This is Eater’s guide to all the New York City restaurants, bars, and cafes that closed in October 2025 (see: September, August, July, June, May, April, March, February, and January). This list will be updated weekly, serving as a round-up of the dining and drinking places that have shuttered around the city. If a restaurant or bar has closed in your neighborhood, let us know at ny@eater.com.
Brooklyn Heights: Michelin-starred Brooklyn restaurant Clover Hill appears to have closed without any notice. It had been the kitchen home to chef Charlie Mitchell, who is now head chef at Saga in Fidi, and more recently, Sam Rogers. 20 Columbia Place, between Joralemon and State streets
Chelsea: Long-running Japanese-leaning Italian restaurant mainstay Basta Pasta closed on Thursday, October 30, after 35 years. While the announcement did not go into detail about reasons for the closure, Basta Pasta’s website emphasizes that “the spirit of Basta Pasta will live on” somewhere else, and hints at future possibilities. 37 West 17th Street, between Fifth and Sixth avenues
East Village: Paradis to Go closed sometime this month after 20 years in business. Owner Kim Paradis, a French-trained chef who opened the place with her husband, a butcher, said the landlord declined to renew her lease, per EV Grieve. 114 Fourth Avenue near East 12th Street
Long Island City: Japanese restaurant Suzuki Shokudo closed on Thursday, October 30, because the namesake owner is retiring. 38-01 31st Street, at 38th Avenue
Midtown: Italian aperitivo-style cafe Lodi closed on Thursday, October 30, as confirmed by its voicemail. Ignacio Mattos’s restaurant was among the first restaurants to open at the address as part of an ambitious turnaround effort led by developer Tishman Speyer. It reportedly shuttered due to high operating expenses related to the increased cost of goods. 1 Rockefeller Plaza, between Fifth and Sixth avenues
Midtown East: Southeast Asian food stand Burmese Bites closed its location inside of food hall Mona Kitchen sometime in October. Chef and owner Myo Lin Thway’s Queens Mall location in Elmhurst remains open. 310 East 44th Street, between Second Avenue and United Nations Plaza
Park Slope: Mexican restaurant Cruz del Sur, known for its stellar Guadalajaran torta ahogadas, is closing on Friday, October 31. It looks like its original location in Prospect Heights closed sometime earlier this year or late in 2024. 446 Dean Street, near Fifth Avenue
Upper West Side: Oklahoma-style barbecue restaurant Au Jus appears to be closed, as reported by West Side Rag. Its East Harlem location is temporarily closed. 2621 Broadway, at West 96th Street
Williamsburg: Popular Mexican seafood restaurant Ensendada, which opened in 2022, closed on Sunday, October 26, because of a reported dip in sales and rising operating costs. 168 Borinquen Place, at South Second Street

Here & There’s counter. Here & There/Official
East Village: The Juice Press chain closed this neighborhood location sometime this month, per EV Grieve. There are plenty of still-open locations in Manhattan. 201 East 10th Street, near Second Avenue
Greenpoint: Seven-year-old bar Jimbo Slims is closing on Saturday, October 25. 524 Graham Avenue, at Newton Street
Park Slope: Italian bakery Foca Foca closed in early October, as reported by Here’s Park Slope. It had opened in 2023 with a focus on focaccia. 349 Fifth Avenue, near Fourth Street
Sunnyside: Mexican shop Cemitas El Tigre, which was known for its packed Pueblo-style sandwiches with ingredients such as fried chicken and barbacoa, closed on Friday, October 24. Owner Danny Lyu is keeping his Manhattan Bajan-style taco restaurant Summer Salt open. 45-14 48th Avenue, between 45th and 46th streets
Upper East Side: Belgian restaurant and beer bar B. Cafe closed after 20 years of operations sometime in October, as reported by Upper East Site. 240 East 75th Street, near Second Avenue
Williamsburg: It turns out that Japanese listening bar Here & There closed in September after just six months. The team behind it, Third Date Hospitality Group, has turned the space into a new seafood restaurant, Boro Brine, which opened this week. 109 South Sixth Street, between Berry Street and Bedford Avenue

