PUERTO PLATA RESTAURANT

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Overview

PUERTO PLATA RESTAURANT in Jamaica underwent a NYC health inspection on March 17, 2026. The inspection found 1 violation, including 1 critical.

ROUNDUP See the daily roundup: 57 NYC Restaurants Earn Grade A on March 20, 2026 →
Address
149-19 JAMAICA AVENUE
Queens, NY 11435
Cuisine
Latin American
Inspection Type
Administrative Miscellaneous / Re-inspection
Violations
1 total
⚠ 1 critical
Facility History
8 inspections
1 failures

Violations Cited

⚠ CRITICAL 20-06

NYC Health Code Violation 20-06

Current letter grade or Grade Pending card not posted

⚠️ Why This Matters

HEALTH HAZARD: This critical violation creates immediate risk of foodborne illness. Studies link NYC Health Code Violation 20-06 to bacterial contamination and outbreak events. Must be corrected immediately to protect public health.

📋 Code Requirements

Follow NYC Health Code Article 81 requirements. Implement corrective action immediately. Document all corrections. Train staff on proper procedures. Schedule follow-up inspection if critical.

Inspector's Action:

Violations were cited in the following area(s).

View Facility Profile →

PUERTO PLATA RESTAURANT — Inspection Questions

Did PUERTO PLATA RESTAURANT pass their NYC health inspection on March 17, 2026?
PUERTO PLATA RESTAURANT underwent inspection on March 17, 2026. The inspection found 1 violation(s).
What critical violations did PUERTO PLATA RESTAURANT have?
PUERTO PLATA RESTAURANT had 1 critical violation(s) during their inspection. Critical violations directly contribute to foodborne illness and must be corrected immediately. These include issues with temperature control, hand washing, cross-contamination, and pest infestations.
What does violation code 20-06 mean in NYC restaurant inspections?
NYC violation 20-06 (NYC Health Code Violation 20-06) is a critical violation. Violation of NYC Health Code requirements HEALTH HAZARD: This critical violation creates immediate risk of foodborne illness. Studies link NYC Health Code Violation 20-06 to bacterial contamination and outbreak events. Must be corrected immediately to protect public health.