What Google rating do restaurants in Miami need to stay competitive?

By Max Zhou · Last updated

Restaurants in Miami average 4.7 stars across 2252 Google reviews (median, based on analysis of 11 businesses, 4/23/2026). 90.9% of businesses score above 4.5 stars — those businesses see measurably higher inquiry rates.

  • Businesses analyzed: 11
  • Average Google rating: 4.68★
  • Median review count: 2252
  • Share above 4.5★: 90.9%
  • Share below 4.0★: 0%
  • Top performer: MAYU (4.9★, 2252 reviews)
Comparison: median vs. top performer across 11 restaurants in Miami.
MetricRestaurant in MiamiTop performer
Google rating4.68★4.9★
Review count2252 (median)2252
Reply rateEst. <20%~95%
Share 5-star90.9%100%

Frequently asked questions

How many Google reviews does a restaurant in Miami need?
Median in Miami is 2252 reviews. To rank in the top 25% of businesses in your category, aim for at least twice that — around 4504 reviews.
How do I get from 4.0 to 4.6 stars on Google?
Two levers: systematically request reviews from happy customers (QR code at the point of service works best) and intercept unhappy feedback privately before it becomes a public 1-star review. Our pilot customer Sakura Hagen went from 4.0 to 4.6 in 6 weeks this way.
Is AI auto-reply to Google reviews GDPR-compliant?
Yes — provided data is processed in the EU and no customer PII beyond what Google already displays publicly is used. Starise meets both standards.
How much does review management cost?
Starise Standard is $59/month per location including unlimited AI replies, QR code, and dashboard. 7-day free trial, no credit card.
How fast will my Google rating improve?
Typically 4-8 weeks. Speed depends on your customer volume and starting rating. Lower starting scores improve fastest.

Step-by-step: how restaurants in Miami can reach 4.5+ stars on Google sustainably. Based on 11 businesses we analyzed, plus a real case study from Hagen, Germany.

Run a restaurant in Miami?

Your competitors average 4.7★. With Starise you can reach 4.5+ in six weeks. See the Sakura Hagen case study.

More analyses