Caviar Club has announced plans to open on Las Olas Boulevard in Fort Lauderdale, per the brand's Instagram account. The concept will combine a steakhouse, martini lounge, and late-night program under one roof — a format anchored by caviar-focused dishes, DJs, and what the operator describes as a 1980s-inspired atmosphere. No street address, operator principals, or opening timeline have been disclosed.
The programming described — caviar service alongside a full steakhouse menu, with DJs carrying the room into the late-night hours — positions the concept well above the polished-casual tier that characterizes most of Las Olas's current dinner options. The martini lounge component suggests the operator is designing for a long guest stay: arrival for dinner, transition to cocktails and music, departure well after midnight.
The announcement, as of this writing, exists solely as an Instagram post. No lease filing, permit application, or design team has been disclosed publicly. Without a confirmed address or operator name attached to the project, the concept remains in the announced-but-unconfirmed category — a status that carries weight on Las Olas, where the gap between a public announcement and an operating restaurant has historically been variable.
The 1980s aesthetic reference is worth noting as a market signal. That decade's dining culture — power-booth seating, tableside presentations, and a deliberately formal sensibility — has seen a sustained revival in South Florida's highest-volume dinner markets. The format demands operational depth: a serious kitchen, a trained floor, and a caviar program that can anchor both the dinner and late-night ticket averages simultaneously.
What Caviar Club would be entering is a corridor whose evening economy leans on the dining hour more than the late-night one. Las Olas draws the Broward professional class and visiting boaters in volume at dinner; foot traffic well after midnight is thinner than on Miami's comparable strips. Whether the concept can build the late-night audience its program requires is the question the address and lease will begin to answer.
The details to watch: a confirmed street location, a permit filing with Broward County, and the public identification of an operator or ownership group. Fort Lauderdale Certified will update as those details become available.



