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Best Restaurants in Driggs Idaho: A Local's 2026 Dining Guide

  • Michael Leonard
  • May 20
  • 14 min read
Warm restaurant interior in Driggs Idaho with two wine glasses and a buffalo burger plate on a wooden table, diners in background

Driggs, Idaho is home to a surprisingly strong restaurant scene for a small mountain town, with options ranging from chef-driven bistros and authentic Thai kitchens to a genuine local bar pouring huckleberry margaritas at prices that won't sting. Whether you're heading out after a day on the slopes at Grand Targhee or rolling into town from Grand Teton National Park, the restaurants in Driggs, Idaho give you real choices beyond resort food.


  • Top pick for upscale dining: Forage Bistro and Lounge at 253 Warbird Lane, where chef-inspired plates meet serious craft cocktails in a warm, inviting space.

  • Best local bar and grill: The Royal Wolf on Depot Street, where locals go for 1/2 lb buffalo burgers, huckleberry margaritas, and bread baked fresh daily in Driggs by 460 Bread.

  • Best for families on a budget: Agave at 310 N. Main St. and Bangkok Kitchen at 220 N. Main St. cover Mexican and Thai respectively at accessible prices.

  • Biggest gap in competitor guides: Hours of operation, reservation policies, and seasonal availability are almost never mentioned, so this guide covers all three.

  • Where to stay: Teton Basecamp, a fully equipped 3-bedroom condo in Driggs, puts you walking distance from downtown dining and minutes from every restaurant on this list.


Snow-capped Teton peaks at golden hour above Driggs Idaho valley, near restaurants in Driggs Idaho

Teton Valley has changed a lot since 2020. The dining scene in Driggs has grown with it, and as of 2026, you have genuine variety across cuisines, atmospheres, and price points. This guide covers every restaurant worth your time, organized by how and when you'd actually use them, with the practical details competitors consistently leave out: which places take reservations, which are seasonal, and what to order when you get there.


At The Peak Properties, we manage Teton Basecamp right in the heart of Driggs, so we hear regularly from guests about where they ate, what they loved, and what let them down. This guide reflects that ground-level knowledge, not just a directory copy-paste.


What Restaurants Are in Driggs, Idaho?


Restaurants in Driggs, Idaho include roughly a dozen establishments covering American bar food, chef-inspired bistro dining, Mexican, Thai, bagels and breakfast, and craft cocktails, concentrated along and just off North Main Street. The town sits at the base of the Teton Range in Teton Valley, Idaho, about 45 minutes from Jackson Hole and 20 minutes from Grand Targhee Resort, and its restaurant scene reflects that position: unpretentious, quality-forward, and genuinely local.


Here is the full verified list of restaurants in Driggs with addresses and phone numbers:


Restaurant

Address

Phone

Cuisine / Type

Forage Bistro and Lounge

253 Warbird Lane

208.354.2858

Chef-driven American, craft cocktails

The Royal Wolf

63 Depot Street

208.354.8365

American bar and grill, local hangout

Agave

310 N. Main St.

208.354.2003

Mexican

Bangkok Kitchen

220 N. Main St.

208.354.6666

Thai, Asian

Big Hole Bagel and Bistro

285 N. Main St.

208.354.2245

Breakfast, bagels, cafe

Hacienda Cuajimalpa

355 N. Main St.

208.354.0121

Mexican

O'Rourke's Sports Bar and Grill

42 E. Little Ave.

208.354.8115

American, sports bar

The Provision Kitchen

95 S Main St.

208.354.2333

American, market kitchen

Teton Thai

18 N. Main St.

208.787.8424

Thai


Additional names that come up in Teton Valley dining conversations include Brakeman American Grill, Butter Cafe, Knotty Pine Supper Club, Badger Creek Cafe, and West Side Yard. Hours and current operating status for these shift seasonally, so confirm before driving out.


Rustic lodge bedroom with wooden platform bed, gingham bedding, and mountain cabin decor at Teton Basecamp
Teton Basecamp

Which Driggs Restaurant Is Best for a Sit-Down Dinner?


Forage Bistro and Lounge is the strongest option for a proper sit-down dinner in Driggs, Idaho. Located at 253 Warbird Lane, Forage is described as chef-inspired dishes paired with craft cocktails in a warm atmosphere, and it has earned a reputation as the valley's gathering place for celebrating or splurging. For a mid-range, decidedly local alternative, The Royal Wolf on Depot Street delivers a fuller menu with more personality than most visitors expect from a mountain bar.


