Night Out · Restaurant Guide · Forest Hills, Queens

Restaurants Near Forest Hills Stadium

Station Square has a bar steps from the venue entrance. Austin Street has everything else. Here is where to eat before a Forest Hills show — and what changes when you are trying to make the most of the neighborhood rather than just fuel up and walk in.

Venue 1 Tennis Pl · Entrance: Burns St near 69th Ave
Closest Bar / Bite Dirty Pierre’s · 13 Station Square · Steps away
Main Dining Strip Austin Street · 5–10 min walk north
Best Post-Show Forest Hills Station House · 106-11 71st Ave

Forest Hills Stadium is set inside a residential Queens neighborhood unlike anywhere else in New York — a planned Tudor-style community called Forest Hills Gardens where the streets curve through tree canopies and the LIRR station faces a brick-paved plaza. That plaza, Station Square, is where most arriving concertgoers land, and it is where the venue’s most useful pre-show bar sits steps from the entrance. The broader dining scene lives on Austin Street, the commercial spine of Forest Hills proper, a five-to-ten-minute walk north from the stadium.

The honest framing: Forest Hills is not a neighborhood that floods with restaurant options the way Hell’s Kitchen does for Hammerstein or the Upper West Side does for Carnegie Hall. It is a real neighborhood with a real dining scene — genuinely good food on Austin Street, a legendary dive bar right at the stadium entrance, a solid gastropub five minutes away — but late-night options thin out quickly, and visitors expecting a dense concert-district cluster should calibrate expectations. The trade is real atmosphere for fewer choices, and most Forest Hills concert regulars consider it a good trade.

Station Square in Forest Hills, a neighborhood dining and arrival area near Forest Hills Stadium

Station Square in Forest Hills, one of the neighborhood hubs that helps turn a Forest Hills Stadium concert into a real dinner-and-show night.

Quick Answers — Where to Eat Near Forest Hills Stadium

Best for date night before the show
(aged.) Steakhouse — Austin Street and 70th Road

107-02 70th Road. The neighborhood’s most established steakhouse — filets, ribeyes, porterhouses, consistently regarded as the best steak option in Forest Hills. More of a full-evening restaurant than a quick pre-show stop, so book for an earlier seating if the show starts at 8pm. Reservations through OpenTable.

Best quick bite before the show
Austin Street Pizza or Tacombi — both fast, both on Austin Street

Austin Street Pizza does excellent square slices with caramelized crust — fast, cheap, no reservation, close to the subway. Tacombi is the fast-casual Mexican option on Austin Street: quick tacos and aguas frescas for when you want to get to the show without sitting down for a full meal.

Best post-show bar
Forest Hills Station House — 106-11 71st Ave

The most popular post-show bar in the neighborhood. Gastropub with 16 rotating craft beers, 70+ whiskeys, good cocktails, and food served late (until midnight or 1–2am on weekends). A five-minute walk from the stadium. Gets packed quickly after sold-out shows — move fast or be patient.

Best late-night option after the show
Matiz — Latin American, open until midnight Saturdays

On Austin Street, a lively Latin spot with strong cocktails, tostones, steak and plantain plates. Open until midnight on Saturdays — the best sit-down late option in a neighborhood that largely shuts down early. Not ideal if you need to eat at 11:30pm on a Tuesday.

How to Think About Dining Near Forest Hills Stadium

Forest Hills Stadium is in a residential Queens neighborhood, not a commercial entertainment district. That distinction shapes every dining decision. Austin Street, the main commercial strip, is a genuine neighborhood high street — real restaurants, real regulars, real quality — but it is not built around concert traffic. The best restaurants here do not fill up because of the stadium; they fill up because people who live in Forest Hills actually eat at them.

This is mostly good news for visitors. The food quality-to-price ratio on Austin Street is better than what you find at most concert-district restaurants in Manhattan, which are often priced for tourists and suburbanites who do not know the neighborhood. The Greek seafood at Agora Taverna, the steaks at (aged.), the mussels at Dirty Pierre’s — these are restaurants that survive on their regulars, not on show night traffic, which tends to keep the quality honest.

