Maito


Panama's most internationally recognised restaurant, Maito occupies a firm position on the Latin America's 50 Best list and ranked #9 on Opinionated About Dining's Casual North America list in 2025. Chef Mario Castrellón builds a menu around Panamanian ingredients sourced from indigenous communities, framing traditional cuisine through a contemporary land-and-sea structure. Open Monday through Saturday in Obarrio's Kenex Plaza.

Obarrio and the Address That Defines Panama's Fine Dining Moment
Obarrio sits in the middle band of Panama City's restaurant geography, between the high-rise financial district and the older residential streets to the west. It is not a neighbourhood that announces itself dramatically. The Kenex Plaza building on Calle 59 Este is functional rather than ornate, and arriving on foot or by taxi you pass the usual mix of offices and mid-range eateries that characterise much of the area. What makes the address matter is not the street but what it signals: that Panama's most internationally recognised restaurant chose a neighbourhood setting over a hotel lobby or waterfront promenade. That decision carries an argument about what serious Panamanian cooking should look like and where it should live.
The choice is consistent with a broader pattern visible in Latin America's more confident dining cities. Restaurants in Bogotá, Lima, and Mexico City that have come to define national cuisines for international audiences tend to operate in residential or commercial neighbourhoods rather than tourist-facing zones. The venue's presence in Obarrio places it in that tradition: a restaurant that expects its audience to seek it out rather than stumble across it.
The shortlist, unlocked.
Hard-to-book tables, cellar releases, and concierge-planned trips.
Get Exclusive Access →Where Maito Sits in the International Ranking Picture
The award record here is worth reading carefully because it places the restaurant in two distinct competitive sets simultaneously. The World's 50 Best ranking at number 100 in 2023 positions Maito within a global peer group that includes restaurants like Le Bernardin in New York City, Atomix in New York City, Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María, and Alain Ducasse's Louis XV in Monte Carlo. That is a meaningful credential: entry into the World's 50 Best at any position requires sustained critical attention and a record of consistent performance.
At the same time, the Opinionated About Dining trajectory tells a different story about regional momentum. Ranked 29th in Casual North America in 2024 and climbing to 9th in 2025, the movement is not a single-year anomaly. The 2023 ranking at 19th was the midpoint of a consistent upward arc. OAD rankings are driven by professional diner surveys rather than committee votes, which means the movement reflects accumulating first-hand assessments from frequent travellers and industry figures across multiple visits. A restaurant that moves from 29 to 9 in a single year on that survey is not benefiting from novelty; it is compounding a reputation.
For context, OAD's Casual North America list ranks restaurants from Panama City in the same pool as entries from New Orleans, San Francisco, and major US cities. Reaching the leading ten from Panama is a genuinely unusual outcome, and it frames Maito less as Panama's reference point and more as a restaurant that competes on a continental scale.
The Logic of a Land-and-Sea Menu
Panama's culinary geography makes the land-and-sea menu structure more than a stylistic convention. The country sits at the junction of two oceans, with Pacific and Caribbean coastlines that produce distinct fish and seafood, and interior highland regions with indigenous agricultural traditions that date back centuries. A menu that treats land and sea as separate editorial categories is, in this context, a map of the country rather than a format borrowed from European fine dining.
The sourcing relationship with indigenous communities adds a dimension that positions the restaurant within a wider movement in Latin American cooking. Across the region, the most-discussed restaurants of the past decade have built supply chains that connect urban kitchens to producers who were previously invisible to the fine dining circuit. The approach at Maito, sourcing sustainable products from those communities, places it in that cohort, which includes restaurants like international destinations known for local sourcing philosophy and European counterparts like Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen that have formalised producer relationships as a core identity statement.
Chef Mario Castrellón's role here is less that of a technician working within an established tradition and more that of a translator: taking ingredients and preparations rooted in Panamanian domestic cooking and presenting them through a format legible to international restaurant audiences. That translation work is what the awards record reflects. The Google rating of 4.7 across 1,147 reviews suggests the restaurant holds that position across a broad audience, not only among the professional diners who drive the OAD rankings.
Panama City's Dining Scene and Maito's Position Within It
Panama City's restaurant scene is more varied than most visitors expect. The city's role as a transit hub and financial centre has produced a cosmopolitan dining culture that includes strong Japanese representation, with venues like Umi Restaurante Bar Izakaya operating at a serious level, alongside seafood specialists like Caleta and casual Panamanian cooking at places like Fonda Lo Que Hay and La Tapa Del Coco. Cocktail culture has its own circuit, with venues like Cantina del Tigre representing the more spirited end of the market.
Within that picture, Maito occupies a specific position: the address that places Panama City in international conversation. That function is not simply about prestige. It means the restaurant operates under a different set of expectations than its peers. Visiting food professionals and serious travellers arrive with a benchmark already set by the rankings. The practical consequence is that the restaurant must perform consistently across a wider range of diners than a purely local institution would face.
For first-time visitors to Panama City who want to understand the city's food culture at its most considered level, Maito is the logical first reference. For those who have already explored the broader scene through our full Panama City restaurants guide, it functions as the point against which other experiences are measured. The city's hotel, bar, and experience circuit is worth mapping alongside: see our full Panama City hotels guide, full Panama City bars guide, full Panama City wineries guide, and full Panama City experiences guide.
Planning Your Visit
Maito is open Monday through Saturday from noon to 10 pm and is closed on Sundays. The lunchtime opening from midday makes it one of the few restaurants at this level in the city that operates a full afternoon service, which is worth noting if you are building an itinerary around the restaurant rather than fitting it into an existing evening schedule. Obarrio is accessible by taxi from most of the city's hotel districts, and the Kenex Plaza address on Calle 59 Este is well known enough to give directly to a driver. Booking in advance is advisable given the restaurant's ranking profile; the OAD position in the leading ten for casual North America means international visitors are actively targeting the address, and weekend evenings in particular will fill.
What Should I Eat at Maito?
The menu is structured around a land-and-sea division that reflects Panama's dual coastline and interior highland ingredients. The kitchen draws on sustainable products sourced from indigenous communities, and the dishes translate traditional Panamanian preparations into a contemporary format. Given that structure, the most direct approach is to follow the menu's own logic: treat the sea section as the entry point for Panama's Pacific and Caribbean coastal flavours, and the land section as the route into the country's agricultural interior. Chef Mario Castrellón has built the restaurant's awards record, including appearances on the Latin America's 50 Best list and the World's 50 Best at number 100 in 2023, on exactly that framework. The colourful, ingredient-driven presentations the kitchen is known for are most fully experienced across multiple courses rather than a single dish, which makes a longer sitting the more considered choice if your schedule allows.
Where the Accolades Land
A quick look at comparable venues, using the data we have on file.
| Venue | Awards | Cuisine | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Maito | Opinionated About Dining Casual in North America Ranked #9 (2025); Panama's… | Panamanian | This venue |
| Cantina del Tigre | |||
| Umi Restaurante Bar Izakaya | World's 50 Best | ||
| Caleta | |||
| Fonda Lo Que Hay | |||
| La Tapa Del Coco |
Need a table?
Our members enjoy priority alerts and concierge-led booking support for the world's most difficult tables.
Get Exclusive AccessThe shortlist, unlocked.
Hard-to-book tables, cellar releases, and concierge-planned trips.
Get Exclusive Access →