Forage Bistro and Lounge sits slightly off the Main Street corridor, which is intentional. The space feels designed rather than just built. Visit their official website for current menus and reservation options, because this is the one Driggs restaurant where checking ahead is genuinely worth the 30-second effort during peak ski season or summer weekends. Forage occupies a distinct position in the local dining scene as the place people choose for a first date, a birthday, or a post-epic-ski-day dinner when price is secondary to quality.


The Royal Wolf at 63 Depot Street earns its reputation differently. This is a local bar and grill in the truest sense: the kind of place where valley ranchers, ski instructors, and visiting families all end up at the same table. The menu is more substantial than the casual atmosphere suggests. The 1/2 lb ground buffalo burger runs $19.00, the 8 oz center-cut top sirloin is $29.00, and the 12 oz Angus ribeye hits $34.50. All steaks come finished with portabella mushroom and blue cheese butter, topped with roasted red peppers, and served with mashed potatoes and sautéed vegetables. That's a complete plate.


The bread used across Royal Wolf burgers and sandwiches comes from 460 Bread, a local baker producing fresh loaves daily in Driggs. The veggie cheese steak uses blue oyster mushrooms sourced from Morning Dew Mushrooms in nearby Tetonia. That farm-to-table specificity in a laid-back bar setting says something real about the food culture developing in Teton Valley. Read guest reviews of The Royal Wolf on TripAdvisor before going; the feedback is consistently warm and useful for setting expectations.


What Do People Do in Driggs, Idaho? (And Where Do They Eat After?)


Driggs, Idaho is an outdoor activity hub in both summer and winter. According to the Teton Valley Chamber of Commerce, the area is known for skiing Grand Targhee Resort, hiking and biking in the Teton Range, fly fishing the Teton River, and serving as a gateway to Grand Teton National Park (roughly 60 minutes by car) and Yellowstone National Park (roughly 90 minutes). After a full day outdoors, the restaurants in Driggs, Idaho become a genuine priority, not an afterthought.


For breakfast before an early start, Big Hole Bagel and Bistro at 285 N. Main St. is the most logical choice. Breakfast and bagel spots in mountain towns often operate on shorter hours than dinner establishments, and Big Hole is no exception. Arrive before 11am to be safe. The bistro format means you can grab something to eat in or take it to the trail. Check their RestaurantJi listing for current hours before heading over, particularly in shoulder season.


After a day at Grand Targhee, the resort itself runs a local shuttle service into Teton Valley for dining. That shuttle makes The Royal Wolf and Forage both practical options even if you don't feel like driving the 20-minute trip back to Driggs yourself. Post-Targhee crowds tend to hit The Royal Wolf hardest on weekend evenings, so if your group is larger than four, walk in by 6pm or accept a wait.


Guests staying at Teton Basecamp are positioned well for all of this. The condo sits in Driggs with two parking spaces, meaning you can drive to Grand Targhee in the morning, return to the condo to clean up, and walk to dinner on Main Street without moving the car again. The summer activity guide for Driggs covers the full activity calendar if you're planning a warm-weather visit.


Which Driggs Restaurants Are Best for Specific Occasions?


Dining in Driggs, Idaho works best when you match the restaurant to the occasion. The town has a small enough dining scene that making the wrong choice on a limited vacation schedule is a real cost. Here is a straightforward breakdown by dining occasion, based on what each place is genuinely set up to deliver.


Best for Date Night or a Celebration


Forage Bistro and Lounge is the clear choice. Chef-inspired cooking, craft cocktails, and a warm atmosphere built for lingering rather than turning tables. Reservations are strongly recommended during ski season (December through March) and summer weekends (late June through August). Call 208.354.2858 or check their website directly for current availability.


Best for Families


The Royal Wolf handles families well because the menu is broad, the atmosphere is low-pressure, and the prices are honest. Kids who want a burger get a good one. Adults who want a steak or a Huckleberry Margarita ($8.75) are equally covered. Agave at 310 N. Main St. and Hacienda Cuajimalpa at 355 N. Main St. both offer Mexican menus that work well for groups with varying tastes. Teton Valley has two Mexican restaurants worth mentioning because they serve slightly different regional styles, so if one is full, the other is a solid fallback rather than a consolation prize.