The consideration to plan around is timing. This is not a neighborhood where you can wander Austin Street after midnight looking for a late meal. Most restaurants close at 9:30 or 10pm. Post-show options are limited to bars with food: Forest Hills Station House stays open until midnight or later, Matiz is open until midnight on Saturdays. For visitors who want a real dinner after the show, it needs to be planned in advance rather than improvised.

The Forest Hills Dining Principle

Eat dinner before the show on Austin Street, budget time to walk through the Tudor neighborhood to the venue, and let Dirty Pierre’s in Station Square handle the final drink before you walk in. Post-show, Forest Hills Station House is the natural decompression spot before catching the train. The neighborhood rewards the visitors who engage with it rather than treating it as a transit corridor to the concert.

Best Restaurants Near Forest Hills Stadium

Station Square — the pre-show hub

Austin Street — sit-down dinners before the show

Forest Hills Station House
5 Min Walk · Best All-Around
106-11 71st Ave · Mon–Wed noon–midnight · Thu noon–1am · Fri–Sat noon–2am · Sun noon–midnight

Forest Hills Station House is the gastropub that anchors the neighborhood’s nightlife — a proper craft beer bar (16 rotating taps, 70+ whiskeys) with food that goes beyond standard pub fare. The menu includes elevated items like skirt steak with truffle fries alongside the flatbreads and burgers that fill tables before and after shows. It is described by The Infatuation as the most popular post-show bar in Forest Hills, and it is reliably packed both before and after major concerts at the stadium.

Station House works for pre-show dinner if you arrive early enough to get a table without competing with the full pre-concert crowd. It is especially useful as the post-show stop for visitors who want to eat after the concert — the kitchen runs late, the beer selection is excellent, and the energy winds down at a comfortable pace rather than shutting down at 10pm like most Austin Street restaurants.

Planning note On sold-out show nights, Station House is genuinely crowded. Pre-show: arrive at least 90 minutes before doors or expect to wait. Post-show: the crowd builds in the 30–45 minutes after the headliner ends — arriving immediately after the show means competing with the whole audience. Staying for the encore, then walking slowly, usually gets you there in a quieter window.

Quick pre-show options

Nick’s Pizza
Quick · Old-School Neighborhood Pizza
108-26 Ascan Avenue · Mon–Thu 4pm–9pm · Fri–Sun noon–9pm

Nick’s has been a Forest Hills fixture since 1993 — thin-crust pies, fresh mozzarella, and calzones that The Infatuation rates as highly as the pizza itself. It is on Ascan Avenue, a quieter side street just off Austin Street, a few minutes from the stadium. Fast, affordable, no pretension. The kind of neighborhood pizza that concert visitors from Manhattan are surprised to find at this quality level this close to the venue.

Planning note Nick’s closes at 9pm, making it a pre-show option only. Not open late enough for post-show. The calzones — flattened, sort of like a grilled cheese — are genuinely worth getting alongside the pizza.
Tacombi
Fast-Casual · Quick Tacos on Austin Street
Austin Street · Fast-casual · No reservation needed

When the goal is getting to the show rather than making dinner the event, Tacombi on Austin Street handles it cleanly. Quick tacos and aguas frescas, fast-casual format, no reservation required. The right call for visitors who are coming specifically for the concert and want something easy and good without a sit-down commitment. Eater/Resy recommend it specifically as a pre-stadium stop for exactly this use case.

Austin Street Pizza
Fast · Excellent Square Slices
Austin Street · Counter service · Fast

Thick square slices with a caramelized bottom crust — The Infatuation specifically praises the crust texture, which runs crunchy rather than bready. The pesto margherita is the standout. Fast service, affordable, located right on Austin Street steps from the subway and LIRR station. No reservation needed, no sit-down commitment. Good for a quick slice before walking to the venue.

