119 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.

Restaurant Pont Vell

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

Book in advance for a table on the romantic riverfront terrace and you’ll be rewarded with exceptional views of Besalú’s medieval bridge. The prix-fixe menu changes monthly and offers a wide array of traditional Catalan dishes of superb quality, with seasonal ingredients sourced from the nearby Banyoles market.

Restaurante Iván Cerdeño

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

Chef Iván Cerdeño's namesake restaurant is a beacon of Castilian alta gastronomía—think architectural dishes composed of foams, spherified sauces, and edible flowers served in a minimal white-tablecloth dining room. The ever-rotating tasting menus (3, 12, 15, or 20 courses) almost always feature local game and plentiful seafood.

Ctra. de la Puebla de Montalbán s/n, Toledo, 45004, Spain
92-522–3674
Known For
  • Two-Michelin-star dining
  • Culinary hot spot
  • Secluded location across the Tagus
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. No dinner Wed., Thurs., and Sun.

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Restaurante Will and Margaret

$$ Fodor's Choice

Tucked away in a working-class neighborhood on the outskirts of Zaragoza, Will and Margaret is an unassuming eatery worth a stop on your way in or out of town. The Ecuadorian family running this jewel delights neighborhood lunch goers, students, and families alike with a menu that blends traditional Spanish fare with global influences and subtle nods to South American flavors. Dishes are crafted from fresh ingredients, artfully plated, with genial service. The three-course menu changes daily, featuring plates like turkey stewed with peaches and black pepper, or monkfish tail with shrimp, peanuts, and cilantro. 

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San Sebastián 57

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

To fully grasp the potential of Canarian cuisine, book a table at this white-tablecloth standby that coaxes market ingredients—such as patudo (bigeye) tuna, black potatoes, and local heirloom tomatoes—into flawless, modern preparations like foam, ensaladilla rusa (salade Olivier), and vinaigrette, respectively. The prix-fixe lunch and more elaborate menú de degustación (tasting menu) are fantastic values, as are the bottles of Tenerife wine.

Av. de San Sebastián 57, Santa Cruz de Tenerife, 38005, Spain
822-104325
Known For
  • Canarian fusion cuisine
  • Rave-worthy tasting menus served by attentive staff
  • Subdued, minimalist decor
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon.

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Slow & Low

$$$$ | Eixample Fodor's Choice

Easily one of the hottest tickets in town for lovers of eclectic, avant-garde cuisine, Slow & Low is run by an energetic multicultural young team who have translated their culinary genius into two tasting menus, which combine Mediterranean, Mexican, Peruvian, and even some Southeast Asian influences. The three tasting menus (11 courses for €115, 13 courses for €140, or 14 courses for €170) are all equally worthy of your time and hard-earned cash.

Comte Borrell 119, Barcelona, 08015, Spain
93-625–4512
Known For
  • Creative tasting menus
  • Fresh seafood and seasonal veggies
  • Young, international team
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon.

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Tondeluna

$$$ Fodor's Choice

Tondeluna has six communal tables (with 10 seats each), and all have views into the kitchen, where cooks plate dishes novel and familiar like glazed beef cheeks with apple puree and Getaria-style hake with melty panadera (thinly sliced and roasted) potatoes.

Calle Muro de la Mata 9, Logroño, 26001, Spain
94-123--6425
Known For
  • Balance of experimental and classic dishes
  • Lively dining room
  • Excellent value
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. No dinner Sun.

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Xerta

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

Much of Xerta's menu is the expected swanky fine-dining fare, but stand-out options use unique produce from the deltas and rivers of the Terres de l'Ebre region, such as sweet miniature canyuts (razor clams), oysters, and fresh eel. The superb weekday four-course lunch menu includes two glasses of wine per person and is a steal at €45.

