
Originally published on May 17, 2026.
The Florida Keys are more than just a vacation destination. They’re one long roadside food crawl stretched across the Overseas Highway, filled with burger joints, fish shacks, bakeries, old bars, souvenir shops, roadside BBQ stands, and places that somehow survive despite looking like they shouldn’t.
Some spots in this guide are destination-worthy restaurants. Others are little more than a roadside stop with a memorable burger, frozen drink, weird soda selection, or slice of pie that stuck with me long after the drive home. That’s the Keys experience. Not everything is polished, and that’s part of the appeal.
This isn’t a ranked “best of” list. It’s an ongoing guide to eating in Key Largo, Tavernier, Islamorada, and Key West, with plans to continue adding to the Upper and Lower Keys over time. Some places here are still thriving. Others are already gone. Food history vanishes quickly in the Florida Keys, especially when no one bothers to document it.
So whether you’re pulling over for a roadside smash burger, hunting down old-school Dairy Queen vibes, grabbing snacks at a general store, or revisiting a Key West classic before it vanishes, this guide is built for your road trip adventure.
Key Largo
Key Largo is where the Florida Keys road trip officially begins to feel real. The traffic slows down, the roadside signs get weirder, and suddenly you’re passing bait shops, tiki bars, general stores, seafood joints, and old-school businesses that feel frozen somewhere between tourist stop and local hangout.
It’s also one of the easiest places to accidentally spend an entire day eating. A roadside burger trailer turns into a long lunch. A quick stop for drinks becomes a bag full of old-school candy and strange sodas. Some of my favorite stops in Key Largo aren’t fancy restaurants at all. They’re the kinds of places you remember because of the atmosphere, the people running them, or the fact that you stumbled onto something unexpectedly good while driving toward Key West.
Dani and Mike’s 102 Smash Burgers
I don’t know everything about burgers, but I know enough to trust certain people when they tell me to make a detour. A big shoutout to my guy @soflajohnny for insisting I drive down to Dani & Mike’s 102 in Key Largo.
What started as a random afternoon somehow turned into one of those classic South Florida road trips. I hit McDonald’s in Doral for one of the retro McDonaldland tins, accidentally jumped onto the Turnpike, stopped at Cracker Barrel in Florida City looking for Halloween decorations, and eventually realized I was only about 30 minutes away from Key Largo anyway.

The burger trailer sits outside John’s General Store, which feels like the kind of roadside spot you hope still exists in the Florida Keys: snacks, drinks, souvenirs, random finds, and enough personality to make you wander around longer than expected.

I ordered the OMG Burger: fresh-ground beef, American cheese, bacon jam, roasted jalapeño aioli, all on a brioche bun with Cajun fries on the side. No oversized tower nonsense, just a properly built smash burger with great balance and real flavor.
It’s the kind of stop that makes you rethink rushing through the Upper Keys just to get to Key West.
Dani & Mike’s 102 Smash Burgers
📍 102700 Overseas Hwy, Key Largo, FL
📸 Instagram | Facebook
John’s General Store

Places like John’s General Store are part of the reason driving through the Florida Keys still feels different from the rest of Florida. It’s equal parts roadside stop, souvenir shop, snack headquarters, and time capsule.
Inside are shelves stacked with old-school candy, bottled sodas, chips, hot sauces, fishing gear, t-shirts, beach junk, and random Florida tourist chaos. You will walk in intending to buy a drink and end up leaving with key lime candy, a sticker, and snacks for the road.

Even if you’re stopping for Dani & Mike’s 102 Smash Burger parked outside, it’s worth taking a few extra minutes to wander around inside. General stores like this used to be all over roadside Florida. Now they feel increasingly rare.
John’s General Store
📍 102411 Overseas Hwy, Key Largo, FL
📸 Instagram | Facebook
Mike’s BBQ 101
Roadside BBQ and the Florida Keys make a lot more sense together than most people realize. Somewhere between the fishing culture, cold beer, and outdoor cooking lifestyle, smoked meat fits down here.

