Arizona’s restaurant history runs through desert highway diners, Route 66 stops, border-town cafés, Sonoran hot dog stands, resort restaurants, and neighborhood spots in fast-growing suburbs. This page collects closed and no-longer-operating restaurants across Arizona, organized city by city, so you can explore the places that once defined everyday life from Phoenix and Tucson to small towns in the mountains and along the rim. Whether it was a classic steakhouse in Prescott, a Mexican restaurant in Nogales, or a long-time favorite in Lake Havasu City, each link below preserves a piece of Arizona’s dining story.
Arizona Cities


Love old restaurant stories, local history, and keeping up with the places that quietly disappear? Our free weekday emails follow restaurant closures across the entire United States—one region at a time— with short stories, links, and context you won’t see in a headline. Sign up once, and you’ll get a quick tour of what closed this week, Monday through Friday.
- 🌵 Southwest Stories — Monday
Texas · New Mexico · Arizona · Oklahoma - 🌾 Midwest Farewell — Tuesday
Iowa · Illinois · Indiana · Ohio · Michigan · Minnesota · Wisconsin · Missouri · Kansas · Nebraska · North Dakota · South Dakota - 🌤 Southern Last Call — Wednesday
Louisiana · Mississippi · Alabama · Georgia · Florida · South Carolina · North Carolina · Tennessee · Kentucky · West Virginia · Arkansas - 🌊 Coastline Closings — Thursday
California · Oregon · Washington · Alaska · Hawaii - 🏔 Mountain West Report — Friday
Idaho · Montana · Wyoming · Colorado · Utah · Nevada - 🍁 New England Notes — Saturday
Maine · Vermont · New Hampshire · Massachusetts · Rhode Island · Connecticut - 🏙 Mid-Atlantic Memo — Sunday Morning
New York · New Jersey · Pennsylvania · Delaware · Maryland · Washington, D.C.
We’ll keep expanding this list as more Arizona restaurant memories surface. If you know of a closed restaurant we haven’t included—or if you’d like to share photos, dates, or stories from one of these places—visit your city’s page and reach out. Together, we can help document the Arizona restaurants we loved and lost, making sure their stories remain part of the state’s record long after the neon signs went dark.


