The Mother Road menu—where to eat on Route 66

Revving up for its 100th anniversary, Route 66 is experiencing a culinary renaissance, offering everything from humongous hot dogs to reimagined Native American cuisine.

An eye-level view of a diner with tables and a neon sign saying 'open til late'.
The eating options along America’s iconic Route 66 range from new-wave diners to elevated Native American restaurants.
Photograph by Dilly Diner
ByZoey Goto
Published February 6, 2026
This article was produced by National Geographic Traveller (UK).

There was a time when dining on Route 66 was a surefire recipe for indigestion. Stretching 2,448 miles from Chicago’s soaring skyscrapers to Santa Monica’s sun-drenched pier, the Mother Road of yesteryear was lined with all-you-can-eat buffets and neon-lit diners dishing out gut-busting classics. It was pure, unapologetic comfort food, perfectly suited to the rough-and-ready spirit of America’s most beloved road trip.

But as Route 66 approaches its 2026 centennial, the culinary scene has shifted up a gear. A new generation of chefs now tempts travellers off the asphalt with some seriously creative cuisine, including the likes of spicy chicken tikka toasties, available just steps from the Route 66 easternmost marker, in Chicago. As the horizons widen in Oklahoma, you can fill up on new-school diner eats, while in the state of New Mexico dramatic red-rock vistas are the backdrop to nourishing Indigenous Puebloan cuisine. And cruising onwards to Arizona, a hip butcher shop tucked inside a Route 66 landmark is taking the humble sandwich to giddy new heights. Roadside quirk endures, too, like the iconic hot dog-shaped diner in Hollywood, every bit as photogenic as the glamorous stars who live nearby.

From pop-culture throwbacks to contemporary culinary mashups, the flavours of Route 66 are now as varied as the landscapes it weaves through. From east to west, these are the eight tastiest pit stops worth pulling over for.

Swadesi, Chicago, Illinois

It’s a long-held tradition to start a Route 66 road trip at Lou Mitchell’s, a vintage diner that’s been flipping pancakes since 1923. But just across the street, a new ritual awaits: a cafe bringing India’s bustling chai culture to Chicago.

Opened in 2024, Swadesi has become a go-to for breakfast and lunch, thanks to dishes including its famed chicken tikka toastie: a twist on the classic American grilled cheese sandwich, elevated with smoky tandoor-cooked meat and a dollop of zingy mint mayo. Pair it with their spiced chai tea, richly fragrant with cardamom. In the airy dining room, potted palms and rattan-backed chairs create a sanctuary in which to refuel before the long journey westward begins. Chicken tikka toastie $13 (£9.50).

The interiors of a classic diner with booth tables and lots of windows.
A close-up of a plate of fried chicken on waffles with a side of water and a bloody mary.
Dilly Diner has kept the essence of a road-side diner while also serving fresh twists on tested classics, like fried chicken waffles and griddle cakes with locally sourced buttermilk.
Photograph by Dilly Diner (Top) (Left) and Photograph by Dilly Diner (Bottom) (Right)

Dilly Diner, Tulsa, Oklahoma

There’s something irresistibly cinematic about stepping into this new-school diner: regulars hunched over steaming coffee at the breakfast counter, sunlight catching the cushiony booths, and a tantalising sliver of the original Route 66 just visible through oversized windows. (The original two-lane highway has now largely fragmented into ‘Historic Route 66’ segments, state roads and interstate highways).

While the decor may look like the ghost of road trips past, the menu at the Dilly Diner is anything but, offering a fresh take on quintessential diner food. Think matcha lattes and granola bowls alongside griddle cakes made with local buttermilk. The true showstopper, though, is the Jed: a hulking cinnamon roll, warm and golden, crowned with a generous swirl of whipped cream-cheese frosting. It’s almost impossible to finish, so grab a takeout box before hitting the open road. Jed roll $10.50 (£7.70).

Nātv, Broken Arrow, Oklahoma

It’s rare to find some of the region’s most inventive cuisine served in a low-rise suburban strip mall. Even rarer is a chef who blends the Native American flavours of her heritage with techniques acquired through classical French culinary training.