Zelaia Sagardotegia

$$$ Fodor's Choice

This traditional sagardotegi 7 km (4 miles) south of San Sebastián is where top chefs like Juan Mari Arzak and Martín Berasategui like to ring in cider season with a resounding ¡txotx! ("cheers" in Basque). Off the tourist track, Zelaia invites guests into its barrel-lined warehouses to chow down on an à la carte menu of bacalao-centric dishes, thick-cut steaks, and—for dessert—local cheeses with quince preserves and walnuts (vegetarian options are available).

B0 Martindegi 29, 20120, Spain
94-355--5851
Known For
  • Rambunctious, buzzed crowd
  • Food that's an echelon above other sagardotegis
  • Unlimited cider drinking straight from the barrel
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. and Jun.--Dec., No lunch Tues.–Thurs.
Reservations essential

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El Celler de Can Roca

$$$$ Fodor's Choice
Diners who can plan far enough ahead to deal with the waiting list for tables at this multiple-time winner of Restaurant magazine's World's Best Restaurant crown) are rewarded with an all-encompassing feast for the senses. Fine dining doesn't get any better than this. Brothers Joan, Josep and Jordi Roca deliver a one-of-a-kind "freestyle cooking" experience that blends classical cooking with cutting-edge techniques.
Can Sunyer 48, Girona, 17007, Spain
97-222–2157
Known For
  • One of the world's greatest restaurants
  • Outstanding wine list
  • Dazzling creativity and perfectionism
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch Tues. Closed 1 wk at Easter, 2 wks in Aug., and 2 wks at Christmas

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ABaC

$$$$

Chef Jordi Cruz is a celebrity in Spain, and pulls out all the stops with a panoply of artfully presented dishes that vary from season to season; no expense or effort is ever spared. ABaC serves only a set tasting menu, which you can request with or without paired wines. There are tables only for two or four; the coveted seating looks out on a lovely garden. 

Av. del Tibidabo 1–7, Barcelona, 08022, Spain
93-319–6600
Known For
  • Celebrity chef
  • Creative in-season dishes
  • Elegant setting in a boutique hotel
Restaurant Details
Reservations essential

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Adonías del Pozo

$$

In this softly lighted dining room furnished with rustic tables and colorful ceramics, feast on top-of-the-line cured cecina (Leonese air-dried cured beef), roasted peppers, and chorizo. Grilled sea bream is a treat for seafood lovers; a refreshing lemon cream is a treat for just about everyone.

Calle Santa Nonia 16, León, 24003, Spain
98-720--6768
Known For
  • Well-priced menú del día
  • Excellent sausages and roast meats
  • Homey dining room
Restaurant Details
No dinner Sun.--Thurs.

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Aizian

$$$$ | El Ensanche

Chef José Miguel Olazabalaga's Aizian is anything but a "hotel restaurant," even if it's situated inside the Meliá Bilbao. Sure, his dishes err on the staid side—you won't find tweezed microgreens and dry-ice displays here—but they're dependably delicious: think sautéed wild mushrooms topped with foie gras and a runny egg or seared venison loin with beets and smoked chestnut puree.

Calle Lehendakari Leizaola 29, Bilbao, 48001, Spain
94-428--0039
Known For
  • Old-school Basque with a twist
  • Dreamy torrija (Spanish "French" toast)
  • Good value for fine dining
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.

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Alameda

$$$$

The Txapartegi brothers—Mikel, Kepa, and Gorka—are the decorated chefs behind this restaurant in an elegantly restored house with a sunny terrace. Count on seasonally rotated combinations of carefully chosen ingredients, from fish and duck to vegetables.

Calle Minasoroeta 1, Hondarribia, 20280, Spain
94-364--2789
Known For
  • Understated Michelin-starred dining
  • Freshest seafood and meats
  • Scenic seaside environs
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. No dinner Sun.–Thurs.

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Alberca Asador

$$$

Alberca's two-story stone dining room boasts a comfortable minimalist design and a fire-focused menu. Most dishes get some time on the grill, even the local goat cheese with ash and apple. The oxtail croquettes are truly exceptional as well, whether you find them in the tasting menu or order a-la-carte. And the grilled, smoky take on the torrija, a rich Spanish-style French toast, is beyond memorable.

