LaGuardia Airport Food Guide: What to Eat Before Your Flight

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LaGuardia used to be the airport New Yorkers complained about, and the food was usually part of the complaint. That’s changed. Since the terminals finished their multibillion-dollar rebuild, LGA has turned into one of the better places in the country to eat before a flight, with chef-backed restaurants sitting alongside the bagel counters and pizza slices you’d expect from a New York airport. It’s also a convenient jumping-off point for anyone headed east toward Long Island, so a good meal here sets the tone for the rest of the trip too.

The dining scene now splits fairly cleanly by terminal, with each terminal developing its own identity rather than the generic fast-food rows airports used to rely on. Here’s what’s actually worth your time, terminal by terminal.

Terminal B: The Food Hall Everyone Talks About

Terminal B is the largest at LGA, and its food hall has become a destination in its own right, with a fountain at the center and floor-to-ceiling windows looking out over the tarmac. A few names stand out:

  • Shake Shack: the reliable burger-and-shake stop, including a breakfast sandwich worth ordering if you’re catching an early flight.
  • Brooklyn Diner: classic comfort food, from pastrami sandwiches to a Reuben, plus a slice of the diner’s well-known cheesecake.
  • Zaro’s Family Bakery: the move for bagels, pastries, and coffee if you’re passing through before 9 a.m.
  • La Chula: upscale Mexican tacos and tortas from chef Julian Medina, with margaritas if your flight allows for one.
  • Hunt & Fish Grill: a Manhattan steakhouse outpost serving grilled cuts and seafood for travelers who want a proper sit-down meal.

Terminal B also recently added Capital One Landing, a Spanish tapas spot from chef José Andrés on one of the terminal’s skybridges. You don’t need the Capital One card to eat there, and the skyline views make it worth a look even if you’re not hungry yet.

Terminal C: Delta’s Upscale Food Court

Delta’s terminal took a different approach, leaning into a curated food hall built with input from well-known New York chefs. Expect higher prices than Terminal B, but the payoff is real:

  • Bubby’s: scratch-made comfort food, including crispy fried chicken, buttermilk biscuits, and pie that regulars specifically fly through LGA to eat.
  • The Grille: an American restaurant built around burgers, chicken sandwiches, and a full breakfast menu, with a design meant to feel like a park rather than a gate area.
  • Flatiron Tavern & Provisions: elevated pub food and a solid beer list, good for a relaxed pre-flight meal.
  • Prime: the terminal’s steakhouse, sourcing beef from Pat LaFrieda and serving filet, strip, and ribeye alongside a strong seafood menu.
  • Chuko Ramen: the Brooklyn shop’s airport outpost, serving both ramen and sushi rolls named after Queens neighborhoods.

Running Late? Here’s Where to Grab Something Fast

These terminals have markets built for travelers with no time to sit down. They’re spread near the gate clusters rather than clustered in one spot, so it’s worth knowing where to look before you’re actually sprinting:

  • Cibo Express Gourmet Market: pre-packaged salads, overnight oats, and grab-and-go coffee, with specialty items like Kosher sandwiches for anyone who needs them. Terminal C has a few locations, including one near the shuttle departures area.
  • Magnolia Bakery: the famous NYC chain’s cupcakes, banana pudding, and wafer cookies, located near the food hall in Terminal C.

Both let you get in and out in a few minutes without skipping breakfast entirely, and neither requires a table or a wait.

Order Ahead to Skip the Line

Most sit-down restaurants across the terminals now offer contactless ordering through QR codes at the table or a mobile app tied to the terminal. Scan the code, place your order, and the kitchen starts working while you’re still deciding whether you have time to sit. It’s a small feature, but it matters at an airport where a delayed flight can turn a leisurely lunch into a sprint to the gate.

A Few Notes Before You Fly

A handful of practical details worth knowing before you land at LGA:

  • Prices run higher in Terminal C than in Terminal B, partly because of the chef partnerships behind restaurants like Prime.
  • Peak breakfast hours get busy fast, especially at Zaro’s and Shake Shack, so build in extra time if you’re flying out during the morning rush.
  • Hours vary by restaurant and season, so it’s worth checking the terminal’s website if you’re arriving very early or very late.

Why It’s Worth Getting to the Airport a Little Early

LaGuardia’s food scene isn’t an afterthought anymore. Whether you land in Terminal B and want a proper sit-down dinner or connect through Terminal C craving sushi or a steak, there’s finally something worth eating at this airport. Order ahead if your gate is far, budget a little extra time during busy mornings, and treat the meal as part of the trip instead of something to survive before boarding.

The bigger shift is how much local New York flavor made it past security. These aren’t generic airport chains; they’re outposts of restaurants people already seek out across the five boroughs. If landing at LGA is just the first leg, plenty of travelers continue straight out to Long Island once they’ve eaten.