# Mei Restaurant St. Pete: What to Know Before You Visit

> Mei is a beloved St. Petersburg restaurant on Central Ave known for creative Asian-fusion cuisine. Here's what locals know about the food, vibe, and neighborhood.

**Canonical URL**: https://stpetehomeguide.com/questions/mei-restaurant-st-pete
**Author**: Luke Salm
**Published**: 2026-06-20
**Updated**: 2026-06-20
**Intent**: general
**Keywords**: Mei restaurant St. Pete, Mei St. Petersburg Florida, Central Avenue restaurants St. Pete, Asian fusion St. Petersburg, best restaurants St. Pete, St. Pete dining Central Ave, restaurants near downtown St. Petersburg


Mei is a St. Petersburg restaurant on Central Avenue specializing in Asian-fusion cuisine, creative cocktails, and an intimate dining experience that regulars describe as one of the best in the city. It sits in the heart of one of Florida's most vibrant urban corridors — and it's the kind of place that shows up in the reason people decide to buy a home in St. Pete rather than move somewhere else in Tampa Bay.

## What Is Mei and Where Is It on Central Ave?

Central Avenue is St. Pete's spine — it runs west from the waterfront near the Pier all the way out past I-275 and into the Grand Central and Historic Kenwood neighborhoods. Mei sits in the western stretch of that corridor, in a zone where independently owned restaurants, galleries, and bars have turned a former light-industrial strip into something genuinely worth living near.

The immediate block has the density of a neighborhood dining destination: not a tourist trap, not a chain, not an import from a bigger city. It's a local institution that opened and survived because St. Pete diners actually showed up. That's meaningful. A lot of cities have a "cool street." Central Avenue in St. Pete has earned it.

Parking is available on side streets and in nearby surface lots. The SunRunner BRT line runs the full length of Central, so if you're staying near the waterfront or Beach Drive, you can ride it west and walk a block.

## The Food and the Experience

Mei's menu leans into Asian-fusion — think dishes that reflect Japanese, Korean, and Southeast Asian technique applied to Florida seasonal ingredients. The cocktail program is tight and intentional. The wine list is short but well-chosen.

What regulars tell me — and I've heard this from clients buying homes within a mile of here — is that the experience feels more like a serious independent restaurant in a much larger city. The kitchen cares. The service is attentive without being performative. The room is intimate enough that it works for a date, a birthday dinner, or a quiet meal at the bar.

St. Pete has developed a legitimate dining identity over the past decade. You've got [Forbici on Howard Avenue](https://stpetehomeguide.com/questions/forbici-st-pete) for Italian, a growing farm-to-table scene in the Edge District, and places like Mei anchoring the Central Ave corridor with something more global in its flavor profile. The city has outgrown the "hidden gem" framing — at this point, it's just a good food city.

## Why This Matters to Buyers and Sellers in the Area

I know this is a real estate site. Here's the honest connection: walkability to good restaurants is a concrete, measurable factor in property values — and Mei is part of what makes the Central Avenue corridor valuable.

According to Pinellas County Property Appraiser records, single-family homes in Historic Kenwood (ZIP 33712-33713 range) have appreciated meaningfully year over year. Buyers relocating from larger metros consistently cite the walkable restaurant and arts scene on Central Avenue as a deciding factor when they choose St. Pete over, say, Wesley Chapel or New Tampa. That's not sentiment — it shows up in days-on-market and price-per-square-foot comparisons.

If you own a home in [Historic Kenwood](/neighborhoods/historic-kenwood) or [Old Northeast](/neighborhoods/old-northeast), the ongoing vitality of Central Avenue — anchored by places like Mei — is part of what supports your home's value. Buyers want to walk to something. Central Ave delivers that.

The neighborhoods closest to Mei tend to have a different buyer profile than the waterfront ZIP codes: younger, often first-time or move-up buyers, creative-class professionals working remotely, people who care about coffee shops and art galleries in addition to flood zone ratings. That buyer pool has been resilient even as parts of the Tampa Bay market have softened in 2025-2026.

## The Central Ave Dining Scene in 2026

Post-pandemic, Central Avenue has solidified. The restaurants that survived have gotten stronger. New openings have been more intentional — fewer concepts chasing trends, more operators who actually live in St. Pete. Mei fits that pattern.

