745 Best Restaurants in Spain

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We've compiled the best of the best in Spain - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Café Botánico

$ | Centro Fodor's choice

Located southeast of Granada's cathedral, this modern hot spot is a world apart from Granada's usual traditional tapas bar. It attracts an eclectic crowd of students, families, and businesspeople with a diverse international menu, including Mexican fajitas, poke bowls, and Thai cod. Seating is outside on the pleasant sidewalk overlooking the Botanical Garden or inside in two sizeable dining areas.

Café Iruña

$ | El Ensanche Fodor's choice

This historical Bilbao haunt (est. 1903) in the Ensanche's most popular garden and square has azulejo-lined walls, dreamy murals of rural scenes, and a painted artesonado ceiling. Stick to tried-and-true classics like Basque steak frites or bacalao al pil pil. The room overlooking the square is the place to be—if they try to stuff you in the back dining room, resist or come back another time.

Cal Pep

$$ | Born-Ribera Fodor's choice

It's been in a permanent feeding frenzy for more than 30 years, intensified by hordes of tourists, but this loud, hectic bar manages to keep delivering the very highest quality tapas, year-in and year-out. Be prepared to wait up to an hour for a place at the counter; reservations for the tables in the tiny back room and on the outdoor terrace are accepted, but the counter is where the action is.

Pl. de les Olles 8, Barcelona, 08003, Spain
93-310–7961
Known For
  • Excellent fish fry
  • Delicious tortilla de patatas
  • Lively counter scene
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and 3 wks in Aug. No lunch Mon.

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Can Po

$$ Fodor's choice

In this ivy-covered stone-and-mortar farmhouse perched over a deep gully in nearby Rocabruna, feast on carefully prepared local dishes like vedella amb crema de ceps (veal in wild mushroom sauce) and the Catalan classic oca amb peres (goose stewed with pears). In winter, spring for the civet de porc senglar (stewed wild boar) or any of the wild mushroom dishes.

Ctra. de Beget, Beget, 17867, Spain
972-741045
Known For
  • Hearty mountain cuisine
  • Cozy ambience
  • Soul-satisfying stews
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.–Thurs.

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Can Ventura

$$$$ Fodor's choice

In a flower-festooned 17th-century stone house is one of La Cerdanya's finest restaurants, which serves elevated Catalan fare with French touches. Beef a la llosa and duck with orange and spices are house specialties, and the wide selection of entretenimientos (hors d'oeuvres or tapas) is the perfect way to begin. Ask about wine selections, game, and wild mushrooms in season.

Pl. Major 1, Llívia, 17527, Spain
972-896178
Known For
  • Beef seared on hot slate
  • Cozy mountain lodge setting
  • Additional bar area for drinks and tapas
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Thurs. No dinner Sun.

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Cap Roig

$$$ Fodor's choice

A Menorca institution set above Cala Sa Mesquida, a short drive from Mahón, Cap Roig owes its well-deserved fame to the quality of its seafood and the splendor of its views. The mussels from the port of Mahón are excellent, as is the lobster, which can be served grilled, in a stew, or as part of one of the restaurant's celebrated rice dishes or paellas.

Cappuccino

$$$ Fodor's choice

Just under the Don Pepe Hotel and right on the promenade, this is the perfect spot for some refreshment before or after a long stroll along the seafront. Done in orange and white with wicker chairs and navy director seats, this outdoor café-restaurant has a fitting nautical theme, and if the temperature drops, blankets and gas heaters are at the ready. Meals are available all day, starting with a range of breakfast options and continuing with brunch-style dishes such as Caesar salad with king prawns and omelets, or something a little more filling like minute steak. Drinks are on the expensive side, but the ocean view is well worth it.

Caracolillo Coffee

$ Fodor's choice

One of the Canaries' few great specialty coffee shops (think single-origin beans, seasoned baristas, and Chemex pour-overs), Caracolillo is a trendy hangout in the Centro district.

