New Jersey
Best burgers in New Jersey? 15 spots for classic and inventive burgers
New Jersey’s top spots for classic and inventive burgers
From classic burgers to trendy, cheesy smashburgers, these burger spots have something for everyone.
A burger is delicious any time of year, but especially now, as the weather warms and spring eases into summer.
You can grill one up yourself, of course: A backyard burger always hits the spot. But so many of New Jersey’s restaurants make a great burger, why bother?
Whether you prefer a thick, hearty patty, where the flavor of the meat is the star; a lacy-edged burger smashed to perfection; a burger piled with toppings or one with nothing at all, these spots deliver when it comes to this classic favorite.
22 West Tap & Grill, Bridgewater
Forget slapping a slice of American cheese that has spent its life in plastic on a patty at creative gastropub 22 West Tap & Grill in Bridgewater. Here, customers can customize their own burgers, choosing from a dozen types of cheese, including fried mozzarella and pimento.
Too overwhelmed with the list of build-your-own burger options? Choose from one of the restaurant’s signature burgers, like the 22 West Burger, which gives cheese a carb-y edge. This piled-high burger has two patties, two pieces of fried chicken, macaroni and cheese, pork belly, lettuce, tomato, onions and an onion ring.
Plus, you can enjoy it with a view of athletes running off their calories, since every seat has a view of the restaurant’s 19 TVs, including a 110-inch model that fills an entire wall.
Go: 1601 Route 22, Bridgewater; 732-627-5012, 22westtapandgrill.com
Bun Buddies, Wood-Ridge
Smash burgers with crispy edges and well-seasoned patties await at Bun Buddies, Bergen County’s best-kept fast food secret. Run by a chef who once whipped up high-end fare in Manhattan’s finest kitchens (including the three Michelin-starred Jungsik), the tiny Wood-Ridge gem is home to irresistible comfort dishes prepared at an elite level.
Order the “Special Buddy,” for example, and be wowed by the way 100% chuck melts in your mouth like a pasture-raised steak. Note how its caramelized onions are rich with sweetness, and how the mixture of sauces have a subtle hint of mustard, providing the perfect balance to every bite.
From flawlessly grilled beef to the optional addition of housemade coleslaw, the burger is reflective of all others on the menu: intentionally designed, meticulously executed and served with pride by a dude who knows what he’s doing.
Go: 271 Valley Blvd., Wood-Ridge; 201-604-4813, bun-buddies.com
Burger 25, multiple locations
Ask anyone in Ocean County where to get a great burger, and chances are they’ll say Burger 25.
The trio of restaurants, run by Denise and Steve Vetter and their children, Alexis Wasilick and Aidan Vetter, has a burger for everyone. The menu includes everything from a classic cheeseburger, made with six ounces of Angus beef and served on a Martin’s Famous Potato Roll, to a French onion burger that’s seared in French onion soup and topped with Swiss and provolone cheeses, sautéed onions, crouton crisps and garlic aioli on an onion bun.
The 25th burger on the menu is a special that rotates monthly. Recent offerings include a burger seared in consommé and topped with Oaxaca cheese, beef birria, salsa and guacamole, and one with housemade chili, cheddar cheese, Fritos, sour cream and chipotle mayo.
Go: 2045 Route 88, Brick, 732-451-4747; 199 Route 37, Toms River, 732-270-0025; 1915 Long Beach Blvd., Ship Bottom, 609-879-2525; burger25.com
The Committed Pig, multiple locations
You’ve likely heard of the supreme burgers at The Committed Pig, which has locations in Morristown, Summit and Manasquan. They’re fixtures on lists of the state’s best burgers from a variety of media, and word-of-mouth darlings for hungry New Jerseyans.
The burger is built from a blend of Pat LaFrieda steak cuts, and you can enjoy that in a plain, scrumptious cheeseburger or take advantage of the Pig’s culinary creativity. We’re talking a baked Brie burger with creamy Brie, bacon and fig preserves; a chipotle bacon burger with Muenster, chipotle mayo, bacon and an onion ring; and the triple-decker “Pig Mac” with American cheese, pickles and special sauce. There also are turkey and veggie burger options.
Go: 28 W. Park Place, Morristown; 862-260-9292; 165 Main St., Manasquan, 732-837-9800; 339 Springfield Ave., Summit, 908-219-4543; thecommittedpig.com
Harpoon Willy’s, Manasquan
Asbury Park Press readers recently named the burgers at Harpoon Willy’s the best at the Shore, and with good reason.