Mike’s BBQ 101 has been serving ‘que in Key Largo since 2017 and has built a loyal following for brisket, ribs, and pulled pork.
If the name sounds familiar, yes, this is the same Mike behind Dani & Mike’s 102 Smash Burgers, another one of my favorite roadside stops in the Upper Keys.
Unfortunately for me, they had already sold out of brisket by the time I rolled in, which honestly felt like a good sign more than a disappointment. So instead, I ordered a pound of smoked sausage, coleslaw, a pulled pork sandwich, cornbread, and mac and cheese.

We worked our way through each of the house sauces: Sweet BBQ, Hot BBQ, Carolina Sweet, and Mustered. The Hot BBQ Sauce turned out to be our favorite, but the pulled pork didn’t need any help.
There’s nothing overly polished about the experience, which honestly works in its favor. The Florida Keys don’t need luxury BBQ. They need places that smell like smoke while you’re parking the car. There are a handful of tented picnic tables out front for seating, which makes the whole roadside BBQ setup feel even more perfect for the Keys.
Mike’s BBQ 101
📍 97000 Overseas Hwy, Key Largo, FL
🌐 mikesbbq101.com
Pinecrest Bakery

Seeing a Pinecrest Bakery in Key Largo somehow feels both completely out of place and totally correct at the same time. Once you get deep enough into a South Florida road trip, eventually cafecito becomes mandatory.
For anyone driving into or out of the Keys, it’s an easy stop for Cuban coffee, pastelitos, croquetas, sandwiches, and emergency road snacks before getting back on the Overseas Highway. This Key Largo location also has indoor seating, outdoor seating, and a drive-thru, making it the most convenient cafecito stop in the Upper Keys.
It also quietly reinforces something that makes the Florida Keys unique: the farther south you drive, the stronger the overlap becomes between old Florida tourist culture and Cuban comfort food culture.
Pinecrest Bakery
📍 99600 Overseas Hwy, Key Largo, FL
🌐 pinecrestbakery.com
Tavernier
As you keep driving south through the Upper Keys, Tavernier starts feeling a little quieter and more lived-in than Key Largo. The tourist energy is still there, but it blends into neighborhoods, marinas, roadside businesses, and old Florida holdovers that somehow continue surviving along the Overseas Highway.
Dairy Queen

You’ll pass plenty of fast food spots driving south through the Keys: Arby’s, McDonald’s, Wendy’s, and just about every chain built for road trips. But this Dairy Queen in Tavernier has always had a special place in my heart.
I’ve been stopping at this DQ since high school. A friend’s family had a summer home nearby, and whether we were heading down for the weekend or making the drive back home, this was one of those guaranteed stops along the Overseas Highway.
My go-to order was always the Nestlé Crunch Blizzard, which Dairy Queen sadly discontinued years ago. Somehow, I still have a picture from the last time I ate one here back in 2009, which feels both ridiculous and completely on brand for me.
Dairy Queen
📍 91200 Overseas Hwy, Tavernier, FL
🌐 dairyqueen.com
Islamorada
By the time you hit Islamorada, the Florida Keys road trip starts slowing down. Fishing culture, roadside restaurants, dive bars, and old-school Keys weirdness all start blending together here.
MEAT Eatery and Taproom

MEAT Eatery & Taproom has been one of the Florida Keys’ best burger stops long before smash burgers and over-the-top burger builds took over social media. The Islamorada spot serves properly cooked burgers, duck fat fries, housemade chorizo, craft sodas, and fresh pork rinds that are worth ordering every single time.

Guy Fieri and Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives eventually rolled through, which only made the place busier, but the food still hit right. If you’re driving through Islamorada, it’s genuinely worth stopping.
MEAT Eatery & Taproom
📍 88005 Overseas Hwy, Islamorada, FL
🌐 meateatery.com
Key West
By the time you finally hit Key West, the road trip turns into organized chaos: Duval Street crowds, wandering chickens, bars everywhere, late-night food stops, and restaurants constantly changing hands. Some places become institutions. Others disappear before you make it back down again.
That’s part of what makes eating in Key West memorable. Half the experience is finding something great. The other half is hoping it still exists the next time you visit.
Frita’s Cuban Burger Cafe

While I’ve never officially sat down at Frita’s Cuban Burger Cafe, I’ve eaten their fritas more than once. The first came courtesy of my sister Michelle, and the second when they traveled to Miami to compete in my Frita Showdown.

