Google: 4.5 · 2,987 reviews



Nopa has occupied its corner on Divisadero Street for well over a decade, earning a devoted following among San Francisco's wine and restaurant professionals with a wood-fired, seasonally driven New American menu. Ranked by Opinionated About Dining in both its casual and gourmet casual tiers across consecutive years, it represents the mature, neighbourhood-anchored end of California's farm-to-table tradition.
Pearl is the En Primeur Club membership app — saves, bookings, and concierge access live there. Same editors, same standards.
- Address
- 560 Divisadero St, San Francisco, CA 94117
- Phone
- (415) 864-8643
- Website
- nopasf.com

Divisadero After Dark: What Nopa Says About San Francisco's Neighbourhood Dining Tradition
On Divisadero Street, the shift from daytime foot traffic to evening restaurant culture is one of the more reliable rituals in San Francisco's NoPa district. The corridor runs north through a stretch of Victorian flats and converted storefronts, and by six o'clock the street takes on the particular density of a neighbourhood that eats late and lingers. Nopa, at the corner of 560 Divisadero, sits at the social centre of that rhythm. The interior is cavernous for a neighbourhood restaurant — high ceilings, an open kitchen, and a mezzanine level that lets the room absorb a crowd without collapsing into chaos. The noise level is deliberate, not accidental. This is a space designed to feel like a place people actually want to be, not a backdrop for a tasting menu performance.
The Farm-to-Table Arc, and Where Nopa Sits on It
California's farm-to-table movement has had several distinct phases. The first, associated with Berkeley and the Chez Panisse orbit in the 1970s and 1980s, was ideological: sourcing from local farms was a political and philosophical stance before it was a marketing category. The second phase, through the 1990s and into the 2000s, saw the approach institutionalised across fine dining in the Bay Area, producing a generation of kitchens that treated seasonal sourcing as table stakes rather than a differentiator. The third phase, which Nopa represents alongside a cohort of mid-tier neighbourhood restaurants that opened in the 2000s and 2010s, is about making those same sourcing commitments work at volume and at accessible price points, in rooms where reservations are harder to hold and the crowd is wider.
That third phase is arguably the most consequential for the day-to-day eating culture of a city. Restaurants like Tartine Manufactory and Marlowe occupy adjacent territory: neighbourhood-anchored, ingredient-driven, with menus that rotate with the season rather than the marketing calendar. Nopa has been part of that cohort for over a decade, long enough that its continued Opinionated About Dining recognition across 2023, 2024, and 2025 reads as institutional confirmation of something locals already knew.
Wood Fire as Method, Not Aesthetic
San Francisco's farm-to-table restaurants have tended to split between those that treat sourcing as the headline and those that treat a cooking method as the organising principle. Nopa's wood-fired kitchen belongs to the second camp. In that approach, the fire is not decoration or branding — it is a constraint that shapes what can be cooked and how. Wood-fired cooking rewards ingredients with enough structure and flavour density to hold up to direct heat, which in practice means the menu skews toward proteins, root vegetables, and alliums rather than the more delicate preparations you find at the technique-led end of the San Francisco dining spectrum.
That spectrum's technical apex sits further up the price tier, at places like Lazy Bear, Atelier Crenn, and Benu , all of which command $$$$ pricing and fixed tasting formats. Nopa operates in a different register entirely, one that is less about the orchestrated progression of a tasting menu and more about the kind of cooking that improves through repetition and relationship: relationships with suppliers, with a kitchen crew that stays, with a regular clientele that keeps the room full on Tuesday nights.
The Industry Endorsement Signal
The phrase in Nopa's Opinionated About Dining record , that wine professionals citywide have made it their ritual to unwind there , is a meaningful credential. Restaurant industry workers are a demanding and unsentimental audience. They eat out frequently, spend their working hours in dining rooms, and tend to return only to places that give them something their own restaurants do not: ease, consistency, and a room that does not feel like work. When a restaurant sustains that kind of loyalty for over a decade, it is not by accident. The 4.5 Google rating across nearly 3,000 reviews supports the same reading from a broader audience: this is a place that delivers reliably, at scale, over time.
Chef Laurence Jossel has led the kitchen throughout that run. In the context of the New American category, where kitchens can cycle through concept changes quickly, that continuity is itself a form of editorial statement. The sourcing relationships, the wood-fire discipline, and the neighbourhood positioning have remained consistent even as the city's dining culture has shifted around them.
Nopa in the Wider New American Conversation
New American cuisine as a category spans an enormous range, from the modernist ambition of Alinea in Chicago and the produce-obsessed luxury of The French Laundry in Napa to the ingredient-first farm integration of Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg and the regional American traditions represented by Bayona in New Orleans and The Inn at Little Washington. Nopa sits at the casual-accessible end of that range but shares with its more formal peers a commitment to the idea that sourcing quality and cooking discipline are not reserved for high-expenditure occasions.
Elsewhere on the American dining map, similar positioning is held by Providence in Los Angeles, Emeril's in New Orleans, and Le Bernardin in New York City , though those operate at different price tiers and formats. What they share with Nopa is sustained institutional recognition over time, which in the restaurant world is a harder achievement than a single award cycle.
Planning a Visit
Nopa is open Tuesday through Thursday from 5:30 to 10 pm, Friday and Saturday from 5:30 to 11 pm, Sunday from 5 to 9:30 pm, and Monday from 5:30 to 10 pm. The later Friday and Saturday close reflects the room's function as a late-night gathering point in the neighbourhood. The Divisadero location puts it within reach of public transit and the broader NoPa and Western Addition street grid.
How Nopa Compares to Nearby Peers on Logistics
| Venue | Format | Price Tier | Hours | OAD Recognition |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nopa | Neighbourhood, à la carte, wood-fired | Mid-range | Mon–Sun from 5/5:30 pm | Ranked casual and gourmet casual, 2023–2025 |
| Lazy Bear | Progressive tasting menu | $$$$ | Dinner only, set seatings | OAD top-tier recognition |
| Atelier Crenn | Modern French tasting | $$$$ | Dinner only | Michelin-starred |
| Benu | Franco-Chinese tasting | $$$$ | Dinner only | Michelin-starred |
| Tartine Manufactory | All-day, bakery and restaurant | Mid-range | All-day | Widely editorially recognised |
For a broader view of where Nopa sits in the city's dining ecosystem, see our full San Francisco restaurants guide. The NoPa neighbourhood also rewards exploration across bars, hotels, wineries, and experiences , all covered in EP Club's San Francisco guides.
A Quick Peer Check
A small peer set for context; details vary by what’s recorded in our database.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nopa | New American | Nopa has become a food industry darling at its corner spot in the center of NoPa… | This venue | |
| Lazy Bear | Progressive American, Contemporary | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Star | Progressive American, Contemporary, $$$$ |
| Benu | French - Chinese, Asian | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star | French - Chinese, Asian, $$$$ |
| Atelier Crenn | Modern French, Contemporary | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star | Modern French, Contemporary, $$$$ |
| Quince | Italian, Contemporary | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star | Italian, Contemporary, $$$$ |
| Saison | Progressive American, Californian | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Star | Progressive American, Californian, $$$$ |
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