Tail O’ the Pup

LA's iconic 18-foot hot dog-shaped stand serving classic franks since 1946, lovingly restored and reopened in 2022.

  • Eat & Drink

Tail O’ the Pup Details

Hours
  • Wednesday-Thursday: 3pm-10pm
  • Friday-Saturday: 12pm-10pm
  • Sunday: 12pm-9pm
  • Closed Monday-Tuesday
Cost
$

Overview

Tail O' the Pup stands as one of LA's most recognizable examples of programmatic architecture—a 17-foot-long hot dog and bun built in 1946 by architect Milton Black for celebrity dance duo Veloz and Yolanda. After closing in 2005, the city-declared cultural landmark spent 17 years in storage before the 1933 Group meticulously restored and reopened it in 2022 at its new West Hollywood location. The historic stand now anchors a full-service restaurant offering hickory-smoked franks, burgers, corn dogs, and shakes, with indoor and outdoor seating where you can order directly from the iconic hot dog structure.

Details

Experiencing Tail O’ the Pup / Curious LA Field Notes

Quick Take

Tail O' the Pup represents a rare survivor of LA's roadside novelty architecture era. The 1946 hot dog stand shaped like an actual giant hot dog drew celebrities for decades before closing in 2005, then sat in warehouses for 17 years. Now meticulously restored by the 1933 Group and relocated to a building that once housed The Doors' studio, it serves quality hot dogs with proper snap alongside burgers, corn dogs, and a full bar. You get both the nostalgic photo op and a legitimately good meal.

The Architecture

Walk up to Tail O’ the Pup and you can’t miss the 18-foot-wide, 9-foot-tall hot dog structure that defines the place. The giant frankfurter sits in a bun complete with a squiggle of mustard rendered in plaster and wood. This is programmatic architecture at its purest—buildings designed to look exactly like what they sell. Architect Milton Black created this roadside attention-grabber in 1946 when car culture dominated LA and drivers needed visual hooks to pull them off the road.

The 1933 Group spent years restoring the original structure, which involved welding metal fabrications and repairing stucco to match the 1946 specifications. Every detail got attention, from the color of the mustard to the curve of the bun. The result feels authentically mid-century without looking artificially aged.

Ordering and Seating

You can order directly from the hot dog stand when it’s staffed, or head inside to the pickup counter. The restaurant wraps around the historic structure with retro 1960s-70s decor, vintage photos of celebrity visitors, and stacks of prop ketchup and mustard crates that nod to the stand’s roadside roots. Seating options include indoor tables, an outdoor patio, and an upstairs balcony that overlooks Santa Monica Boulevard.

The space has rock history too. Before becoming Tail O’ the Pup’s new home, this building served as the recording studio where Jim Morrison recorded vocals for “LA Woman” in the bathroom. The 1933 Group preserved that connection while adapting the space for the restaurant.

The Food

Hot dogs run around $10 and come with satisfying snap when you bite in. The 1946 Pup replicates the original recipe—split and grilled with toasted bun, grilled onions, and house mustard. The Chicago Pup loads on sweet relish, dill pickle spear, raw onions, diced tomato, sport peppers, house mustard, and poppy seeds. The Jalapeño Pup adds sliced jalapeños, grilled onions, jalapeño spread, and house spread.

Beyond hot dogs, the menu includes burgers (the Sassy Cheese gets frequent praise), corn dogs with light crunchy batter, chili cheese fries, onion rings, and soft serve. Two 170-flavor Coca-Cola Freestyle machines let you customize your soda. The bar serves beer on tap, canned wine, and cocktails.

Vegan options use plant-based dogs and vegan cheese. Gluten-free corn dogs accommodate dietary restrictions. Kids get hot dogs in puppy-shaped buns. Dogs get their own menu with a Doggy Pup and water station.

Making the Most of Your Visit

Come during off-peak hours (weekday afternoons) to beat crowds and get better street parking. The restored stand photographs best in late afternoon light. If you’re bringing your dog, grab outdoor seating where the patio stays pet-friendly. The upstairs balcony offers Route 66 views and a quieter atmosphere than ground level.

Plan about 30-45 minutes for your visit—time to order, eat, and photograph the stand. The loyalty program gives you free fries when you order online or through the app. Parking validation works at the Sprouts structure if metered spots are full.

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