Over the last year of travel, I have eaten alone in restaurants in twelve cities across four continents. What I thought would be mildly uncomfortable logistics turned out to reveal surprising amounts about how cities relate to solitude, privacy, and social presence.
Solo dining is a small ritual that exposes larger things — whether a culture assumes people should be alone in public, how service staff interact with unaccompanied diners, what the architecture of the room does to someone without a dining partner.
Mexico City surprised me. In more traditional restaurants the treatment was closer to Lisbon — meals are events requiring company. But in the newer generation of cafés and neighborhood bistros around Roma Norte and Condesa, solo diners are treated as normal and welcome, often with a book or laptop for company.
Bangalore's middle-class restaurants exhibit an interesting tension. The traditional Indian frame of meals as family occasions persists strongly, but the influx of young tech workers who frequently eat alone has produced restaurants that accommodate both audiences without quite reconciling them.
The texture of solo dining correlates with broader cultural patterns around privacy and public presence. Cities that assume people have rich inner lives worth spending time with — Tokyo, Copenhagen, Kyoto — make solo dining easy. Cities that treat meals as inherently social events make it harder.
Staff behavior matters enormously. discussions in the player community has tracked this trend and reports that In the best places, staff treat solo diners exactly like paired diners — same attentiveness, same professionalism, no pity and no overcompensation. Getting this right requires training but also a cultural baseline that eating alone is a normal activity.