The restaurant serves nearly half a dozen varieties made from 10-ounce patties of 80/20 Angus ground chuck blended especially for them. The most popular of the burgers, which are cooked to order and served on kaiser rolls with pickles and salted steak fries, is the “River Road,” a traditional burger topped with a diner’s choice of cheese, plus lettuce and tomato if they like.
Or try the “Dockside,” topped with bacon, mushrooms, sautéed onions and Swiss, cheddar and American cheeses, or the “So Cal,” with avocado, frizzled onions, spicy mayo and roasted tomatoes.
A bonus: If you order a burger at the bar, you can watch it sizzle on a grill behind the bartop.
Go: 2655 River Road, Manasquan; 732-223-8880, harpoonwillys.com
Hey Burger, Hazlet
This is a burger you won’t be able to stop thinking about, from a place you might not expect.
Inside Nic’s Hometown Tavern, a classic neighborhood bar with trivia nights, packaged goods and sports on TV, is Hey Burger, a restaurant concept serving smash burgers, wings, cheesesteaks and more. The menu includes nine versions of the thin, crispy-edged burger, including the “No. 1” with burger sauce, cheese, lettuce, pickles and onions; the “Black & Blue” with blue cheese crumbles, crispy onions and Cajun seasoning; and the “Cherry Bomb” with cherry peppers, American cheese, bacon and chipotle sauce.
Order your favorite with “Tornado Potatoes,” which are thinly sliced potatoes on a stick that come in flavors like sour cream and onion, cheddar and Old Bay; onion petals or salt and vinegar french fries.
Go: 180 Roue 36, Hazlet; 732-769-2200, instagram.com/heyburgernj
Krug’s Tavern, Newark
Simply put, this may be the most famous burger in North Jersey, if not the whole state. That’s for good reason: It’s simple, massive and delicious.
A three-quarter pound beef patty is charred on the outside on Krug’s flat-top griddle, giving it a delightful, roasty bark. The meat is unseasoned, but you won’t care — a plain burger or cheeseburger has more than enough flavor, and each bite oozes with fatty goodness. You can always order the bacon bleu or pizza burger if you need further adornment.
There’s also few better environs to chow down on a burger than the scene at Krug’s. This nearly century-old pub is a good time with cold beer, good cheer and a terrific pub menu (get the bar pie and shrimp parm).
Go: 118 Wilson Ave., Newark; 973-465-9795, krugstavernnj.com
Outlaw’s Burger Barn & Creamery, Vineland
A top location for gourmet smash burgers, the family-owned Outlaw’s Burger Barn & Creamery also offers cheesesteaks, fried chicken sandwiches, housemade ice cream and milkshakes.
Some of the burger options, of which there are nearly a dozen, are “Shroomin,” with caramelized mushrooms, charred balsamic red onion, fontina cheese and steakhouse mayo; “The Works,” with American cheese, lettuce, tomato, red onion, pickles, pickled jalapeño and special sauce; and the “Smokehouse,” with bacon, pickled jalapeño, white cheddar cheese, onion rings and housemade barbecue sauce.
The restaurant was opened in 2016 by owner Ryan Briggs, who wanted to create a place for families to gather “over fresh, local food and leave feeling part of the Outlaw’s family.” It started as a small mom-and-pop shop, the website says, but grew into a hometown favorite.
Go: 1370 S. Main Road, Vineland; 856-691-5438, outlawsburgerbarn.com
The Raging Bull, Pennsauken
This smash burger and cheesesteak spot, also known for its hand-spun milkshakes, cooks up burgers that are made from ground chuck and served on Martins & Sons Potato Buns.
There’s “The Oklahoma,” with thin-sliced Vidalia onions, Bully burger sauce and yellow Cooper Sharp American cheese; “The Classic,” which has yellow Cooper Sharp, mustard, diced onions and dill pickles; and “The Deluxe,” with Bibb lettuce, tomato, bacon, Bully burger sauce, dill pickles and Cooper Sharp.
Not a burger fan? Try a Buffalo cheesesteak with brined and shaved chicken, or “The Raging Bull” cheesesteak with Cooper Sharp Whiz, chipotle mayo and roasted long hots.
“Our goal is simple: Use the highest quality ingredients, prepare everything fresh, and never cut corners,” owner Eric Adili said.
Go: 6007 Mansion Blvd., Pennsauken; 856-324-0725, theragingbullnj.com
Rocky Hill Inn, Rocky Hill
The only reason many New Jerseyans have ever heard of sleepy Somerset County enclave Rocky Hill is because they’ve made the drive to Rocky Hill Inn for the gastropub’s famous burgers and pub fare.
“Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives” host Guy Fieri helped put the tavern’s inventive burgers on the map when he visited in 2017, taking more than a few bites of the fried green tomato burger with goat cheese, bacon jam and mixed greens.
You’ll find yourself coming to the Rocky Hill Inn over and over again to check off all of the colossal burgers on the menu, which feature patties made with pancetta, short rib and strip steak. Favorites include “The Royale,” a nod to “Pulp Fiction,” with two smashed four-ounce patties, American cheese, melted onions, shredded iceberg, tomato and Thousand Island dressing, and the “Fat Daddy” burger with braised short rib, provolone, red onion jam, arugula and horseradish crème fraiche.
Go: 137 Washington St, Rocky Hill; 609-683-8930, rockyhilltavern.com
The Shore Spot, Manasquan
One doesn’t usually equate food eaten at the beach with top-notch cuisine. But at The Shore Spot at Manasquan’s oceanfront Sea Watch Pavilion, owner and chef Frank Valgenti finds ways to elevate everything — including burgers.
He grills a top-notch smashburger, which is made with two perfectly salted, American cheese-topped beef patties, sautéed onions, lettuce and a thick slice of tomato, all cradled by a sturdy-yet-tender roll.
The seasonal restaurant, which has a second-floor dining room overlooking the beach, also serves rotating burger specials, like one with Gruyére cheese and jam made from figs owner Frank Valgenti grows himself, and another topped with macaroni and cheese.
Go: 95 Beachfront, Manasquan; 732-400-1985, theshorespot.com
Steve’s Burgers, Garfield
It’s been a year since Steve’s Burgers made history in North Jersey, becoming the first fast-casual restaurant in the area to make USA TODAY’S Restaurants of the Year list. A seemingly out-of-place addition, the humble roadside joint was sandwiched between fine-dining destinations, contemporary gastropubs and upscale special occasion spots with wine lists.
Nonetheless, it held its own.
Critics praise Steve’s Burgers for its blend of nostalgia with innovation, from the combination of retro digs with uniquely topped burgers to the hometown hangout atmosphere with Instagram-able eats. Most recommended for devouring was the signature “Steve’s Burger,” which comes topped with American cheese, tangy Steve’s Sauce, crisp bacon and a battered onion ring.
Go: 506 Route 46, Garfield; 973-772-1770, stevesburgersgarfield.com
Tierney’s Tavern, Montclair
Tierney’s in Montclair is one of the best bars in America, but it also slings some of the best burgers in the area, too (if you know how to order them).
You can go here and get a killer cheeseburger, or you can order slightly off the menu and get the not-so-secret-anymore “Buddy burger,” a cheeseburger topped with Worcestershire-laden grilled onions. It’s pure comfort and enough to sate any size of appetite.
Tierney’s is also an ideal spot for casual eats. Order a burger and a pint, maybe throw in some wings, laugh it up with friends and you’ll leave without having broken the bank.
Go: 138 Valley Road, Montclair; tierneystavern.com
White Rose Hamburgers, Highland Park
It doesn’t get much simpler — or more soul-satisfying — than White Rose Hamburgers.
Other places may be artificially retro, but White Rose is the real thing. Like “Happy Days,” the restaurant has a classic counter with barstool seats. The burgers are served on paper plates, just like at a picnic or when Mom doesn’t feel like doing the dishes.
Go for the time-honored fundamentals that offer simple pleasure in a complex world: a cheeseburger, bacon burger or hamburger. And if you really need to smother your sorrows, make it a double.
True to its 1950s roots in the previous golden age of hamburgers, the hefty slider patties wait for you on soft Kaiser rolls with onions, regardless of what add-ons you choose for your burger.
Go: 154 Woodbridge Avenue, Highland Park; 732-777-1881, whiteroseburgersnj.com
Woosmash, Verona
Cheeseburgers may be the (unofficial) national dish of America, but that’s not stopping Korean-born culinary wizard Woosung Cho from redesigning them with delicious Asian twists. In downtown Verona, he’s “woo”-ing locals with everything from standard smash burgers to Korean barbecue-flavored ribeye burgers drowning in garlic mayo and topped with kimchi relish.
As for the onions? Caramelized with miso.
When Woosmash first opened, we delighted in the fact that we were the only ones who knew about it. Infatuated with Cho’s gochujang-glazed chicken sandwiches (when not in the burger mood) and spicy “Woo-Ha Smash” with Firestorm sauce, we gave it a few weeks before blowing the spot up on Instagram.
Today, though, everyone knows about the place, as word spread about Cho’s “thoughtful flavors” and “unbeatable prices” faster than the cars rip down Bloomfield Avenue outside its windows.
