Food

24 Decadent Ice Cream Shops to Try This Summer Around the DC Area

Where to find the best scoops, frozen custard, gelato, and other summery treats

Photograph courtesy of The Creamery at Union Market.

This post was updated from an earlier version in June 2025

Summer in Washington means mosquitoes and mugginess, but it also means an excuse for ice cream pretty much any time of day. And there are more options than ever (plus, others are on the way). Here, our favorite places for nostalgic shakes and sundaes, over-the-top ice-cream sandwiches, Japanese-­style soft-serve, and more.

Authors

44933 George Washington Blvd., Ashburn

Formerly known as Doughboy Creamery, this Virginia farmers-market stand opened a shop last year, serving small-batch ice cream, coffee, and its signature doughnut panini. Yep, that would be a doughnut shell filled with ice cream and toppings of your choice, then placed into a panini press.

Bon Tea House

5718 Pickwick Rd., Centreville

 

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This sleek, minimalist cafe may be in a Centreville strip mall, but it feels straight out of Kyoto. In fact, Bon Tea House—which previously operated as a carryout window in downtown DC— sources its matcha from farmers across Japan. You can find the green-tea powder in all kinds of drinks, but most notably in some of the best matcha soft-serve we’ve encountered. Just as phenomenal: seasonal flavors like banana-milk and lychee, which you can combine into a swirl.

The Charmery

7175 12th St., NW 

The Charmery churns out new flavors every week. Photograph by Justin Tsucalas.

This popular Baltimore ice cream shop has an outpost in the Parks at Walter Reed development. And the place—and its ever-rotating flavors—are all about Maryland pride. Here, cookies and milk is made with Otterbein sugar cookies, and Old Bay spices up a scoop of caramel. The creations can be sugar bombs (think Frosted Flakes ice cream with mini marshmallows), so we lean towards simpler flavors like roasted strawberry for shakes and sundaes.

The Creamery at Union Market

1309 Fifth St., NE

You’ll find lots of local dairy products—glass bottles of milk, Pennsylvania-made yogurt—along with just-baked cookies at this stall inside Union Market. The ultra-rich ice cream is made in-house and comes in old-school flavors (Grape-Nuts!). For ice-cream purists who just want a good chocolate shake or a scoop of butter pecan in a (freshly rolled) waffle cone, this is your place.

 The Dairy Godmother

2310 Mount Vernon Ave., Alexandria

 

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Wisconsin expats will feel right at home at this Del Ray institution, with its yolk-rich frozen custard, Sprecher-soda floats, and Door County–cherry sundaes. There are three flavors of custard each day—chocolate, vanilla, and a wildcard such as Cinnamon Toast Crunch or hazelnut-s’more—but myriad ways to dress them up. Go for chocolate with Rice Krispies and marshmallow sauce, or vanilla with whatever fresh baked good is around, whether cobbler or cookies. Dogs also get some love, with pumpkin or banana “puppy pops.”

Dolcezza

CityCenterDC, H Street Corridor, Hirshhorn Museum, Dupont Circle, Fairfax, and Bethesda

 

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This gelato maker is the closest thing Washington has to a homegrown frozen-­treat chain—you’ll find flavors like peanut-butter stracciatella and roasted strawberry in several area cafes as well as dozens of markets and grocery stores around the Mid-Atlantic. It’s easy to overlook the much shorter list of sorbets, but the 21-year-old operation has farmers-­market roots, and its seasonal renditions are lovely. Plus, you can always mix them: Pineapple-­lime sorbet and coconut gelato are a pretty perfect match. At the newest location—on H Street, Northeast—owners Robb Duncan and Violeta Edelman  are dabbling with soft-serve.

Everyday Sundae

713 Kennedy St., NW

 

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Former corporate chef Charles Foreman opened this shop off Georgia Avenue four years ago, and the snug space fast became a community hub. Cops, afterschoolers, and neighborhood regulars line up for generous bowls of flavors like brown-sugar ice cream rippled with oatmeal cookies, banana pudding with marshmallow, and praline and brown butter. Get them with a drizzle of chocolate sauce, in a flight of six scoops, or—on Wednesdays—on a warm waffle.

Goodies Frozen Custard & Treats

200 Commerce St., Alexandria

Photograph by Cornerstone Captures.