The Hakata-style tonkotsu at Marufuku Ramen. Marufuku Ramen/Official
Bushwick: Brooklyn Italian spot Marie’s Restaurant closed on Monday, September 29. Chef Miguel Trinidad had opened the restaurant in March 2024. 195 Wyckoff Avenue, at Harman Street
East Village: The sole New York location of Marufuku Ramen, which opened in the summer of 2021, closed on Sunday, October 12. The chain is known for its hot bowls of rich, Hakata-style ramen, which entails thin noodles and creamy tonkotsu broth. 92 Second Avenue, at East Fifth Street
East Village: Turns out the Sabieng Thai, which opened in 2016, is now permanently closed, as reported by EV Grieve. The Thai restaurant had temporarily closed in September, and now, the blog reports that the address is being turned into a new spot, Nounou Noodle Bar. 71 First Avenue, between East Fourth and Fifth streets
Greenpoint: Brooklyn New York-style pizzeria Rita’s Pizza & Provisions is closing on Saturday, October 19. 160 Huron Street, near Manhattan Avenue
Greenwich Village: RIP Papaya Dog. 333 Sixth Avenue, at Cornelia Street
Park Slope: Brooklyn seafood and sushi shop Pisces Fish Market closed on Wednesday, September 24, per Here’s Park Slope. The account reports that the space is going to become an expansion for the next-door Foodtown Supermarket. 413 Fifth Avenue, between Seventh and Eighth streets
Prospect Heights: Pizzeria and cocktail bar Parashades closed on Saturday, September 27, because of “a recent change in building ownership, per its Instagram account. It had opened in early 2023. 241 Flatbush Avenue, near Bergen Street
Pies at Appas Pizza. Appas Pizza/Official
Brooklyn Heights: Pips, the Italian wine bar that opened in 2019 from the Colonie and Hildur team, has had its last service. Its sibling, Colonie, remains open next door. 129 Atlantic Avenue, Brooklyn
Bushwick: Blue Hour, the burger spot hidden away inside the BP gas station on Myrtle Avenue, has closed. The fast food counter, from the team behind Little Flower and Sami’s Kebab House, gained a following for its late-night halal eats. On Instagram, Blue Hour’s owners cited the end of their short-term lease but confirmed that the concept is in search of its next home. The team has two other new projects in the works, including a new space in Brooklyn Heights. 1525 Myrtle Avenue, Brooklyn
East Village: Appas Pizza, the Korean pizza parlor that opened in 2023, has closed. The restaurant, which served pizza topped with bulgogi and kimchi, was inspired by the Korean pizzas that owner Kelsey Seo remembered her father, Yong Seo, bringing home from his job at Pizza Hut in Seoul when she was a child. 210 First Avenue, Manhattan
Greenpoint: Sippy Cafe’s Greenpoint location is scheduled to close by mid-October after a five-year run. Billed as “Brooklyn’s first pan-Asian inspired cafe,” Sippy specializes in sweet cream cold brew, tea, and lattes made with black sesame, strawberry, and ube, along with croissants, cookies, and eggy sandwiches. The closure is caused by its “rent prices nearly tripling,” notes co-owners Cerina Shao and Judy Zhu, who maintain another Sippy Cafe in Brooklyn Heights off Remsen Street. 200 Franklin Street, Brooklyn
Kips Bay: Coppola East, an Italian staple for penne alla vodka, brick-oven pies, veal Parm, and spritzes since 1997, has closed. “It is with mixed emotions that we announce the closing of Coppola’s East, after 28 wonderful years of serving this community,” per a statement on its website. 378 3rd Avenue, at East 27th Street
Soho: Morgenstern’s Finest Ice Cream Parlor, “ice cream maestro” Nicholas Morgenstern’s small-batch shop known for its inventive flavors like salted caramel pretzel and charred banana, will serve its last scoop on Sunday, October 12. While its flagship is closing, the black-and-white brand will continue to sell its pints, ice cream cakes, and merch online, and event bookings for its ice cream cart and truck remain active. 88 W. Houston Street, at LaGuardia Place

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