Best Happy Hour and Drinks


The Royal Wolf has the most detailed drink menu in Driggs. Draft options include Guinness Stout, Pabst Blue Ribbon, rotating microbrews, and hard cider, available in 10 oz glasses, 16 oz pints, or 60 oz pitchers. The cocktail list leans local: the Huckleberry Margarita ($8.75), Jalapeño Margarita ($7.75), and 400 Conejos Mezcal Margarita ($9.00) all read as intentional rather than generic bar menu filler. The Templeton Rye Manhattan ($9.75) is the pick for whiskey drinkers. Confirm happy hour timing directly with the restaurant, as these windows shift seasonally.


Best for Thai Food


You have two options: Bangkok Kitchen at 220 N. Main St. and Teton Thai at 18 N. Main St. Both serve Thai food in a small mountain town that supports two Thai restaurants, which alone signals genuine local demand. Bangkok Kitchen has a functional online presence at their official site. Teton Thai's official website is similarly available. Between the two, Teton Thai sits closer to the south end of Main Street, while Bangkok Kitchen is a few blocks north. If your group is split, decide by who's more willing to walk.


Modern mountain kitchen with granite countertops and warm wood cabinetry at Teton Basecamp in Driggs Idaho
Teton Basecamp

Where Did Guy Fieri Go in Idaho?


Guy Fieri filmed episodes of Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives in several Idaho locations, though Driggs itself has not been prominently featured in confirmed Triple D coverage as of 2026. The more relevant question for planning a trip to Teton Valley is which local spots have the kind of unapologetically specific, locally rooted food culture that the show celebrates. By that measure, The Royal Wolf qualifies. A bar that sources its mushrooms from a named farm in Tetonia and its bread from a local bakery in town, then puts a buffalo burger and a Huckleberry Margarita on the same menu, is exactly the type of place that earns that kind of attention.


If you're specifically chasing a Guy Fieri-adjacent experience in the broader Idaho region, the Treasure Valley around Boise has more documented Triple D stops. For Teton Valley dining specifically, the better research tool is the Grand Targhee Resort dining guide, which pulls together the most current directory of Driggs, Victor, and Tetonia restaurants in one place.


Are There Restaurants Near Driggs Open Year-Round?


Seasonal availability is one of the most important practical details for Driggs dining, and it's almost entirely absent from competitor guides. Driggs operates on two distinct peak seasons: ski season from roughly December through March (centered on Grand Targhee) and summer hiking and fishing season from June through August. Shoulder periods in late April, May, October, and November see reduced operating hours and occasional temporary closures at some establishments.


The Royal Wolf and Agave are generally understood to operate year-round, but hours contract in the off-season. Calling ahead at 208.354.8365 (Royal Wolf) or 208.354.2003 (Agave) before a weeknight visit in October or May takes 45 seconds and prevents a wasted trip. Forage Bistro and Lounge, as the higher-end option, also tends toward year-round operation, but its hours are more likely to reflect seasonal demand, so check their website or call 208.354.2858 ahead of a mid-week visit in shoulder season.


For breakfast and cafe options, Big Hole Bagel and Bistro at 285 N. Main St. is one to verify seasonally. Bagel and breakfast concepts in small mountain towns frequently keep limited winter hours compared to their summer schedule. Butter Cafe and Badger Creek Cafe (in nearby Tetonia) are also worth knowing about for morning stops, though their specific seasonal hours require direct confirmation.


One practical note: if you're arriving late on a Sunday or Monday night, dining options in Driggs shrink noticeably. Stock the kitchen before those evenings. Teton Basecamp comes fully stocked with everything you need to cook, including a new stainless steel oven and dishwasher installed in Spring 2026, which makes a home-cooked meal on a quiet Monday night a genuinely appealing option rather than a compromise. For deeper planning context, the winter activities guide for Driggs covers the full seasonal rhythm of the valley.


What Should You Know Before Eating Out in Driggs?


Practical dining logistics in Driggs, Idaho differ from larger resort towns in a few meaningful ways. Understanding them before you go saves frustration, especially during peak ski weekends or busy summer weekends when Grand Teton day-trippers flood through town.


Reservations: When You Need Them and When You Don't


Forage Bistro and Lounge is the one Driggs restaurant where a reservation genuinely changes your evening on a busy Friday or Saturday. The dining room is not large, and the combination of local regulars and visiting skiers or hikers fills it quickly on weekends. Call ahead for any Friday or Saturday dinner between mid-December and late March, and during July and August. The Royal Wolf operates more casually and generally handles walk-ins well, though groups larger than six should call 208.354.8365 to check on space. O'Rourke's Sports Bar and Grill at 42 E. Little Ave. and The Provision Kitchen at 95 S Main Street are typically walk-in friendly.