A vintage Bob’s Big Boy statue stands outside this ice house turned frozen-­custard shop with a walkup window in Old Town. Adding to the retro vibes: orange- and grape-soda floats, thick shakes, and a handmade ethos that extends from the custard to the caramel sauce to the baked goods that anchor the sundaes. Owner Brandon Byrd also operates a mobile version—naturally, it’s run out of a 1950s van.

Happy Ice Cream

1509 17th St., NW

We think of Ben Brunner not as an ice cream maker, but an ice cream artist. At this beloved natural wine shop and Mediterranean cafe, he churns up flavors like mandarin/labne, strawberry/elderflower, and olive oil with chocolate crumbles. Find them in pints, or when the weather is nice, at the outdoor scoop cart, where you can also score a homemade sourdough waffle cone. Brunner’s colorful paletas come in tropical variations like pink guava and coconut/tamarind.

Honeys & Friends

5027 Connecticut Ave., NW

 

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The Comet Ping Pong crew teamed up with former Little Red Fox baker and ice-cream maker Lauren Parlato to create this darling sweets-and-scoops shop in DC’s Forest Hills. Classic flavors are spot-on, but try more inventive ones, like toasted-pretzel, creamy fig, and banana-cream pie.

Ice Cream Jubilee

Locations in Georgetown, Navy Yard, Ballston, Reston, West Falls Church, and College Park 

 

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It’s the fruity flavors at these spare shops (you’ll also find pints at some grocery stores) that keep us coming back. Marion­berry—a blackberry-like fruit—is liberally swirled into vanilla ice cream with graham crackers. Another thing owner Victoria Lai has mastered: the ratio of mix-ins to ice cream—just try the vanilla-based scoop dense with cookie dough and crushed Oreos.

Junge’s

1850 K St., NW

Located inside the Square, the Spanish-leaning downtown food hall, Junge’s offers soft-serve that’s all about simplicity: chocolate, vanilla, or swirl. Order the crispy mini churros and use the ice cream as a dipping sauce, or get them with the more classic hot chocolate.

Kyoto Matcha

Locations in Alexandria, Falls Church, Columbia, Ellicott City, and Rockville 

 

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Matcha makes it into all kinds of trendy Japanese desserts at this sweets shop. Think green-tea-flavored crepe cakes, cream puffs, and of course soft-serve (try it swirled with milk ice cream). While we like to keep this frozen treat simple, you can add toppings like boba, mochi, or gold leaf for the ’gram.

Lil’ City Creamery

114 W. Broad St., Falls Church

 

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This shop, barely bigger than a walk-in closet, is so crammed with knickknacks and figurines, you might think it was an eBay clearinghouse. Its ice cream—all made at Delaware’s Woodside Farm Creamery—is eclectic, too. Elsa fans go wild for blue-tinted raspberry/cotton candy, while Steam Oil, the standout flavor, translates to coffee ice cream rippled with green caramel and chocolate. Try it sandwiched between cookies, in a brownie sundae, or doused with a shot of espresso.

Malai

1407 T St., NW

Malai features ice cream, popsicles, and more, all inspired by South-Asian flavors. Photograph by Morgan Ione Photography.

The old Ice Cream Jubilee space off 14th Street is now home to hit NYC creamery Malai, which specializes in south-Asian flavors created by its founder, Pooja Bavishi. Line up for popsicles and scoops in flavors like lemon cardamom, apricot mace, and rose with roasted almonds.

Mimi’s Handmade Soft Serve

5406 Wisconsin Ave., Chevy Chase

This local chain’s soft-serve-only location in the Heights food hall has a concise list of classic and Asian-leaning flavors. Order them in a fish-shaped taiyaki cone or buy pints to go. There’s also a small selection of Japanese treats and snacks.

Mt. Desert Island Ice Cream

3110 Mount Pleasant St., NW

DC indie rock trio Ex Hex at Mt. Desert Island Ice Cream. Photograph by Jason Hamacher.

Brian Lowit and Melissa Quinley, longtime employees of the local punk label Dischord Records, brought this mini-chain to DC after falling in love with its original Maine location. All summer long, families line up for scoops of blueberry/sour-cream crumble, fresh strawberry, or whatever other flavors are in season. Don’t eat dairy? Mt. Desert offers a number of oat-milk options and sorbets.