They’re not based in Miami, the frita cubana capital of the world, but they make a righteous frita that absolutely deserves a stop if you’re wandering around Key West hungry.
Frita’s Cuban Burger Cafe
📍 425 Southard St, Key West, FL
🌐 fritascubanburgers.com
Garbo’s Grill

Garbo’s Grill is a husband-and-wife-run Airstream food truck tucked behind Hank’s Hair of the Dog Saloon serving Korean BBQ tacos, burgers, burritos, lobster rolls, and fish tacos.

Guy Fieri and Diners, Drive-Ins & Dives helped turn it into one of the better-known food spots in Key West, but the setup still works because it genuinely feels like Key West: outdoor seating, live music nearby, cold drinks, and tourists wandering around trying to figure out what to order.
Garbo’s Grill
📍 409 Caroline St, Key West, FL
🌐 garbosgrillkw.com
Glazed Donuts

I grabbed half a dozen donuts from Glazed Donuts, including glazed, chocolate lovers, triple chocolate, bourbon maple bacon, and salted caramel pretzel alongside a cup of Red Buoy coffee.

The glazed was solid, but the bourbon maple bacon donut was the standout. Marcela was too distracted by the chocolate donuts to notice me quietly claiming the better choice.
Glazed Donuts
📍 420 Eaton St, Key West, FL
🌐 glazeddonuts.com
Hog’s Breath Saloon

Hog’s Breath Saloon is one of those classic Key West bars that somehow feels exactly the way you hoped it would. Multiple bars, live music, open-air seating, and a constant flow of tourists trying to turn a quick drink into an all-day situation.
Years ago, after I wrote about their Hog Dust seasoning, the owners mailed me a bottle as a thank-you. Small gesture, but one I still remember.
Hog’s Breath Saloon
📍 400 Front Street, Key West, FL
🌐 hogsbreath.com
Cheeseburger (Closed)

Walking Duval Street one afternoon, Marcela and I ended up at Cheeseburger, a loud Hawaiian-themed burger joint where she ordered a burger topped with grilled pineapple and avocado while I went with one loaded up with bacon, a fried egg, and Thousand Island.
The entire Cheeseburger chain has since disappeared, including the Key West location. Another reminder that restaurants in tourist towns rarely last forever, even when they seem busy all the time.
Hot Dog Lounge (Closed)

Late one night wandering Duval Street, I stumbled into the Hot Dog Lounge, a tiny stand serving hot dogs, sausages, pretzels, and an unexpectedly massive lineup of sauces years before hot sauce obsession became mainstream.
I met Raymond that night, who proudly told us about his yearly Target runs to stock sauces for the stand. Raymond passed away in 2011, and the Hot Dog Lounge eventually disappeared too, but it remains one of my favorite random late-night Key West food memories.
Final Thoughts
The Florida Keys are more than just a vacation destination. They’re one long roadside food crawl stretched across the Overseas Highway, filled with burger joints, fish shacks, bakeries, old bars, roadside BBQ stands, general stores, and places that somehow survive despite looking like they shouldn’t.
Some spots in this guide are destination-worthy restaurants. Others are little more than a roadside stop with a memorable burger, frozen drink, weird soda selection, or slice of pie that stuck with me long after the drive home. That’s the Keys experience. Not everything is polished, and that’s part of the appeal.
This also isn’t a ranked “best of” list. It’s an ongoing guide to eating through Key Largo, Tavernier, Islamorada, and Key West that I’ll continue adding to over time. Some places here are still thriving. Others are already gone. Food history disappears quickly in the Florida Keys, especially when no one bothers to document it.
So whether you’re pulling over for a roadside smash burger, hunting down old-school Dairy Queen nostalgia, grabbing snacks at a general store, or revisiting a Key West classic before it vanishes, this guide is built for the road trip itself as much as the food.