Seventh Hill Pizza
Seventh Hill Pizza on Capitol Hill has built a neighborhood following on serious wood-fired pies at an accessible price point, operating in a D.C. dining scene more often discussed for its tasting-menu ambitions than its casual staples. For visitors working through the city's broader dining options, it sits at a useful counterpoint to the higher-ticket rooms nearby.
- Address
- 327 7th St SE, Washington, DC 20003
- Phone
- +1 202 544 1911

Capitol Hill's Pizza Counter and the City Around It
Seventh Street SE in Capitol Hill moves at a pace that the rest of Washington rarely matches. The blocks between Eastern Market and the neighborhood's quieter residential stretches carry a low-key confidence: local businesses, foot traffic from the Metro, and a dining culture built around regulars rather than reservation platforms. At 327 7th St SE, Seventh Hill Pizza occupies exactly that register. It is a pizza restaurant in Washington, D.C., priced at about $20 per person, and it is permanently closed. It is not a destination in the sense that Jônt or minibar are destinations, there is no ticketed format, no weeks-long lead time, but that is precisely the point. In a city where the conversation about dining often gravitates toward tasting-menu architecture and Michelin credentialing, the neighborhood pizza counter fills a role those rooms cannot.
The Booking Experience: What to Know Before You Go
Washington's higher-end restaurant tier, the rooms that would sit alongside The French Laundry in Napa or Le Bernardin in New York City in any serious national conversation, demands advance planning measured in weeks, sometimes months. Seventh Hill operates differently. The Capitol Hill crowd it serves tends to arrive without a reservation strategy. That accessibility is itself a statement about where the restaurant sits in D.C.'s dining ecosystem: it absorbs the spontaneous evening, the last-minute group, the visitors who have already checked off the tasting-menu boxes and want something that does not require a calendar reminder. Because precise hours and booking policies are not available, visiting the restaurant directly at their 7th Street SE address is the practical approach before planning around an evening.
The broader context is useful here. D.C.'s Capitol Hill neighborhood does not yet have the dining density of the 14th Street corridor or the concentrated ambition of Penn Quarter, where minibar operates. Eastern Market remains the neighborhood's culinary anchor, weekend mornings at the market set a tone that the surrounding blocks try to match across the rest of the week. Seventh Hill's position on 7th Street places it within that gravitational field, drawing the foot traffic that the market generates and converting it into a more sustained neighborhood pattern.
Pizza in Washington and What It Signals
American cities have spent the past decade sorting their pizza culture into tiers with a seriousness previously reserved for wine. Wood-fired Neapolitan-adjacent pies, sourced-flour programs, fermented dough, and regional American hybrids now compete for the same educated audience. Washington has participated in that shift, though its pizza scene lacks the institutional weight of New York or Chicago and the cult-following intensity of cities like New Haven. What D.C. does have is a customer base with high dining literacy and relatively high disposable income, conditions that support quality-first casual operations without requiring them to inflate into something more formal.
Seventh Hill's approach, based on its Capitol Hill location and neighborhood positioning, fits the pattern of quality-focused casual operators that treat pizza as a serious product without extending that seriousness into ceremony. The comparative reference point within D.C. is useful: the city's more formal dining rooms, Oyster Oyster at the $$$ tier, Albi and Causa operating at $$$$, occupy a different planning calculus entirely. Seventh Hill operates several tiers below that in terms of formality, which means it absorbs the kind of visits that don't fit a tasting-menu evening: early dinners, solo meals, weeknight decisions made at 6pm.
Capitol Hill's Dining Character
Understanding where Seventh Hill sits requires a read of the neighborhood itself. Capitol Hill's restaurant culture is shaped by its residential density and its proximity to federal institutions. The regulars are staffers, Hill workers, longtime residents, and Eastern Market visitors who extend their Saturday into lunch and dinner. It is a demographic that eats out frequently but does not always eat elaborately, which creates durable demand for quality casual operators that would struggle to maintain the same volume on the other side of the city.
That neighborhood character is what distinguishes Capitol Hill from D.C.'s more showcase dining corridors. The city's most-discussed rooms tend to cluster elsewhere: 14th Street, Penn Quarter, Shaw. Capitol Hill's dining identity is quieter and more local-facing. Seventh Hill's address puts it in dialogue with that identity rather than in competition with the high-profile rooms that attract out-of-town attention. For visitors who have already spent time at D.C.'s more ambitious tables, or who are planning to, having a reliable neighborhood option that operates without booking friction is a practical asset, not a consolation.
Planning Your Visit
For those building a D.C. itinerary around dining, Seventh Hill functions as a session-filler rather than an anchor booking, the kind of meal you build the afternoon around rather than the week. Its 7th Street SE location is accessible from Eastern Market Metro station on the Blue, Orange, and Silver lines, which also serves the broader Capitol Hill area. Because hours, pricing, and reservation policies are not confirmed in centralized records, direct contact or an in-person visit to the 327 7th St SE address remains the practical first step.
For reference on the higher end of that range: D.C.'s fine dining tier includes rooms that hold their own against nationally recognized programs like Smyth in Chicago, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Providence in Los Angeles, Addison in San Diego, Blue Hill at Stone Barns in Tarrytown, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, Atomix in New York City, Emeril's in New Orleans, The Inn at Little Washington, and international programs like Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler in Brunico. Seventh Hill occupies none of that territory, and is not trying to. Its value is in the opposite direction: low friction, neighborhood scale, and a Capitol Hill character that the city's more prominent rooms can't replicate.
Same-City Peers
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Seventh Hill PizzaThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Wood-Fired Pizza | $$ | |
| DuPont Italian Kitchen | Classic Italian Trattoria | $$ | Dupont Circle |
| Sette Osteria | Authentic Italian Osteria | $$ | Logan Circle |
| LiLLiES Italian | Farm-Fresh Italian & Mediterranean | $$ | National Zoological Park |
| Pitango Gelato | Authentic Italian Gelato | $$ | East End |
| Capa Tosta | Modern Italian Bistro | $$ | Pleasant Plains |
Continue exploring
More in Washington DC
Restaurants in Washington DC
Browse all →Bars in Washington DC
Browse all →Hotels in Washington DC
Browse all →Wineries in Washington DC
Browse all →At a Glance
- Cozy
- Rustic
- Lively
- Casual Hangout
- Family
- Open Kitchen
- Beer Program
- Local Sourcing
Bright and welcoming space centered around a French stone oven.
















