There are grocery stores, and then there is the Buford Highway Farmers Market — a sprawling, sensory-rich wonderland tucked into the Doraville stretch of Buford Highway that has quietly become one of the most exciting food destinations in the entire Southeast. If you haven’t made the drive out here yet, consider this your formal invitation.
Located about twelve miles northeast of downtown Atlanta, the Buford Highway Farmers Market sits at the heart of what locals lovingly call the “International Village” corridor — a stretch of Buford Highway dense with authentic restaurants, bakeries, and shops representing dozens of cultures. The market itself anchors the whole experience, and stepping through its doors for the first time genuinely stops you in your tracks.
The place is massive — over 100,000 square feet of international groceries, live seafood tanks, a butcher counter that puts most American supermarkets to shame, a full Korean banchan section, aisles of Latin American dried chiles and spices, Japanese snacks, Vietnamese produce, fresh-made tamales, and an in-store food court where you can grab a steaming bowl of pho or a freshly grilled piece of whole fish for a few dollars. It sounds chaotic written out like that, but inside it flows with a kind of wonderful, purposeful energy that feels more like an adventure than a shopping trip.
What makes this place so special is how genuinely it reflects the community around it. Buford Highway is home to one of the most diverse populations in the country, and the market has grown up alongside that community over the past four decades. You’ll hear half a dozen languages in a single aisle. You’ll see grandmothers choosing exactly the right dried mushrooms with the kind of authority that only comes from a lifetime of cooking. You’ll discover ingredients you’ve never seen before and produce that makes your local grocery store look a little sad by comparison.
Plan to arrive hungry, because the food court alone is worth the trip. Grab a table and work your way through a plate of freshly made dumplings, a cup of boba, and maybe a warm egg tart to finish. The prices are remarkably reasonable — this is not a trendy market charging artisan premiums. It’s the real thing.
Go on a weekend morning when the energy is highest and the prepared food selection is at its best. Wear comfortable shoes, bring a reusable bag or two, and give yourself at least two hours. You’ll almost certainly leave with things you didn’t plan on buying, a full stomach, and a very strong urge to come back next weekend. Atlanta has no shortage of great food experiences, but the Buford Highway Farmers Market sits in a category entirely its own.