Casa Cámara

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Four generations ago, Pablo Cámara turned this 19th-century fishing wharf on the Pasaia narrows into a first-class seafood restaurant with lovely views over the shipping lane. A steaming sopa de pescado (fish soup) is just the ticket on a wet Atlantic day, or try cangrejo del mar (spider crab with vegetable sauce) or the superb hake with salsa verde. A central "live" tank rises and falls with the tide and has lobsters and crayfish that can be hauled up for your inspection.

Calle San Juan 79, Pasai Donibane, 20110, Spain
94-352--3699
Known For
  • Pier-side dining
  • Pristine shellfish
  • Quaint, old-timey ambience
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No dinner Sun.–Thurs.
Reservations essential

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Casa Dani

$ | Salamanca Fodor's choice

Casa Dani is a legendary bar in Mercado de la Paz whose tortilla de patata (potato omelet) is easily the best in town, and perhaps the country (if first place in a recent National Spanish Omelet Championship is any indication). Each hefty wedge is packed with caramelized onions and served hot and slightly runny. Adventurous eaters should opt for the con callos version, topped with spicy tripe.

Calle de Ayala 28 (also Calle de Lagasca 49), Madrid, 28001, Spain
91-575–5925
Known For
  • Rich, tender oxtail
  • €13 prix fixe which hinges on market ingredients
  • Long lines that are worth the wait
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. No dinner

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Casa de los Minutejos

$ Fodor's choice

Carabanchel's best-known bar, Los Minutejos, is synonymous with distressingly inhalable griddled sandwiches of crispy pig ear doused in fiery brava sauce. Tamer tapas are available for the squeamish. To drink? An ice-cold Mahou, of course.

Calle de Antonio de Leyva 17, 28019, Spain
91-560–6726
Known For
  • Crustless "minutejo" sandwiches
  • Ample space to spread out
  • No-nonsense service

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Casa Gerardo

$ | La Latina Fodor's choice

Tinajas, huge clay vessels once filled to the brim with bulk wine (but now defunct), sit behind the bar at this raucous no-frills 1895 bodega specializing in Spanish cheese and charcuterie. Ask the waiters what they've been drinking and eating lately, and order precisely that. The washed-rind cheeses from Extremadura (Torta del Casar or similar) are always a safe—and pleasantly putrescent—bet.

Calle de Calatrava 21, Madrid, 28005, Spain
91-221–9660
Known For
  • Unforgettable old-world atmosphere
  • Wide selection of wines and charcuterie
  • Frazzled yet friendly staff
Restaurant Details
No dinner Sun.

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Casa González

$ | Barrio de las Letras Fodor's choice

This gourmet shop (established 1931) doubles as a cozy bar where you can sample most of the stuff on the shelves, including canned asparagus, charcuterie, anchovies, and a varied well-priced selection of Spanish cheeses and wines. It also serves good inexpensive breakfasts.

Casa Hortensia Restaurante y Sidrería

$$ | Chueca Fodor's choice

Approximate a vacation to northern Spain by dining at this true-blue Asturian restaurant (or at the more casual sidrería in the bar area), where that region's unsung comfort-food dishes—such as fabada (pork-and-bean stew), Cabrales cheese, and cachopo (cheese-stuffed beef cutlets)—take center stage. The obligatory tipple is sidra, bone-dry Asturian cider that's aerated using a battery-powered gadget designed for this task.

Calle de la Farmacia 2, Madrid, 28004, Spain
91-539–0090
Known For
  • Fried steak with jamón and cheese
  • Cider bottles with fun DIY aerators
  • Local crowd
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No dinner Sun.

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Casa Macareno

$$ | Malasaña Fodor's choice

Whether you pull up a stool at at the marble bar or sit down for a soup-to-nuts feast in the azulejo-lined dining room, you're in for some of Madrid's finest traditional tapas with a twist here. Madrileños come from far and wide to share heaped plates of ensaladilla rusa, a house specialty, as well as textbook-perfect croquetas and hefty steaks served with sherry gravy and house-cut fries. Vermouth (on tap) is the nonnegotiable aperitif, and there are always several Spanish wines to try by the glass.

