Centretown is Ottawa’s most restaurant-dense neighbourhood by raw count β more restaurants per square block than anywhere else in the city. That density creates both opportunity and noise. There’s genuinely excellent food here, but there’s also a lot of mediocre tourist-facing stuff on Elgin Street that can mislead people into thinking that’s what Centretown is. This guide is about what’s actually worth your time.
Elgin Street: Manage Your Expectations
Elgin Street is Ottawa’s main pub strip and it does that job well. It’s where you go for live sports, a pint, and a burger β not where you go for a serious meal. The restaurants on Elgin are fine, but if that’s all you know of Centretown’s food scene, you’re missing the better half. Walk one or two blocks off Elgin in any direction and the quality-to-price ratio improves noticeably.
The Streets Worth Knowing
Centretown’s most interesting food is on Somerset, Bank, and the residential side streets. Somerset Street West has Lebanese, Vietnamese, and South Asian spots that have been quietly feeding the neighbourhood for years. Bank Street through Centretown has a different character from the Glebe section β more lunch spots, more casual, more daytime-oriented. The blocks around McLeod and James have attracted some of the better independent dinner spots.
Lunch Centretown
Centretown is a government and office neighbourhood, which means lunch is serious business. The area around Sparks Street and Metcalfe gets slammed between 11:45am and 1:15pm on weekdays β every place that does a fast, affordable lunch has a lineup. If you’re eating lunch in Centretown on a weekday, either go before 11:30am or plan for after 1:30pm. The food trucks that rotate through the office areas are often excellent and genuinely worth seeking out.