Calle de la Victoria 8, Trujillo, 10200, Spain
92-732--2209
Known For
  • Grill-fired fare
  • Highly attentive service
  • Outstanding desserts
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. and Wed.

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Aleia

$$$$ | Eixample

Take a historic luxury hotel and add one of Barcelona's most avant-garde, yet ultra-elegant fine-dining restaurants, and what have you got? Aleia restaurant at Casa Fuster. Set in a opulent dining room overlooking Passeig de Gràcia, Aleia is the kind of place you'll get dressed up for when you want to impress someone special. Choices are limited: there's one tasting menu, priced at €172 (or €134 at lunchtime), the contents of which may vary, but the quality of the produce will never disappoint---like white prawns from Tarragona, de-boned Bresse quail, or Kaluga caviar.

Passeig de Gràcia 132, Barcelona, 08008, Spain
93-502--0041-Casa Fuster
Known For
  • Opulent tasting menus
  • Chic setting overlooking Passeig de Gracia
  • Michelin-starred elegance
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch Tues.

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Arbidel

$$$$

This award-winning, modern Asturian restaurant in the old town is adorned with rustic stone walls and a hand-painted mural. There are also inventive tapas and tasting menus (starting at €65). Notable dishes include creamy rice with tiger prawns and squid, Xaldu lamb royale with mushrooms, and warm chocolate cake with ice cream. 

Calle Oscuro 1, Ribadesella, Spain
985-861440
Known For
  • Experimental Asturian cuisine
  • Good-value tasting menus
  • Apple gazpacho with sardines
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues.

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Asador Guetaria

$$$ | El Ensanche

With a wood-paneled dining room awash with antiques, this family operation is a longtime local favorite for top-quality fish and meats cooked over coals. In the open kitchen, wild lubina (sea bass), rodaballo (turbot), and other regional delicacies from land and sea cook to crackly perfection.

Colón de Larreátegui 12, Bilbao, 48001, Spain
94-424--3923
Known For
  • Masterful grilled dishes
  • Familial atmosphere
  • Homey, old-timey dining room
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.
Reservations essential

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Astelena

$$$ | Parte Vieja

The narrow stone rooms of a defunct banana warehouse are now one of the finest spots for modern Basque dining. There's an affordable weekend tasting menu that hinges on what's in season, though dishes like seared txuleton and hake in white wine sauce with clams never come off the menu for a reason.

Calle Euskal Herria 3, San Sebastián, 20003, Spain
94-342--5867
Known For
  • Unpretentious yet elegant Basque cuisine
  • Fantastic seafood dishes
  • Surprising value for this part of town
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No dinner Sun.

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Bar La Gloria

$ | Malasaña

Overlook the soulless IKEA furnishings of this family-run dinette and instead focus on the honest home-cooked food served at exceptionally reasonable prices. Try Cordoban-style flamenquines (ham-and-cheese-stuffed pork), salmon tartare, or (on Sunday) a crave-worthy paella Valenciana.

Reservations are a must for Sunday lunch; call ahead or visit the website to book a table and preorder your paella.

Calle del Noviciado 2, Madrid, 28015, Spain
91-083–1401
Known For
  • Budget weekday prix fixes
  • Delicious house-made desserts
  • Local crowd
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No dinner Sun.

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Barómetro

$$$

Decorated with an ornate barometer to gauge the famously unpredictable local weather, this family-run seafood spot is in a 19th-century building on the harbor. In addition to an inexpensive menú del día (prix fixe), there's outstanding seafood à la carte including fried calamares (squid) and uni-stuffed asparagus. If there were ever a place to splurge on bogavante, large-claw lobster, it's here. For dessert, the fig ice cream is delicious.