Casa Maians

$$ | Barceloneta Fodor's choice

You’ll mainly hear Catalan conversations in this 10-table establishment that feels like eating at a Spanish relative’s house, with food as locally sourced as its clientele. Rice dishes are the main event, particularly the squid-ink variety and, if you're lucky, the seasonal special topped with perfectly cooked steak.

C. de Sant Carles 28, Barcelona, 08003, Spain
93-627--1585
Known For
  • Market-fresh ingredients and seasonal twists
  • Homemade desserts, such as cheesecake
  • Service is run single-handedly, so don’t come in a rush
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. No dinner Sun., Wed., and Thurs.
Reservations essential

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Casa Manteca

$ Fodor's choice

Cádiz's most quintessentially Andalusian tavern is in the neighborhood of La Viña, named for the vineyard that once grew here. Chacina (Iberian ham or sausage) and chicharrones de Cádiz (cold pork) served on waxed paper and washed down with manzanilla (sherry from Sanlúcar de Barrameda) are standard fare at the low wooden counter that has served bullfighters and flamenco singers, as well as dignitaries from around the world, since 1953. The walls are covered with colorful posters and other memorabilia from the annual Carnival, flamenco shows, and ferias. A few hot dishes are available such as albóndigas (meatballs). This venue is popular, so join the line 30 minutes before opening.

Calle Corralón de los Carros 66, Cádiz, 11002, Spain
956-213603
Known For
  • Atmospheric interior
  • Delicious cold cuts
  • Manzanilla sherry

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Casa Marcelo

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Fusing traditional Galician cuisine with Japanese, Mexican, and Peruvian, among others, Casa Marcelo whips up creatively plated dishes in an open-plan kitchen. The jovial dining area—always full and always loud—seats guests at long communal tables, a nod to the fact that the dishes are meant to be shared.

Rúa das Hortas 1, Santiago de Compostela, 15705, Spain
981-558580
Known For
  • Fusion tapas
  • Impress-your-date cuisine
  • Extremely popular
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. No dinner Sun.

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Casa Rufo

$$$ | El Ensanche Fodor's choice

Charming and cozy, this centenarian Bilbao institution is essentially a series of nooks and crannies tucked into a fine food, wine, olive oil, cheese, and ham emporium. Leave it to the affable owners to recommend specialties such as txuleton (gigantic T-bone steak), which pairs wonderfully with the house Rioja or any red from the 1,000-bottle-strong wine list.

Calle Hurtado de Amézaga 5, Bilbao, 48008, Spain
94-443--2172
Known For
  • Deep wine list
  • Stewed oxtail and other beef dishes
  • Traditional Basque desserts
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.
Reservations essential

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Casa Rufus

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Pine walls and floors, red-and-white-check curtains, and flowy white tablecloths furnish this stuck-in-time restaurant in the gray-stone village of Gessa, between Vielha and Salardú. Try the rabbit stuffed with veal and pork, or call ahead to order an off-menu civet of mountain goat or venison. Book ahead as hours are unpredictable.

Carrer Sant Jaume 8, Salardú, 25598, Spain
973-645246
Known For
  • One of the best restaurants in the area
  • Wide selection of local meat dishes
  • Good stop-off on way to or from the Baqueira ski slopes
Restaurant Details
Seasonal closures after Easter--June

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Casa Salvador

$$ | Chueca Fodor's choice

Whether you approve of bullfighting or not, the culinary excellence of Casa Salvador—a checkered-tablecloth, taurine-themed restaurant that opened in 1941—isn't up for debate. Sit down to generous servings of featherlight fried hake, hearty oxtail stew, and other stodgy (in the best way) Spanish classics, all served by hale old-school waiters clad in white jackets.

Calle de Barbieri 12, Madrid, 28004, Spain
91-521–4524
Known For
  • Time-warpy decor
  • Walls packed with bullfighting paraphernalia
  • Great steaks
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. No dinner Mon.

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Casa Sotero

$ | Tetuán Fodor's choice

Crackly fried pig ear, fat wedges of tortilla de patata (potato omelet), and garlicky rabbit al ajillo are a few of the many old-school standbys that have kept this cubbyhole bar in business since 1934.