Budget Tiers: What Each Place Costs


Teton Valley restaurant pricing in 2026 roughly breaks into three tiers. Forage Bistro and Lounge sits in the higher range for the area, appropriate for a celebratory dinner where cocktails, starters, and entrees add up. The Royal Wolf is mid-tier with transparent pricing: appetizers from $6.00 to $14.75, burgers and sandwiches in the $15.00 to $19.25 range, steaks from $29.00 to $34.50. Bangkok Kitchen, Agave, Hacienda Cuajimalpa, and Teton Thai generally represent the most budget-accessible options in Driggs proper. Big Hole Bagel and Bistro is the value leader for breakfast.


Parking and Getting There


Main Street in Driggs has free street parking, and the town is small enough that even on a busy ski weekend you rarely walk more than two blocks from your car to a restaurant. The Royal Wolf on Depot Street sits one block off the main drag. Forage Bistro and Lounge on Warbird Lane is slightly further, but still within easy walking distance of downtown. If you're staying at Teton Basecamp, you're within walking distance of every Main Street restaurant, which makes the two included parking spaces a genuine convenience rather than a necessity for dinner.


One Thing Most Visitors Miss


The Royal Wolf taco menu is consistently underordered in favor of the burgers. The tacos use warm corn tortillas with shredded cabbage, avocado, black bean salsa, sour cream, and fresh cilantro, with six protein options: grilled chicken ($11.50), grilled shrimp ($11.25), chipotle pulled pork ($11.75), grilled ahi ($12.50), sautéed local oyster mushrooms ($12.75), and a chipotle beef option. The oyster mushroom taco using Morning Dew Mushrooms from Tetonia is the most locally specific thing on the menu and the most overlooked item when visitors come in looking for a burger.


Rustic bedroom with queen plaid bed and wooden dresser at Teton Basecamp mountain lodge in Driggs Idaho
Teton Basecamp

Are There Grizzly Bears in Driggs, Idaho?


Grizzly bears are present in the greater Teton Valley ecosystem, including areas near Driggs, Idaho. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem management framework both confirm that the grizzly bear population in the Greater Yellowstone area has recovered significantly since the 1970s, with bears now regularly moving through Teton Valley corridors in Idaho. Sightings near rural areas outside of town are documented, particularly in spring and fall when bears are moving or foraging.


For the purposes of your restaurant trip to downtown Driggs, this is not a practical concern. Bears are not present in the town center. The relevant context is for guests planning hiking, camping, or early-morning outdoor activities in the surrounding national forest or the Jedediah Smith Wilderness west of Driggs. The National Park Service recommends carrying bear spray and traveling in groups on backcountry trails in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. The guide to staying near Grand Teton covers wildlife safety and outdoor planning for this region more thoroughly.


Bear spray is sold at outdoor retailers in Driggs and Victor, and many trail-focused visitors pick some up alongside their first meal in town. If the topic comes up over dinner at The Royal Wolf, the locals will have opinions.


Teton Valley Day-Trip Dining: Worth Knowing About


The restaurants in Driggs, Idaho are the core of the valley's dining scene, but several nearby spots in Victor, Tetonia, and the broader Teton Valley region expand your options meaningfully, especially for full-day excursions.


Victor, Idaho, about 10 minutes south of Driggs on Highway 33, has its own independent restaurant scene. Big Hole BBQ in Victor has developed a following for smoked meats; visit their official website before driving south to confirm current hours. West Side Yard is another Victor name that comes up in local conversations about where to eat.


Tetonia, a few miles north of Driggs, is home to Dave's Pub (see Dave's Pub Tetonia for current hours) and Badger Creek Cafe (visit Badger Creek Cafe's site for details). These are genuinely small-town stops rather than destination restaurants, but they fill a practical gap on a long drive day around the valley. Morning Dew Mushrooms, the farm that supplies The Royal Wolf's blue oyster mushrooms, is also in Tetonia, which gives the area a farm-supply context worth knowing if you're interested in where valley restaurants source their food.


For visitors who want to combine Grand Targhee dining with a town meal, the resort's dining guide at grandtarghee.com includes a full Teton Valley directory and is updated more regularly than most third-party sources. It covers Driggs, Victor, and Tetonia in one place, which is useful when you're deciding whether to eat at the resort or drive into town.


Frequently Asked Questions About Restaurants in Driggs, Idaho


What is the best restaurant in Driggs, Idaho?