Jacque Siegfried, of Shawnee descent, has done just that at Nātv: a small but mighty restaurant that opened in 2022 a short detour from downtown Tulsa’s stretch of Route 66. Nātv’s modern Indigenous dishes, such as sizzling bison sliders paired with fluffy frybread and plated with cordon bleu flair, have earned this game-changing restaurant a James Beard Foundation Award nomination. Bison sliders $14 (£10.25).

Pops 66 Soda Ranch, Arcadia, Oklahoma

In the tiny town of Arcadia, Pops has become a must-stop for road trippers since opening in 2007. Out front, a towering 66ft-tall LED-lit fizzy-drink bottle signals the entrance to a sleek, futuristic building. Inside this working petrol station, diner and store you’ll find more than 700 bottled fizzy drinks from around the world, including a best-selling root beer and even teriyaki beef jerky-flavoured fizzy pop. Pull up a stool at the counter for hand-dipped milkshakes (thick shakes made with blended ice cream) and nostalgic ice cream sundaes topped with glistening cherries, which look like a snapshot from the golden age of Route 66. Hand-dipped shake $5.99 (£4.40).

Indian Pueblo Kitchen, Albuquerque, New Mexico

Cocooned inside Albuquerque’s Indian Pueblo Cultural Center, this lively restaurant is owned and operated by the 19 Native American Pueblo tribes that call New Mexico home. Grab a seat in the bustling dining room or out on the patio terrace to sample ancestral dishes like enchiladas topped with your choice of red or green chili – an eternal dilemma in New Mexico. Or graze the menu by ordering the signature taste of the Pueblos: three warming stews served with a crumbly blue-corn muffin on the side. Don’t leave without picking up a flaky Pueblo pie from the onside bakery, filled with peach, pumpkin, or blueberry preserves. Mains from $12 (£8.80).

A hot-dog-shaped roadside stand with a hatched that opens and hot dogs are sold out of.
The hot-dog-shaped stand and diner Tail O' the Pup has been selling wieners in buns for well over half a century.
Photograph by Zoey Goto

Tail O’ the Pup, Los Angeles, California

It doesn’t get more Americana than ordering a hot dog through the hatch of a stand shaped like, well, a giant hot dog. Tail O’ the Pup, a beacon of mid-century roadside architecture, has been slinging wieners in West Hollywood since 1946.

On warm evenings, grab a seat on the patio or slide into a cherry-red booth inside the retro diner, complete with Formica tables and all-you-can-drink root beer fountains. Hot dogs arrive split and grilled on toasted buns, with the option to add heaps of house chilli, sweet relish, pickle spears or grilled onions. And proving that you can indeed teach an old dog new tricks, the menu also features vegetarian and gluten free options. 1949 pup hotdog $7.95 (£5.80).

Coyote Cafe & Rooftop Cantina, Santa Fe, New Mexico

One of the pioneers of Santa Fe’s culinary renaissance when it opened in 1987, Coyote Cafe uses hyper-local ingredients to create refined Southwestern cuisine. Decades later, it’s still so popular that reservations are needed for the main dining room, where plush velvet chairs and an open kitchen buzz beneath a scarlet blown-glass chandelier.

The signature elk tenderloin, marinated in beer for six hours and served in a hearty serving of meaty gravy, is so delicious you’ll want to lick the plate clean. But save room for the tamale dessert, a white-chocolate mousse playfully shaped like an ear of corn. Or for a more casual vibe, head to the rooftop cantina, where walk-ins are welcome and ice-cold watermelon Mojitos arrive just in time to watch the sun set over the adobe skyline. Mains from $38 (£28).

Proper Meats + Provisions, Flagstaff, Arizona

That Flagstaff is carving out a place on Arizona’s culinary map is thanks in no small part to Proper Meats + Provisions, a butcher shop and sandwich counter housed in the historic Grand Canyon Cafe building, which has fed hungry travellers since 1942.

Today, the menu leans towards the hearty, with a focus on quality and craft. Pastrami is brined and smoked for 10 days before meeting the grilled rye bread, while stocks, sauces and soups are all made in-house. Whole animals are also prepped in the back kitchen, where butchers turn out speciality sausages, incorporating sweet fennel and Carolina mustard, with the kind of swagger that comes from knowing exactly where your meat originated. 10-day pastrami sandwich $22.25 (£16.30).

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