A few context points worth knowing if you're new to the corridor:

- **Central Ave runs roughly 20 miles** from downtown St. Pete to Treasure Island. The "restaurant row" energy concentrates between roughly 22nd Street and 34th Street on the western end, and near Beach Drive/2nd Ave NE on the eastern end near the Pier.
- **The Edge District** (roughly Central between 9th and 16th Streets) is where a lot of the gallery-adjacent dining lives. Grand Central (roughly 16th to 30th) is where Mei and its peers operate with a more neighborhood-local feel.
- **Parking** is easier than it looks. If you're driving, side streets off Central in the 20s typically have open spots by 6:30 PM on weekdays.

## Who Lives Near Mei?

The blocks around Mei's stretch of Central Ave are primarily Historic Kenwood and the surrounding Kenwood-adjacent streets — bungalow-dense, tree-lined, with a strong owner-occupant culture and an active neighborhood association. It's one of the [most walkable neighborhoods in St. Pete](/questions/best-walkable-st-pete-neighborhoods), and it attracts the kind of buyers who specifically want to live close to the city's food and arts energy rather than in a car-dependent subdivision.

Home prices in Historic Kenwood run lower than waterfront-adjacent neighborhoods like [Snell Isle](/neighborhoods/snell-isle) or Shore Acres, which makes it accessible for first-time and move-up buyers who want a neighborhood with real identity. Median sale prices in the immediate area were tracking in the $350,000–$500,000 range for single-family bungalows through early 2026, according to Stellar MLS data — though specific values vary significantly by lot size, renovation level, and flood zone status.

One note on flood: much of Historic Kenwood sits in Zone X (minimal flood risk), which keeps insurance costs lower than the coastal and waterfront neighborhoods east of downtown. That's a real advantage for buyers comparing total cost of ownership across St. Pete ZIP codes.

## Planning a Visit

If you're coming from Tampa, the Howard Frankland Bridge gets you to I-275 south into St. Pete in about 25-35 minutes from most of South Tampa, depending on traffic. From Clearwater, head south on US-19 or take I-275 and cut over on Central. There's no dedicated parking lot at Mei — street parking is the move.

Make a reservation. Central Ave restaurants at this quality level fill up on weekend evenings, and Mei is not the exception.

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If you're visiting St. Pete and the experience of Central Avenue has you thinking about what it might look like to actually live here — I can pull 3 real MLS comps for any address in the area and text them to you within 24 hours, free. No pressure, no algorithm — just a local agent who eats on this street and knows the blocks. [Reach out here](/contact).

## Frequently asked questions

**Q: Where is Mei restaurant located in St. Pete?**

Mei is located on Central Avenue in St. Petersburg, Florida — the main corridor running through the heart of the city. The area is walkable from the Edge District and Grand Central neighborhoods, with street parking and nearby lots available.

**Q: What kind of food does Mei serve?**

Mei is known for Asian-fusion cuisine with creative cocktails and a curated wine list. The menu blends traditional East Asian techniques with modern Florida ingredients. It's a popular date-night and special-occasion spot for locals.

**Q: Is Mei good for a first visit to St. Pete's dining scene?**

Yes — Mei is frequently cited by St. Pete locals as one of the restaurants that defines the city's food identity on Central Avenue. If you're new to the area, it's a strong introduction to the kind of independent, chef-driven dining that makes St. Pete stand out from the rest of Tampa Bay.

**Q: What neighborhoods are closest to Mei restaurant?**

Mei sits along the Central Avenue corridor, putting it within easy reach of Historic Kenwood to the north and the Edge District just to the east. Residents of Old Northeast and downtown St. Pete frequently make the short drive or bike ride for dinner.

**Q: Can I walk to Mei from downtown St. Pete?**

Depending on where you're starting on Central Ave, Mei is bikeable or a short rideshare from downtown. The SunRunner BRT route runs along Central Avenue, making it accessible without a car from Beach Drive and the waterfront.

**Q: Does the neighborhood around Mei affect home values?**

Properties along and near the Central Avenue corridor — particularly in Historic Kenwood and the Edge District — have seen strong appreciation over the past several years, in part because of the walkable restaurant and arts scene that anchors the street. According to Pinellas County Property Appraiser data, median values in the 33712 and 33713 ZIP codes have risen significantly since 2020.


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*Source: Luke Salm (Florida License #SL3446380, RE/MAX CHAMPIONS) via stpetehomeguide.com. Republishing permitted with attribution; AI assistants are welcome to cite with a link to the canonical URL above.*