Nathan’s Dairy Bar

8948 Mathis Ave., Manassas

Photograph courtesy of Nathan’s Dairy Bar.
Photograph courtesy of Nathan’s Dairy Bar.

Our visit to this window-order spot featured a line snaking around the parking lot—in the pouring rain. There are several draws: superlative soft-serve (presented atop a cone in an almost comically tall swirl); housemade ice cream in whimsical flavors; and, for the indecisive, Boston shakes, which are half milkshake, half sundae. A sign dares you to try a cowpie sundae, with chocolate cake and gobs of Oreos, hot fudge, and marshmallow sauce. Don’t let that scare you off—it’s divine.

Peach Cobbler Factory

1010 Massachusetts Ave., NW

The Nashville-born chain is designed for Insta gratification, outfitted with a floral wall featuring a “Get Peachy” neon sign ready to be your backdrop while you flourish one of the desserts. Go for hot cobblers topped with vanilla ice cream, decadent banana-pudding shakes, or over-the-top cinnamon rolls you should get à la mode, because your diet died the moment you walked through the door anyway.

Shuga x Ice 

8200 Dixon Ave., Silver Spring

This counter in the Solaire Social food hall serves four African-inspired core flavors–Tea + Bread features pieces of buttered agege bread, while Gbas Gbos has a milk-chocolate base with a kick of peppers. Other rotating flavors highlight a different African country each month. Look for events like ice-cream-making classes and game nights.

Siroo & Juk Story

4231 Markham St., Annandale; 13830 Lee Hwy., Centreville; 10176 Baltimore National Pike, Ellicott City

Photograph of bingsoo by Jeff Elkins .

These Korean market/cafes are the kind of place where you can get a vat of kimchi and takeout kimbap—but it’s also our go-to for bingsoo. The snow-like shaved-ice dessert comes with toppings ranging from red bean to Oreos to fruit. We’re particularly fans of the green-tea version, with diced mango and corn flakes.

Southwest Soda Pop Shop

1142 Maine Ave., SW

Darryl Jones spent three decades running a fish-cleaning business and operating soda vending machines at the Wharf. Today he and his four daughters sell ice cream instead along the revamped waterfront development. Their carryout window specializes in nostalgic staples like banana splits, root-beer floats, and classic cones (choose from soft-serve or scoops). But you can also go over the top with funnel-cake fries or a “cake explosion” sundae.

Tipsy Scoop

675 I St., NW

Yes, you get carded before you buy these boozy scoops in flavors like Dark Chocolate Whiskey Salted Caramel and Cake Batter Vodka Martini. The Chinatown “barlour” is known for its tasting flights and maximalist sundaes with adornments such as brownie bits or a whole doughnut. Nonalcoholic flavors are available, too.

Venchi

Tysons Corner Center, McLean

 

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This small Tysons mall storefront looks, at first glance, like a Ferragamo-fancy chocolate shop. And it is that—but the place is also the only Mid-Atlantic location of one of Italy’s most popular gelato chains. Head to the counter for satiny spoonfuls of roasty pistachio, ultra-dark chocolate, and ethereal stracciatella. Want to bring some home? It’s otherwise sold by the pound.

 

 

 

 

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Ann Limpert
Executive Food Editor/Critic

Ann Limpert joined Washingtonian in late 2003. She was previously an editorial assistant at Entertainment Weekly and a cook in New York restaurant kitchens, and she is a graduate of the Institute of Culinary Education. She lives in Petworth.

Jessica Sidman
Food Editor

Jessica Sidman covers the people and trends behind D.C.’s food and drink scene. Before joining Washingtonian in July 2016, she was Food Editor and Young & Hungry columnist at Washington City Paper. She is a Colorado native and University of Pennsylvania grad.

Parenting writer

Nevin Martell is a parenting, food, and travel writer whose work has appeared in the Washington Post, New York Times, Saveur, Men’s Journal, Fortune, Travel + Leisure, Runner’s World, and many other publications. He is author of eight books, including It’s So Good: 100 Real Food Recipes for Kids, Red Truck Bakery Cookbook: Gold-Standard Recipes from America’s Favorite Rural Bakery, and the small-press smash Looking for Calvin and Hobbes: The Unconventional Story of Bill Watterson and His Revolutionary Comic Strip. When he isn’t working, he loves spending time with his wife and their six-year-old son, who already runs faster than he does.