Lake George Restaurant Week Returns June 14–20 — Here's What to Book Now
- Joe Blizzard
- May 19
- 2 min read
Updated: May 20

If you've been waiting for an excuse to try every restaurant on your list, this is it. Lake George Region Restaurant Week returns June 14–20, 2026, with three-course prix fixe menus for $35 at restaurants across the region (beverages, tax, and gratuity not included).
This Year's Theme: Tropical Fruits
The Chamber's 2026 theme is "Tropical Fruits" — pineapple, mango, coconut, and citrus woven into appetizers, entrées, desserts, and signature drinks. It's a smart twist for the start of summer, and chefs across the region are leaning into it.
Who's Participating
Past years have included Lake George favorites like Adirondack Pub & Brewery, Charlie's Bar & Kitchen, The Lagoon, The Lakeside Restaurant & Lounge, The Lobster Pot, Log Jam Restaurant, Mama Riso's, Sans Souci, The Score Sports Grille, and TR's Restaurant at Holiday Inn Resort. Full participating menus go live on the Lake George Regional Chamber of Commerce website (lakegeorgechamber.com) as they're released.
How to Make It Work
Make reservations. Restaurant Week books up fast — especially mid-week dinner slots.
Try somewhere new. The $35 price point makes it easier to take a chance on a place you've been meaning to try.
Go in groups. Splitting a few different dishes across the table gets you a real sense of what each kitchen does.
Pair with the rest of June. Restaurant Week runs the same week as the LGA Summer Gala (July 10) prep and lands just before peak summer crowds arrive.
Bonus: Glens Falls Restaurant Week
If you're in the area and want to extend your dining tour, Glens Falls runs its own Restaurant Week with three price points ($25, $35, $45) across spots like Downtown City Tavern, Giovanni Fresco, Park 26, Resto Bar at Adirondack Winery, and Tres Mijas. Different week, same idea — and Glens Falls is only 20 minutes from the Village.
Restaurant Week is the perfect way to kick off summer in the region. Comfortable weather, smaller crowds than peak July, and a real excuse to eat your way through Lake George.



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