Post-show with a later kitchen

Matiz
Post-Show · Open Until Midnight Saturdays
Austin Street area · Open until midnight Saturdays

Matiz is the best sit-down option for a post-show dinner — a Latin American restaurant with a dark, lively atmosphere, strong cocktails, and a menu built around tostones, steak, spicy sausage, and sweet plantains. The Infatuation recommends it specifically for later dinners because it is open until midnight on Saturdays. On a Saturday night Forest Hills concert, this is the natural next stop after the Station House gets too crowded.

Planning note Midnight closing on Saturdays means it works for shows that end by 10:30–11pm. For weeknight shows, verify current hours — the midnight hours apply specifically to Saturdays. This is still more post-show flexibility than most Forest Hills options.

Best Restaurant Choice by Type of Night

Quick pre-show, get in and get to the show
Dirty Pierre’s in Station Square, or Austin Street Pizza / Tacombi for a faster option on Austin Street. Dirty Pierre’s wins if you want a beer and solid bar food with venue proximity. Pizza or tacos win if you want to eat standing up and keep moving. None require reservations, all are close.
Proper sit-down dinner before the show
Agora Taverna on Austin Street — Greek seafood, reservations available, open until 10pm, a genuine neighborhood restaurant at honest prices. Target a 6:30pm reservation for an 8pm show.
Date night in Forest Hills
(aged.) Steakhouse for dinner, then walk through Forest Hills Gardens to the concert. A 5:30pm or 6pm reservation at (aged.) gives you the full evening arc: proper steakhouse dinner, the walk through one of New York’s most unusual residential neighborhoods, and arrival at the historic outdoor bowl as the sky gets dark. This is one of the more distinctive concert date-night structures available anywhere in the NYC area.
GA floor show — eat light, stand all night
Quick and casual: Dirty Pierre’s for mussels and a beer, or Tacombi for tacos before walking over. A long GA standing set calls for eating before the show rather than after — you will be tired and ready to head home, not sit down for a meal. Time your arrival at Dirty Pierre’s to avoid the peak pre-show crowd rush.
Post-show drinks and something to eat
Forest Hills Station House — the only reliably open-late option with food and a proper bar. Gets crowded immediately post-show; arriving with any patience or heading there after a small delay improves the experience significantly.
Visitors using the LIRR — quick stop between train and show
Dirty Pierre’s is one minute from the Forest Hills LIRR platform. This is the single most useful structural advantage in the neighborhood: arrive by LIRR, walk off the platform, walk ten steps into Station Square, have a drink and a bowl of mussels, walk to the venue entrance. No navigation, no transit. Post-show: Station House for a pint before walking back to the platform.

Post-Show Reality in Forest Hills

Forest Hills Gardens is a residential neighborhood. Most of its restaurants close at 9:30 or 10pm, well before a typical 8pm show ends. The post-show window — roughly 10:30pm to midnight — is served by two places that actually stay open: Forest Hills Station House (food until midnight or later on weekends) and Matiz (until midnight Saturdays). Everything else has called it a night.

This is genuinely different from how a Manhattan concert night works, where you can walk out of a venue and find twenty options open until 2am within two blocks. Forest Hills is not that. Visitors who want a post-show dinner should plan for it — Station House or Matiz (for Saturday shows), or a decision to take the train back and eat in Manhattan. Visitors who want just a beer and to decompress: Station House is excellent for exactly that, and the train is a comfortable option once you are ready to head back.

The upside of the early-close neighborhood

Forest Hills’ quiet post-show character is part of what makes the neighborhood feel so different from a standard concert district. Walking out of the stadium and through Forest Hills Gardens after a show — the trees, the Tudor buildings, the relative quiet — is not an inconvenience. It is one of the reasons people come back to this venue specifically.

Timing and Reservation Reality

For a typical 8pm show with doors at 7pm, target dinner between 5:30 and 7pm. A 6:30pm restaurant reservation, an hour for dinner, a fifteen-minute walk through Forest Hills Gardens, and you arrive at the Burns Street entrance comfortably before doors — with time to spare for the Station Square atmosphere. GA floor visitors who want front positions should eat earlier and arrive closer to the 7pm door open.

