

Yebo Beach Haus is a chic neighborhood restaurant offering New American Coastal Cuisine that was first opened in 2012. Open Mondays through Saturdays, guests can dine outside on the serene courtyard featuring a fountain and lush greenery or inside Yebo’s main dining room surrounded by clean white walls, textured pillows and hanging woven drum light fixtures; all designed to transport guests to a chic beach bungalow.
South African dishes & cocktails served in a bright, renovated house with airy, modern decor.
Hours
| Sunday | Closed |
| Monday | 11:30 AM–10 PM |
| Tuesday | 11:30 AM–10 PM |
| Wednesday | 11:30 AM–10 PM |
| Thursday | 11:30 AM–10 PM |
| Friday | 11:30 AM–11 PM |
| Saturday | 11:30 AM–11 PM |
Address and Contact Information
Address: 56 E Andrews Dr NW Unit 7, Atlanta, GA 30305
Phone: (404) 228-8024
Website: https://yebobeachhaus.com/
Menu Photos
Order and Reservations
Reservations: opentable.com
Photo Gallery
Related Web Results
Yebo Beach Haus – Atlanta
Yebo Beach Haus (@yebobeachhaus) · Atlanta, GA – Instagram
Yebo Beach Haus Restaurant – Atlanta, GA | OpenTable
Reviews
Plus their food is amazingggg. You can’t go wrong with any of the choices. Just a fun fusion of different cuisines that we got to explore and experience! Definitely will be back.
It took the wait staff 27 minutes after my scheduled reservation time to seat me. I arrived five minutes early.
After I was seated, things improved – somewhat. For a restaurant with these prices and this many waitstaff (easily 15-20 staff within a relatively small dining space), you would expect a lot more in the way of attentive service.
A positive note – the food I enjoyed was delicious. The Smoke & Mirrors mocktail? Sweet and tangy. The duck confit tart? Exquisitely rendered. The Chilean Sea Bass? Smothered in a mouthwatering sauce atop a sea of risotto. The pumpkin cheesecake, however, was a disappointment – tasted like a frozen dessert delivered by Sysco.
To give this restaurant some grace, I visited on NYE, but not at a busy time (4p). Just bizarre that some people choose to spend their money here.
But then again I remember I am in Buckhead, a place where conspicuous consumption is commonly paired with a remarkable lack of discernment. Alas.
Please also note they added an automatic 20% gratuity to the bill, perhaps anticipating they would otherwise be prone to receive smaller tips.
He got the lamb and it was nicely cooked, just not one of the top ones he’s had. I enjoyed by seabass and leek risotto. It has a nice flavor to it. We liked our flourless cake as well. It was rich without being overly sweet.
It gets busy in there so service was a little hit or miss. We had to wait a while to get our check.
First of all, the place is absolutely beautiful! perfect for couples or a small group of friends.
Service was generally good. The missing star is only because we were seated at a small round coffee-style table even though several larger square tables were open. They did move us after we asked, but it shouldn’t have been an issue in the first place.
Food, however, was the biggest disappointment. For such a great location and stunning space, the menu and kitchen execution really need more attention.
My wife ordered a sushi roll, which I know is a bit unusual for this type of restaurant, but it was surprisingly bland. The rice didn’t have enough flavor, which threw the whole roll off.
The Frittura Mista was supposed to be lightly breaded, but it was pretty heavily coated, though the flavor was okay.
The tuna poke had tasteless rice (similar to the sushi roll) and soggy seaweed. I’d honestly recommend they look up a better rice seasoning ratio — more vinegar and sugar would help a lot.
The smash burger was just okay. Not very juicy, and the special sauce didn’t add much.
The best dish we had was the Sosaties. Personally, the filet mignon was slightly over , but still tender and juicy. The rice was flavorful, with hints of lemon and herbs, plus a sweet glaze on top that gave a nice balance. This dish showed what the kitchen can do.
Overall, it feels like management created a menu first and expected the kitchen to figure it out, rather than designing dishes that match the chef’s strengths. The atmosphere is fantastic, but the food needs a serious rethink to match the quality of the space.
Food arrived lukewarm and surprisingly bland. My salmon was forgettable, the burger was a totally average bar burger, and the “haus salad” was the kind of basic greens you could throw together at home in five minutes. Nothing bad, just … nothing special at all. In a city drowning in incredible food options, this place simply doesn’t move the needle.
The pricing is the real head-scratcher. You’re paying a serious Buckhead tax here – entrées easily north of $30–$50 that taste like they belong at a chain half the price. My last dinner visit with my wife was almost $100 for a steak that was solid, sure, but honestly on par with LongHorn … except LongHorn doesn’t make you feel like you’re subsidizing someone’s Instagram aesthetic. It’s cheaper than Bones but delivers maybe a third of the quality. Same exact experience at their sister spot, Cape at Avalon. Save your money and just go to Oak Steakhouse if you want that level of “fancy.”
On the positive side: service today was genuinely excellent – attentive, warm, zero attitude. The beachy décor is fun and well-executed, and the holiday decorations right now are actually pretty charming. Valet is smooth, but self-parking remains a small nightmare if the lots are full.
Bottom line: Yebo is the quintessential “scene” restaurant – great if you want to sip overpriced rosé in a cute room with your equally attractive friends. If you actually care about the food matching the tab, Atlanta has roughly 1,000 better options within 10 miles. I won’t be back for a fourth.