preferido de Palermo ($$ price tier) offer serious cooking without the international profile. At the leading, a small number of restaurants have accumulated the kind of sustained global recognition that attracts a significant proportion of international visitors alongside the local clientele.
Don Julio operates at the apex of that structure by most measurable indicators: price ($$$$), award count, reservation difficulty, and supply-chain investment. Its closest Buenos Aires competitors in the international-profile steakhouse tier are limited; Elena ($$$, South American steakhouse) sits at a different price point and draws a slightly different crowd. The gap between Don Julio's World's 50 Best position and that of most of its Palermo neighbours is substantial.
For visitors building a wider Argentina itinerary, the parrilla tradition extends well beyond Buenos Aires. La Bamba de Areco in San Antonio de Areco offers a gaucho-country context, while El Colibri in Santa Catalina and EOLO in El Calafate place Argentine beef in dramatically different landscapes. The Argentine steakhouse tradition has also travelled internationally: Kutral por Martin Abramzon in Ronda is one example of the format transplanted to Europe. And for those whose Argentina trip includes the north, Awasi Iguazu in Puerto Iguazu offers a high-end dining reference point in a very different regional context.
Planning the Visit
Don Julio is located at Guatemala 4699 in Palermo, accessible on foot from most of the neighbourhood's hotels and well-served by rideshare from elsewhere in the city. The price tier ($$$$) places it at the higher end of Buenos Aires dining; given the exchange rate dynamics that have historically made Argentina competitive for international visitors, actual expenditure will depend on prevailing conditions at time of visit.
The full experience , cellar tour, butcher's shop, the biodynamic garden square , takes longer than a standard dinner service, so building time into the evening is advisable. The restaurant opens daily for lunch from 11:30 am to 4 pm and for dinner from 7 pm to 1 am. The late closing means Don Julio can absorb Buenos Aires' characteristically late dining culture without pressure.
For further context on where Don Julio sits within the wider city offering, see our full Buenos Aires restaurants guide, alongside our guides to Buenos Aires hotels, Buenos Aires bars, Buenos Aires wineries, and Buenos Aires experiences.
What People Recommend at Don Julio
The cuts most frequently referenced by diners and critics are the skirt steak (a house favourite in the Argentine parrilla canon), the rib-eye, and the T-bone , all sourced from the restaurant's own Aberdeen Angus and Hereford cattle, dry-aged for 21 days in-house. The spiral sausage is regularly cited as a starting point. On the vegetable side, the heirloom tomato salad and grilled seasonal produce from the farm are treated as ordering priorities rather than supporting dishes. The wine list, curated by owner Pablo Rivero and covering 60,000 bottles across Argentine regions, draws specific mention from those who engage with it seriously. Don Julio holds a Michelin star (2024 and 2025) and ranked tenth in the World's 50 Best Restaurants in 2024 , credentials that align with the kitchen's direction under executive chef Guido Tassi, whose focus is on butchery precision and the specific qualities that wood-fire aging brings to beef.
Price Lens
A quick peer reference to anchor this venue in its category.
| Venue | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Don Julio | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star | This venue |
| Aramburu | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Star | Modern Argentinian, Creative, $$$$ |
| El Preferido de Palermo | $$ | World's 50 Best | Argentinian, Traditional Cuisine, $$ |
| Elena | $$$ | South American, Steakhouse, $$$ | |
| La Carniceria | $$ | Argentinian Steakhouse, Meats and Grills, $$ | |
| Mishiguene | $$$ | Argentinian - Jewish, Israeli, $$$ |
Need a table?
Our members enjoy priority alerts and concierge-led booking support for the world's most difficult tables.
Get Exclusive Access