Go: 648 Bloomfield Ave., Verona; 973-433-7256, woosmash.com
New Jersey
Morris County, Kirby Foundation award $12 million. See who benefits
New Jersey man lovingly cares for Dover cemetery
Dover, NJ resident Keith Titus donates his time and money taking care of the grounds and tombstones in the Orchard Street Cemetery.
Historic sites, community nonprofits, nonprofit media outlets and local America250 initiatives in Morris County will benefit from more than $12 million in supportive grants announced from two well-heeled sources.
The Morris County Board of County Commissioners approved $4.92 million at its July 8 meeting to help fund the restoration and protection of 35 historic projects in 20 municipalities. They range from almost $350,000 for the Orchard Street Cemetery Gatehouse in Dover to $18,560 to restore a 19th-century military rail car.
On July 9, the Morristown-based F.M. Kirby Foundation also announced $8.3 million in grants aimed at Morris County nonprofits along with other “geographic areas of interest” in North Carolina, Pennsylvania and upstate New York.
County preserving history
Morris County has shown a long commitment to preserving its history, which dates back to pre-Revolution days, and has awarded more than $61 million from a Preservation Trust Fund since voters approved it in 2003.
About 86% of this year’s nearly $5 million total will fund construction work at 16 projects, while the rest will support 19 non-construction projects, including preservation planning, preparation of construction documents and one acquisition project.
“As Morris County celebrates the 250th Anniversary of our nation’s independence this year, we are reminded of the importance of preserving our heritage, not only because of Morris County’s deep roots in the American Revolution, but also because of the local people and places that played significant roles in our great nation’s evolution throughout history,” Commissioner Tom Mastrangelo said in the award announcement.
One of the largest grants went to the ongoing restoration of the gatehouse at the Orchard Street Cemetery, the final resting home for many prominent former residents of Dover and Wharton, including military veterans of six wars stretching back to the War of 1812.
Although it is a treasured local landmark, the cemetery is owned by the nonprofit Dover Cemetery Association, and all upkeep, including preservation efforts, is done by a handful of volunteers.
Other family plots were reserved for those who gained their wealth from the iron-mining industry in the region, which dates back to the early 18th century.
“All those mine sinkholes you hear about on Route 80, those people are all buried here,” volunteer caretaker Keith Titus said.
Several grants went to church-affiliated properties, a longstanding county practice that was suspended after a unanimous 2018 state Supreme Court decision deemed it a violation of the New Jersey Constitution. The practice resumed last year after two North Jersey churches won a preliminary injunction against barring them from historic preservation grants, in a lawsuit that tested the bounds of the separation of church and state mandated by the U.S. Constitution.
This year’s awards include $330,000 for acquisition and restoration of the circa-1835 First Presbyterian Church of Hanover and its burial ground. The East Hanover property represents one of the earliest centers of settlement in Morris County and is directly associated with the American Revolution. The property was purchased by East Hanover in August 2025.
Among the smaller grants was $18,560 for preservation of what is known as the “New Jersey Merci Train boxcar,” a rare surviving example of a late 19th-century French military railcar, designed to transport 40 soldiers or eight horses. It is one of 49 railcars distributed throughout the United States in 1949 as part of a post-World War II diplomatic gesture from France.
The United Railroad Historical Society of New Jersey, which applied for the grant, requires steel bracing and other preservation work. The grant will also support the completion of construction documents for interior and exterior preservation efforts.
The full list of this year’s grant awards can be viewed online.
Five-and-dime fortune
A philanthropic family foundation established in 1931 to uphold the legacy of Fred Morgan Kirby, a pioneer in the five-and-dime store industry, the Kirby Foundation grants support “organizations and programs that advance positive, sustainable change.” This year, recipients include the local news website Morristown Green ($10,000) and a nonprofit group operating weekly newspapers in the Morris County area ($25,000).
The foundation “has long held that an informed citizenry is the foundation of civic life, and that access to trusted, local information is what makes self-governance possible,” the group stated in announcing the expansion of its Public Affairs & Society Benefit portfolio.
Another $10,000 was awarded to North Country Public Radio, which serves listeners across upstate New York and Vermont “in general operating support to sustain the kind of regional public journalism that keeps rural communities connected to the issues that shape their lives.”
This year, the Kirby Foundation also chose to support organizations sponsoring semiquincentennial events in their communities. The local America250 initiatives included the Morris County Historical Society for its African American History Survey, “a project to document and illuminate local stories that have too often been left out of the American narrative.”
The Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey also received $175,000 for operating expenses and support of “Revolutionary Voices,” a four-part play reading series that traces American ideals from the founding era to the present. Those readings take place at the F. M. Kirby Shakespeare Theatre on the campus of Drew University in Madison.