Forage Bistro and Lounge at 253 Warbird Lane is widely regarded as the best sit-down restaurant in Driggs for a chef-driven meal with craft cocktails. For the best local bar experience with a surprisingly complete food menu, The Royal Wolf at 63 Depot Street is the first choice among valley regulars. Both are distinct enough that choosing between them depends on whether you want a polished dining experience or a lively, unpretentious local hangout.


Do restaurants in Driggs take reservations?


Forage Bistro and Lounge strongly recommends reservations on Friday and Saturday evenings during ski season (December through March) and summer weekends (July and August). Call 208.354.2858 or check their website. The Royal Wolf, Agave, Bangkok Kitchen, and most other Driggs restaurants operate on a walk-in basis, though calling ahead for groups of five or more is always worth the effort during peak season.


Are Driggs restaurants open year-round?


Several Driggs restaurants, including The Royal Wolf and Agave, operate year-round. Hours contract during shoulder seasons in April, May, October, and November. Forage Bistro and Lounge is also generally open year-round. Breakfast and cafe concepts like Big Hole Bagel and Bistro and smaller spots may reduce hours or close temporarily in off-season. Always call ahead for weeknight visits between October and May.


What Thai food options are in Driggs, Idaho?


Driggs has two Thai restaurants: Bangkok Kitchen at 220 N. Main St. (phone 208.354.6666) and Teton Thai at 18 N. Main St. (phone 208.787.8424). Both serve Thai menus in a town small enough that two Thai restaurants signals real local demand rather than oversupply. Bangkok Kitchen has an official website for online ordering context; Teton Thai's site is also available for menus.


How far are Driggs restaurants from Grand Targhee Resort?


Grand Targhee Resort is approximately 20 minutes by car from downtown Driggs. The resort runs a local shuttle service into Teton Valley, making it practical to have dinner in town without driving yourself after a full day on the mountain. Main Street restaurants including The Royal Wolf and Agave are the most commonly used post-ski dinner destinations for Targhee visitors.


Is there Mexican food in Driggs, Idaho?


Yes. Driggs has two Mexican restaurants: Agave at 310 N. Main St. (208.354.2003) and Hacienda Cuajimalpa at 355 N. Main St. (208.354.0121). They serve slightly different regional styles and are both located on North Main Street within a few blocks of each other. If one is full during peak season, the other is a genuine alternative rather than a second-tier option.


Where can I get breakfast in Driggs, Idaho?


Big Hole Bagel and Bistro at 285 N. Main St. (phone 208.354.2245) is the primary breakfast destination in Driggs. Butter Cafe is another name that comes up in local breakfast conversations. For longer stays, Teton Basecamp includes a fully stocked kitchen with a MoccaMaster coffee maker, which makes early-morning starts before a hike or ski day significantly easier without relying on restaurant hours.


Can I walk from downtown Driggs lodging to restaurants?


Yes. Downtown Driggs is compact, and most restaurants along North Main Street are walkable from centrally located accommodations. The Royal Wolf on Depot Street and Forage Bistro and Lounge on Warbird Lane are both within a 5 to 10 minute walk of the Main Street corridor. Teton Basecamp, located in Driggs, sits close enough to downtown that most dinner options require no car at all.


Planning Your Driggs Dining: The Short Version


The restaurants in Driggs, Idaho cover far more ground than most visitors expect from a small Idaho mountain town. You have a legitimate upscale option in Forage Bistro and Lounge, one of the most locally rooted bar menus in the region at The Royal Wolf, two Mexican restaurants, two Thai restaurants, a strong breakfast spot, and several bar-and-grill options for the nights you just want a cold draft and something hot off the grill. The key planning detail most guides skip: call ahead during ski season weekends and summer weekends, and verify hours in shoulder season before making the drive.


In 2026, Teton Valley's dining scene continues to grow alongside the valley's tourism traffic. The Teton Valley resorts guide provides broader context for planning your full trip around both Grand Targhee and the Jackson Hole side of the Tetons. Whether you're spending a winter ski week or a summer week of hiking and fishing, the restaurant variety in Driggs means you can eat well every night without leaving town.


Modern mountain home at Teton Basecamp Driggs Idaho with snow-capped Teton peaks in background, near restaurants in Driggs Idaho

If you're sorting out where to stay while you eat your way through this list, Teton Basecamp puts you in the center of it. The 3-bedroom, 1,530+ sq ft condo is a short walk from Main Street and a 20-minute drive from Grand Targhee, so dinner at The Royal Wolf after a ski day requires exactly zero logistical planning. Check availability at Teton Basecamp and book directly through The Peak Properties to skip the platform fees.


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