Google: 4.5 · 753 reviews

Perched above the Caribbean on Barbados's St. James coast, The Cliff holds a rare place in the region's dining history, appearing in the World's 50 Best Restaurants three consecutive years between 2003 and 2005. The seafood-focused kitchen works within a tradition shaped by the island's fishing waters, and the cliffside setting over Derricks Bay puts the source material — the sea itself — directly in view throughout the meal.

Where the Ocean Defines the Plate
The approach to The Cliff along the St. James coast road tells you something about the dining tradition it belongs to. Derricks, the small settlement just north of Holetown, sits in the heart of Barbados's gold coast, where the Caribbean Sea runs close enough to the shoreline that the salt is in the air before you reach the door. The restaurant occupies a natural coral limestone ledge above the water, and the physical relationship between the dining room and the sea below is not incidental. In coastal seafood restaurants of this calibre — compare it to the cliff-facing rooms at venues like Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María, which similarly situates itself inside its source environment — the geography is an editorial statement about provenance. The sea is what you are eating.
Barbados has a working fishing culture that long predates its hospitality industry. Flying fish, mahi-mahi, red snapper, and kingfish move through local boats out of Oistins and the smaller beach landings along the west coast on a daily schedule, and the kitchen at The Cliff operates within that supply chain. For a restaurant in this category , one that placed at number 28 in the World's 50 Best Restaurants in 2004, its highest-ever ranking , proximity to that supply chain is a structural advantage, not a marketing talking point. The catch arriving off Barbados's leeward coast travels shorter distances to the plate than the fish served at almost any peer restaurant operating in a northern hemisphere city.
Three Years Inside the World's 50 Best
Recognition at this level is worth situating carefully. The Cliff appeared in the World's 50 Best Restaurants in 2003 (number 42), 2004 (number 28), and 2005 (number 46). At the time, the list was in its early years and the cohort was different from today's , still weighted toward Europe and North America, with very few Caribbean or Latin American entries. Holding a position inside the top 50 across three consecutive years, and improving from 42 to 28 in a single cycle, placed The Cliff in company with restaurants that were shaping the global conversation about fine dining. For context, the 2004 list included venues now considered reference points in their own right: institutions comparable to Le Bernardin in New York City, Alain Ducasse at Louis XV in Monte Carlo, and Arzak in San Sebastián.
That the Cliff achieved this while operating in a seafood-forward format in the Caribbean , rather than in Paris, Tokyo, or New York , says something about what the judges recognised: a kitchen extracting serious precision from a specific coastal geography. The 4.5 Google rating across 714 reviews reflects a diner base that continues to measure the experience against that legacy rather than simply against other restaurants on the island.
The Catch: Port-to-Plate on the West Coast
The editorial angle that makes the most sense at a restaurant like The Cliff is the one that runs from water to table. Barbados's west coast fishing economy operates on a rhythm that most diners in the room are unaware of. Artisanal fishing vessels working the waters off St. James and St. Peter pull in flying fish and other pelagic species year-round, with some seasonal variation. Flying fish, the national symbol of Barbados and a constant presence in local cooking, is most abundant between December and June. The Caribbean spiny lobster, a different animal from its northern Atlantic counterpart, runs on its own seasonal calendar.
A restaurant sitting at the leading of the island's dining tier has access to the leading of that catch simply by being present in the market. The question is what it does with the material. In serious coastal kitchens , and The Cliff's 50 Best credentials place it squarely in that category , the handling of fresh fish reflects technique as much as sourcing. The gap between a kitchen that simply grills excellent local fish and one that applies genuine precision to texture, temperature, and complementary flavours is where reputation is built. For reference points operating in the same seafood-specialist register, see Scales in Portland and Lobster Landing in Clinton, both of which anchor their identity in sourcing discipline.
The Setting and How to Read It
The physical setting at The Cliff operates on two levels. Practically, a cliffside table above the Caribbean at dusk gives you one of the more memorable backdrops available in the region. But the setting also functions as context for the food. You are not eating fish that has been shipped, stored, and distributed across a supply chain. You are eating fish that was pulled from the water visible below your table within a plausible distance. That compression of geography matters to how the food lands.
St. James is Barbados's premium hospitality corridor. Holetown, a short distance south, is the island's oldest European settlement and now its most concentrated stretch of high-end retail and dining. The Cliff sits just north of that cluster, at Derricks, which keeps it slightly removed from the busier end of the strip. For context on the neighbourhood's dining range, The Lone Star in Mount Standfast operates nearby with a Caribbean-focused menu, and Buzo Osteria Italiana in Bridgetown offers a contrasting Italian register for visitors who want to rotate across cuisines during a longer stay.
For a broader view of what the island offers beyond this stretch, see our full Durants restaurants guide, along with guides to hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences in the area.
Planning Your Visit
The Cliff is located at Derricks, St. James, BB24110, Barbados. Given its position in the island's dining hierarchy and its sustained profile among international visitors, reservations are advisable, particularly during the peak winter season from December through April when the Barbados tourism calendar is at full capacity. The cliffside setting and the dress code expectations that typically apply at restaurants of this standard suggest that this is not a casual drop-in. Visitors planning a stay along the St. James corridor should treat a dinner here as a booking to arrange before arrival rather than on the night.
- Lobster Thermidor
- Mahi with Saffron Risotto
- Coconut Crusted Red Snapper
- Dover Sole
- Oysters
- Banana Soufflé
At-a-Glance Comparison
These are the closest comparables we have in our database for quick context.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Cliff | Seafood Cuisine | World's 50 Best Best Restaurants #46 (2005); World's 50 Best Best Rest… | This venue | |
| The Lone Star | Caribbean | World's 50 Best | Caribbean | |
| Buzo Osteria Italiana |
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- Romantic
- Elegant
- Scenic
- Sophisticated
- Iconic
- Date Night
- Celebration
- Special Occasion
- Anniversary
- Private Event
- Waterfront
- Open Kitchen
- Private Dining
- Panoramic View
- Terrace
- Extensive Wine List
- Craft Cocktails
- Sommelier Led
- Waterfront
Elegantly lit with candlelit tables, tea lights along the ocean-facing walls, and a sophisticated yet welcoming atmosphere that transitions from sunset dining to evening ambiance with underwater illumination visible through glass-walled sections.
- Lobster Thermidor
- Mahi with Saffron Risotto
- Coconut Crusted Red Snapper
- Dover Sole
- Oysters
- Banana Soufflé