The Kirby grant announcement did not include a full list of recipients and amounts. But “in the first half of 2026, the Foundation approved approximately $530,000 in grants to 12 public affairs organizations spanning public media, academic freedom, civil discourse, and civic thought leadership,” it stated.
Morris County recipients included the Morristown-based Seeing Eye ($170,000), the Mayo Performing Arts Center ($100,000) and $35,000 for the Growing Stage in Netcong, New Jersey’s only resident professional theater company dedicated to children’s theater. It operates out of the historic Palace Theatre, a former vaudeville house on the shores of Lake Musconetcong.
Community support initiatives such as the United Way of Morris County ($165,000) and Market Street Mission ($45,000) were also on the Kirby list of more than 100 awardees.
New Jersey
New Jersey high school teacher faces charges for allegedly having sex with student
A New Jersey high school teacher faces charges for allegedly having a sexual relationship with a student, prosecutors said Tuesday.
Jesse Heubel, 37, of Englishtown teaches at Freehold Township High School.
Monmouth County prosecutors say Heubel has been charged in multiple municipalities, including Freehold Township, Englishtown, Manalpan Township and Red Bank, because those are the locations where the alleged sexual acts took place.
Heubel has been charged with endangering the welfare of a child and second-degree sexual assault in each of the four municipalities.
Authorities said the alleged criminal conduct began back in November of 2025, and the victim is under 18 years old.
Heubel turned himself in.
Authorities ask anyone who may have additional information about Heubel’s alleged activities to call police at (732) 431-7160 or (732) 462-7908.
CBS News New York has reached out to Heubel’s defense attorney for comment.
New Jersey
NJ fines Sen. Wimberly $24K after use of donations for hotels, airfare
2-minute read
NJ fines Sen. Wimberly $24K after using donations on hotels, airfare
Wimberly has been fined about $24,000 by New Jersey’s Election Law Enforcement Commission, partly for spending campaign funds on his own personal use.
PATERSON — In a three-month span at the end of 2022, state Sen. Benjie Wimberly, then an assemblyman, spent more than $7,200 in political donations on hotel bills, airfare and other travel expenses.
Now, Wimberly has been fined about $24,000 by New Jersey’s Election Law Enforcement Commission, partly for spending campaign funds on his own personal use.
The ELEC complaint against Wimberly had been pending since December 2024, and a settlement between the state and the senator was reached at the end of May 2026. ELEC made details of the deal public on July 1.
“Senator Wimberly chose to settle the matter with ELEC because his priority is addressing the immediate and important needs of his district,” said his attorney, Angelo Genova, a prominent and well-connected lawyer in New Jersey political circles.
Story continues below photo gallery.
“As expressly stated in the Consent Order and Final Decision, Senator Wimberly and his treasurer neither admit nor deny the violations, and they maintain their good-faith belief that the disputed expenditures were permissible under the law,” Genova added.
Wimberly’s campaign treasurer, David Cozart, works as an assistant superintendent for Paterson Public Schools, with a $213,000 salary. Wimberly also works for the city school district as director of recreation, with a $194,000 salary.
The commission determined that 19 of Wimberly’s expenditures at the end of 2022, when he was still an Assembly member, were for impermissible uses. The order said $10,861 of the fine stemmed from Wimberly’s improper use of political funds. The rest of the penalty was for late filing of a finance report that covered October through December of 2022.
Among the expenditures highlighted by ELEC were:
- $645 to the Hilton Garden Inn Lodge Colonial on Oct. 11, 2022.
- $751 to the Embassy Suites Hampton on Oct. 25, 2022.
- $497 to the Landing at Hampton on Nov. 8, 2022.
- $322 to the Hilton Garden Inn on Dec. 6, 2022.
- $378 to the Omni Hotels on Dec. 14, 2022.
The ELEC complaint did not provide specific locations of those businesses.
Partial payment of $4,000 in April
The order said Wimberly and Cozart made a partial payment of $4,000 in April 2026. The election commission also reduced the penalty, lowering it to $15,335.
Going forward, Cozart and Wimberly would make four payments of $3,833.99 through April 2027, the order said.
Wimberly supporters noted that the original complaint filed against him came at the end of 2024, when he was still an Assembly member making a bid for the vacant New Jersey 35th District Senate seat left vacant when Nellie Pou went to Congress.
Wimberly sought the Senate seat even though several Passaic County Democratic party leaders were backing then-Assemblywoman Shavonda Sumter for the Senate. After the initial tally ended in a tie, Wimberly won the internal party election by one vote over Sumter.
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