Casa Urola

$$$ | Parte Vieja Fodor's choice

Don't be put off by the outdated decor of this Parte Vieja icon—the kitchen at Casa Urola is easily one of the city's most adroit, whether you post up at the informal bar or sit down to a multicourse meal. In the dining room, savor appetizers made with hard-to-find regional vegetables like cardoon, borage, and caviar-like de lágrima peas before moving onto entrées like seared squab, presented with a pâté of its own liver, and roasted hake loin, served with white wine and clams. Save room for the signature torrija, custardy fried bread crisped in brown butter and dusted with cinnamon sugar.

Cervecería Vaso de Oro

$ | Barceloneta Fodor's choice

A favorite with visiting gourmands, this often overcrowded little counter serves some of the best beer and tapas in town. The house-brewed artisanal draft beer—named after the Fort family who owns and runs the bar—is drawn and served with loving care by veteran, epauletted waiters who have it down to a fine art.

Balboa 6, Barcelona, 08003, Spain
93-319–3098
Known For
  • Old-school service
  • Elbows-out, stand-up dining
  • Beef fillet with foie
Restaurant Details
Reservations not accepted

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Charolés Restaurante

$$$ Fodor's choice

According to Spain's top food critics, this restaurant ladles out the best cocido madrileño in all the land. Each component of the multicourse boiled dinner, from the chickpeas to the chorizo to the pickled peppers, is sourced from top-notch producers from around the peninsula. Fret not, summer visitors: a variety of traditional seafood, vegetable, and meat dishes are available for days when a hot stew doesn't appeal. 

Choco

$$$$ | Centro Fodor's choice

The city's most exciting restaurant, which has renewed its Michelin star annually since 2012, El Choco has renowned chef Kisko Garcia at the helm whipping up innovative dishes based on his 10 Commandments to preserve good cooking. One of them is that taste always comes first, and that plays out well during a meal at this minimalist restaurant with charcoal-colored walls, glossy parquet floors, and dishes offering new sensations and amazing presentations. You start dinner in the entrance lounge and then move into the kitchen to watch a dish being prepared before you go to your table. Two tasting menus are available (from €110), with plenty of tasty creative surprises. Allow three hours for your meal. Take a cab; El Choco is outside the city center to the east and not easy to find.

Calle del Compositor Serrano Lucena 14, Córdoba, 14003, Spain
957-264863
Known For
  • Creative Andalusian cooking
  • Good-value Michelin-star tasting menu
  • Innovative presentation
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon., Tues. and Aug. No dinner Sun.

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Chocolat Madrid

$ | Barrio de las Letras Fodor's choice

Always crisp and never greasy—that's the mark of a well-made churro, and Madrid Chocolat's piping-hot baskets of fried dough always hit the spot.

Compartir

$$$$ Fodor's choice

The word compartir means “to share” and this excellent restaurant bases its menu on a small-plate sharing approach that has been taken to another level by the culinary team of Mateu Casañas, Oriol Castro, and Eduard Xatruch (who also run Barcelona's three-Michelin-starred Disfrutar). Each dish is served by attentive staff within an 18th-century courtyard.

Consentido

$$$$ Fodor's choice

In his 30s, Salamanca-born chef Carlos Hernández del Río cut his teeth in such star-studded kitchens as Elkano, Zuberoa, and DiverXO before returning to his roots in 2020 to open this restaurant showcasing the best ingredients, techniques, and wines from his native region—with a few geeky French touches. Expect immaculately prepared appetizers like griddled fresh artichokes with béarnaise followed by mains including stewed chickpeas with sherry and pork and marinated Tormes river trout, all served in a bright dining room with checkerboard tile floors and designer furniture.

Contraban

$$ Fodor's choice

Once you find this spot, tucked inside the boutique Wittmore Hotel at the end of a tiny alley, you’ll be rewarded with a wonderfully creative menu of small plates and hearty baked pastas. Dishes are served in the lounge-like dining room or out on the courtyard patio with its twinkling lights and impressive vertical garden.