

We first got started serving our Louisiana cuisine out of a food truck back in 2010. Since then, thanks to the support of our community, LoLA expanded to include the brick-and-mortar restaurant you know today. On our menu, you’ll find all kinds of low-country Louisiana seafood options, like our famous overstuffed PoBoys, perfectly seasoned crawfish, and our flavorful creole jambalaya. While enjoying your authentic Southern cuisine, you can relax indoors or hang out on our pet-friendly patio. Either way, you’ll get a meal that will leave you craving more. That’s just the way we do things around here.
Cajun- & Creole-style seafood doled out in hip digs with garage door windows, a full bar & patio.
Address and Contact Information
Address: 4830 O’Hear Ave, North Charleston, SC 29405
Phone: (843) 990-9416
Website: http://www.lolaparkcircle.com/
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Order and Reservations
Reservations: resy.com
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Reviews
We tried as many things as we could, a bit of everything; jambalaya, chicken and andouille gumbo, mussels, fried crawfish, and pecan crusted cornbread. Nothing we got disappointed. We even ordered a muffuletta to go and had the next day for lunch. They serve some cocktails and have a decent variety of beer.
Highly recommend this place for a fun night out.
We walked into the restaurant and saw it was pretty packed with people enjoying their lunch on a weekend. We checked in at the counter and got seated at our table.
We got our menus and after checking them out, we ordered the Duck Fries, Fish Tacos, Jambalaya, and Tropical Storm. The Tropical Storm was a great drink to start our lunch.
Then we got our lunch dishes, which were Duck Fries, Fish Tacos and Jambalaya. We started with duck fries, which were really good and cooked well. They had extra cheese, too. We then got the fish tacos and the jambalaya, and they looked delicious. However, when we ate them, they didn’t really fit our taste and we were disappointed.
A good seafood restaurant with great dishes and drinks.
There’s something about walking into Lola in North Charleston that feels like you’ve stumbled into the back porch of a friend who just happens to cook like a New Orleans grand-mère with a Michelin star in her pocket. The air hums with music and fryer crackle, the purple picnic tables dare you to relax, and every plate that hits the table tells a story worth listening to.
I started with gator bites—crispy, golden little morsels that hit that perfect sweet spot between chicken-tender comfort and swamp-born swagger. Dunked in the house sauce, they’re a handshake and a punchline all at once.
Then came the shrimp & crawfish étouffée, a deep, copper-colored lagoon of flavor poured over a bed of rice. The sauce was a slow jazz number—smoky roux, peppers, the gentle heat of someone who knows the difference between spice and punishment. Each shrimp and crawfish tail tasted like it had been baptized in butter and bourbon.
I wrapped it up the only proper way: beignets dusted in a blizzard of powdered sugar. They arrived hot enough to fog my glasses, soft as a dream, and unapologetically messy—the kind of dessert that makes you forget you own a napkin.
Service? Joshua deserves a standing ovation. He knew the menu like a seasoned tour guide, cracked jokes like a late-night host, and kept the whole experience light and easy without missing a beat.
Lola isn’t just a restaurant; it’s a love letter to the Lowcountry with a Cajun accent. If you crave food with guts, soul, and a sense of humor—where the beer is cold, the flavors are bold, and every bite feels like a high-five—pull up a purple bench and let Lola show you how it’s done.
It was an ok experience but, for me, not worth a revisit.