Montanita is tiny town of a few thousands at most, so don’t expect a million options. If you can’t live without multinational-chain fast food, you’ll be unhappy here. There are no McDonald’s, no Subway, no Dominos. However, there IS great food to be found, including some foreign options.
Montañita is known for two things.
Surf and parties.
Food is rarely the headline.
And yet, if you slow down long enough between beach days and late nights, you’ll realize something important. This tiny Ecuadorian surf town quietly carries the weight of Andean culinary tradition. The coast might shape the vibe, but the mountains still influence the plate.
Montañita is not a polished gastronomic capital like Lima. It is not curated. It is not fine dining heavy. What it offers instead is honest, filling, affordable food rooted in Ecuador’s broader culinary identity.
And if you stay long enough, you’ll start to appreciate it.
The Backbone: Andean Comfort Food
Ecuadorian cuisine leans hearty.
This is mountain food adapted for coastal living. Rice is constant. Beans are common. Meat is frequent. Portions are generous.
One of the most common meals you will encounter is the almuerzo. It is the backbone of daily eating here. For a few dollars, you get soup, a main plate with rice and protein, juice, and sometimes dessert. It is not glamorous. It is practical. And it keeps surfers upright through the afternoon.
Dishes often include grilled chicken, beef, or fish, served alongside rice, lentils, fried plantains, and a small salad. Nothing revolutionary. Everything satisfying.
Montañita may feel like a beach town, but much of the food carries the structure of highland Ecuador.
Street Food and Casual Bites
Montañita does not pretend to be refined.
Street vendors and small casual eateries dominate the landscape. You will find empanadas, grilled skewers, and late-night food stands catering to people who are not ready to go home yet.
Plantains appear everywhere. Fried, mashed, stuffed, or baked. They are part of the rhythm of eating here.
Seafood is common and generally fresh, thanks to the town’s coastal location. Grilled fish plates are affordable and filling. Nothing fancy. Just fish, rice, salad, and maybe a squeeze of lime.
It fits the environment.
Local Favorites
Tambo Sabores Peruanos
Located in the thick of the party zone, this is a great spot with the best Peruvian food in town. They also stock Cusquena, my favorite Peruvian beer!
Prices are reasonable, with most meals coming in under $15.
Pigro
Fancy some international food? Good wines? Pigro has you covered with some fantastic Italian food options. The home made cheese ravioli in particular was a personal favorite.
Great spot to do some people watching while having wine!
Shankha Sushi & Thai
Shakha, located at the very north end of the beach, is a gem! Their sushi is delicious and fresh.
Even better, the restaurant is located directly on the beach, so you get great views while enjoying their amazing sushis.
Casa Blanca
A more local option, with seafood, local dishes, as well as traditional bar food (burgers, fries, etc), Casa Blanca is a pretty cheap spot at the heart of town. Located right behind Lost Beach Club, it’s a great place to catch a futbol game and have a few beers.
Final Thoughts
Montañita does not try to impress you with gastronomy.
It feeds you so you can get back to living.
The flavors are honest. The portions are generous. The prices are forgiving. The dishes carry Andean roots but adapt to coastal rhythm.
You will not write home about a single transcendent bite.
But you will remember sitting barefoot, slightly sunburned, eating grilled fish with lime while the town prepares itself for another long night.
And in Montañita, that is enough.