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Classic American Burgers
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Seattle, United States

Red Mill Burgers

CuisineHamburgers
Executive ChefJohn & Babe Shepherd
Price≈$15
Dress CodeCasual
ServiceCounter Service
NoiseLively
CapacitySmall
Opinionated About Dining

Red Mill Burgers on North 67th Street has held a place on Opinionated About Dining's Cheap Eats in North America list every year from 2023 through 2025, making it one of Seattle's most consistently recognized burger counters. The Phinney Ridge location operates out of a compact, no-frills space where the focus lands squarely on the food. Closed Mondays, with hours running through the week from Tuesday to Sunday.

Red Mill Burgers restaurant in Seattle, United States
About

A Counter in Phinney Ridge, and What It Says About Seattle's Burger Tradition

The physical approach to Red Mill Burgers on North 67th Street does not suggest ambition. The building is small, the signage is functional, and the interior reads as a burger counter that has never needed to explain itself to anyone. There are no mood boards expressed in the ceiling joinery, no bespoke tile work signaling a chef's aesthetic. What the space communicates instead is a kind of structural honesty: the room exists to move burgers across a counter, and the design, such as it is, follows that logic without compromise. In Seattle's current dining climate, where new openings routinely perform casual while charging fine-dining prices, that lack of pretense carries its own editorial weight.

This is Phinney Ridge, a residential neighborhood north of the urban core, sitting between Fremont and Crown Hill. The neighborhood draws regulars rather than tourists, and Red Mill fits that pattern. Burger operations at this tier in American cities tend to bifurcate: there are chains with engineered consistency, and there are independent counters that earn local loyalty over decades through repetition and quality control. Red Mill, founded by John and Babe Shepherd, occupies the latter category firmly.

Where Red Mill Sits in Seattle's Cheap Eats Hierarchy

Opinionated About Dining, the critic-driven ranking platform that covers fine dining and accessible eating with equal rigor, has included Red Mill in its Cheap Eats in North America rankings three consecutive years: a Recommended placement in 2023, a ranked position at #627 in 2024, and an improved position at #638 in 2025. The directional movement in that ranking reflects sustained attention from evaluators rather than a single-year spike. Across North America, the OAD Cheap Eats list functions as a peer review among serious eaters, and consistent presence on it places Red Mill in a different conversation than local popularity alone would suggest.

That context matters when comparing Red Mill to the broader Seattle restaurant map. The city's prestige dining tier runs through addresses like Canlis and Altura, where tasting menus set the frame of reference. Mid-tier options with serious culinary intent include Joule and Archipelago. Red Mill operates in a separate register entirely, but the OAD recognition connects it to a critical tradition that does not separate cheap from serious. For a broader map of where Seattle eats, our full Seattle restaurants guide covers the city's range across price points and cuisines.

The Physical Container: How the Space Shapes the Experience

American burger counters at this level share a design vocabulary that is worth reading carefully rather than dismissing. The absence of designed atmosphere is itself a design choice: communal seating, minimal surfaces, no table service, and a counter that puts the transaction at the center of the experience. At Red Mill, the compact footprint reinforces the format. You are not meant to linger in the way a full-service restaurant invites lingering. The exchange is fast, the food arrives quickly, and the space does not ask you to stay longer than the meal requires.

That spatial logic shapes how the food is received. Burgers eaten at counters like this carry a different social charge than the same food served on ceramic at a designed restaurant. The room is the context, and the context here is neighborhood institution rather than destination dining. The Google review average of 4.6 across 2,448 ratings confirms a consistency that transcends the initial visit: those numbers reflect repeat customers over time, not a single wave of enthusiasm for a new opening.

For comparison within the burger category, New York's 5 Napkin Burger and 7th Street Burger operate at different price points and with different spatial identities. Red Mill's stripped-back format belongs to a specific American tradition of the owner-operated counter where the physical room is secondary to what arrives in the wrapper.

Ordering at Red Mill: What the Record Shows

The venue database does not list specific menu items, so what follows draws on what the OAD recognition and local reputation imply rather than any specific dish. Burger counters that achieve consistent critical recognition in the Cheap Eats category typically do so through control of fundamentals: bun-to-patty ratio, condiment calibration, and consistency across services. At Red Mill, the Shepherd family operation has built a following that the OAD evaluators have confirmed in three separate years. That kind of sustained recognition in the cheap eats format is harder to sustain than a single peak year, because it requires the same execution at every service, not a few exceptional moments.

Seattle's fast-casual burger options include Dick's Drive-In, which operates at a different price point and at much higher volume across multiple locations. The two represent different ends of Seattle's accessible burger spectrum. Dick's is a chain institution; Red Mill is a single-location counter that has earned critical recognition without scaling. Those are different arguments for different occasions.

Planning a Visit

Red Mill is closed on Mondays. Tuesday through Saturday, the kitchen runs from 11 am to 9 pm. Sunday hours are shorter, noon to 8 pm. The North 67th Street address in Phinney Ridge is accessible from central Seattle but is not walking distance from most hotels or the downtown core; plan for a drive or a bus ride into the residential north. No phone or website is listed in the current record, so walk-in is the operative format.

Families with children will find the counter format functional rather than curated for the purpose. There is no specific children's menu noted in the available data, but the space and format of a burger counter are broadly compatible with families, particularly during off-peak hours mid-week when the space is less pressed.

For those building a full Seattle itinerary around food and drink, our full Seattle bars guide, our full Seattle hotels guide, our full Seattle wineries guide, and our full Seattle experiences guide cover the rest of the city's range. The broader American dining map places Seattle's serious cheap eats alongside recognizable names elsewhere: Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Emeril's in New Orleans, Alinea in Chicago, Le Bernardin in New York City, The French Laundry in Napa, and Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg each define different registers of American dining seriousness. Red Mill's argument is made in a different key, but the OAD recognition places it in a critical conversation those names would recognize.

Signature Dishes
Verde BurgerRed Onion Jam BurgerBleu Cheese and Bacon BurgerBabe's Onion Rings
Frequently asked questions

Comparison Snapshot

A compact comparison to help you place this venue among nearby peers.

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Classic
  • Iconic
  • Casual
Best For
  • Casual Hangout
  • Family
  • Group Dining
  • After Work
Experience
  • Standalone
Dress CodeCasual
Noise LevelLively
CapacitySmall
Service StyleCounter Service
Meal PacingQuick Bite

Casual, nostalgic diner atmosphere with small dining area and high tables; often crowded and bustling with a retro burger-joint feel.

Signature Dishes
Verde BurgerRed Onion Jam BurgerBleu Cheese and Bacon BurgerBabe's Onion Rings