MCARTHUR'S RESTAURANT & BAR
A Century of Great Taste
Named in honor of Albert Chase McArthur; the Arizona Biltmore’s visionary architect, McArthur’s legacy is the storied past of the man that designed this uniquely fascinating and inspiring building to be a beautiful place where people feel equally beautiful. Today McArthur’s Restaurant & Bar walks in the footsteps of this century of good taste, providing our diners with a moment of escape from the everyday.
Open Daily for Breakfast, Brunch, Lunch and Dinner
Family-Friendly | Full Bar | Outdoor Patio | Billiards, Shuffleboard, Foosball
The Heart of the Arizona Biltmore
Serving up a feast of New American Cuisine from morning coffee to late-night conversation, McArthur’s is the creative fusion of meticulously sourced ingredients in a menu of comforting delight. Like the Biltmore itself, this is a place of warm welcome sprinkled with iconic design for those who love to indulge in simple, uncommonly good food within elegant surroundings.
Explore the Menu
Sunday – Thursday 7 am – 9 pm
Friday & Saturday 7 am – 10 pm
Restaurant Week Menu: 05/15/26 - 05/24/26
Experience Spring Arizona Restaurant Week at McArthur’s at Arizona Biltmore with a thoughtfully curated three-course dining experience for $44 per person. Featuring seasonal ingredients, locally inspired flavors, and elevated comfort dishes, the menu includes selections such as Chicken Tortilla Soup, Confit Duck, Sonoran Chicken, Anise Braised Short Rib, and a vibrant Southwest Protein Bowl. Set within the iconic Arizona Biltmore, McArthur’s offers a refined yet approachable dining experience that celebrates the flavors of the Southwest in a timeless desert setting.
A Storied Past
In 1925, McArthur arrived in Phoenix and the future began. His brothers, Warren and Charles McArthur, had been pursuing the development of a major tourist hotel in Phoenix since the 1910s and, by 1928, the pieces were in place for what would become Albert Chase McArthur’s signature project and a Phoenix landmark; the Arizona Biltmore Hotel. Albert McArthur designed the Biltmore to be a beautiful building where people feel equally beautiful. The famous Biltmore blocks reflect Albert’s harmonies of light and color, the obsession first studied in his Harvard days.