Reservations matter at Agora Taverna and (aged.) on show nights — both are real neighborhood restaurants with regular local clientele, and popular shows add concert visitors to an already-full dining room. Book when you buy your tickets. Dirty Pierre’s and Station House do not take reservations for standard dining; the trade is walk-in flexibility for the certainty of a wait on busy nights.

One timing note specific to Forest Hills: the walk from Austin Street to the venue entrance is longer than it looks on a map. The route goes through Forest Hills Gardens’ winding residential streets — beautiful, but not a straight line. Allow ten to fifteen minutes rather than five for the walk from Austin Street restaurants to the Burns Street entrance, especially if you are unfamiliar with the neighborhood layout.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the best restaurants near Forest Hills Stadium?

For pre-show proximity and atmosphere: Dirty Pierre’s in Station Square, on the walking path between the LIRR and the venue entrance. For the best sit-down dinner: Agora Taverna (Greek seafood) or (aged.) Steakhouse on Austin Street. For post-show: Forest Hills Station House at 106-11 71st Avenue, open late with a full bar and food. For quick pre-show bites: Austin Street Pizza or Tacombi on Austin Street.

Where should I eat before a Forest Hills Stadium show?

It depends on the type of night. For a drink and a bite steps from the entrance: Dirty Pierre’s in Station Square. For a proper pre-show dinner: Agora Taverna or (aged.) Steakhouse on Austin Street, with a reservation. For something fast: Austin Street Pizza or Tacombi. The key planning note is that Austin Street is a 5–10 minute walk from the venue, and the route through Forest Hills Gardens is not a straight line — allow time for the walk.

Are there restaurants right next to Forest Hills Stadium?

Dirty Pierre’s at 13 Station Square is effectively right next to the venue — it is in the plaza between the LIRR station and the West Side Tennis Club gates, on the walking path to the Burns Street entrance. It is the closest food-and-drink option to the stadium and the one most used by regular concert-goers. Everything else is on Austin Street, a 5–10 minute walk away.

What is open after a Forest Hills Stadium show?

Forest Hills is a residential neighborhood and most restaurants close by 9:30–10pm. Post-show options are limited: Forest Hills Station House at 106-11 71st Avenue stays open until midnight (Mon–Wed, Sun) and 1–2am (Thu–Sat), serves full food, and is the most popular post-show gathering spot in the neighborhood. Matiz on Austin Street is open until midnight on Saturdays. Plan post-show dinner in advance rather than assuming options will be available when you walk out.

How far are restaurants from Forest Hills Stadium?

Dirty Pierre’s is in Station Square, literally on the walking path to the venue — under two minutes from the Burns Street entrance. Austin Street restaurants are 5–10 minutes on foot, but the route goes through Forest Hills Gardens’ residential streets, which are winding and scenic rather than direct. Allow 10–15 minutes for the walk rather than 5, especially if you are unfamiliar with the neighborhood layout.

Do I need reservations for dinner before Forest Hills Stadium?

Yes, for sit-down options. Agora Taverna and (aged.) Steakhouse are real neighborhood restaurants with regular local clientele — popular show nights add concert visitors on top of their usual crowd. Reserve when you buy your tickets. Dirty Pierre’s, Forest Hills Station House, Austin Street Pizza, and Tacombi are all walk-in; the trade is wait risk during peak concert-night windows.

Dinner Near Forest Hills Stadium Fits the Night — If You Plan It

The dining situation near Forest Hills Stadium is better than most concert venues of its size offer, and fundamentally different in character. You are eating in a real neighborhood, at restaurants that survive on their regulars, walking through one of New York’s most unusual residential enclaves to a 100-year-old outdoor bowl. The structure of the evening — dinner on Austin Street, walk through the Tudor neighborhood, show under the sky, drink at Station House, train home — is genuinely one of the more complete concert-night experiences the city has to offer.

The things to plan around: book Austin Street reservations in advance on show nights, budget more time for the walk to the venue than a map suggests, and know that post-show options are limited in a way that Manhattan concert districts are not. For the full seating guide, the venue itself and the complete concert-night planning picture are covered there.

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