Paseo del Muelle 5, Luarca, 33700, Spain
985-470662
Known For
  • Excellent-value prix-fixe lunch
  • Seafood noodle soup
  • Popular with locals
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. No dinner Sun.–Thurs.

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Bergara

$$ | Gros

Winner of many a miniature cuisine award (don't miss the prawn-filled txalupa tartlet), this Gros neighborhood standby offers outside-the-box takes on traditional tapas and pintxos. It also serves more substantial dishes for sit-down meals.

Bodega Amposta

$$ | Poble Sec

A short stroll from the Mies van der Rohe Pavilion and CaixaForum, this bustling brick-walled restaurant serves top-notch seasonal Catalan cuisine prepared on the Josper charcoal oven. Order à la carte or go with the multicourse prix-fixe menu, which is a good deal.

Carrer d'Amposta 1, Barcelona, 08004, Spain
93-673–8346
Known For
  • Tapas with an in-house twist
  • Seasonal ingredients
  • Popular with locals
Restaurant Details
Reservations essential

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Bodegón Alejandro

$$$ | Parte Vieja

Hiding in the basement of a timber building in the heart of the Parte Vieja, this restaurant—where world-renowned chef Martín Berasategui cut his teeth—toes the line between traditional and contemporary Basque cuisine. A recent menu included slow-roasted piquillo peppers, tiny de lágrima peas topped with a poached egg and shaved black trufffles, and brûléed torrijas (Spanish "French" toast).

Calle de Fermín Calbetón 4, San Sebastián, 20003, Spain
94-342--7158
Known For
  • Affordable and delectable tasting menus
  • Kilometer-zero dining
  • Seasonal vegetable delicacies
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues.

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Ca l'Enric

$$$$

Chefs (and siblings) Jordi and Isabel Juncà have become legends in the town of La Vall de Bianya, just north of Olot, with exquisite cuisine that’s firmly rooted in local products. Dishes star game of all sorts, wild mushrooms, and vegetables from the garden, and are served in a historic stone-walled 19th-century inn. The two tasting menus (€115 or €140) give you a full range of the Juncàs' virtuosity. 

Ctra. de Camprodon s/n, Olot, 17813, Spain
972-290-015
Known For
  • Michelin star
  • Truffles and wild mushrooms, in season
  • Prix-fixe tasting menus
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. Dinner served Fri & Sat. only.
Reservations essential

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Café Iruña

$$

Pamplona's gentry have been flocking to this ornate, French-style café since 1888, but in 1926 Ernest Hemingway made it part of world literary lore in The Sun Also Rises. You can have a drink with a bronze version of the author in his favorite perch at the far end of the bar, or enjoy views of the plaza from a table on the terrace. Service is spotty; grab a beverage and a tapa here, but don't stick around for a meal.

Camping Mar

$$ | La Ciutadella

Slightly hidden in the exclusive yachting marina behind the W hotel, this restaurant only attracts those in-the-know, which might explain why it's largely devoid of tourists. The menu includes healthy starters like salmon tartare and ceviche, and there's a nice selection of seafood-, vegetable- and meat-based paellas.

Can Segura

$$

Half a block in from the town's beach, this hotel restaurant serves house-cooked seafood and upland specialties. The pimientos de piquillos rellenos de brandada (sweet red peppers stuffed with codfish mousse) are first-rate, as are the rice dishes.

Casa Carola

$$$$

Cocido madrileño, Madrid's quintessential boiled dinner of rich consommé, butter-soft chickpeas, and some half-dozen cuts of meat, is the must-order item at this Salamanca institution, especially in the winter, when temperatures plummet. The wooden straight-back chairs, kitschy cotton bibs, and walls hung with black-and-white photos belie the fact that this lunch-only restaurant opened just two decades ago, but one taste of its famous cocido, and you might as well be at an abuela's kitchen table.

Calle de Padilla 54, 28006, Spain
91-401–9408
Known For
  • Cocido madrileño served in three courses
  • Old-timey interiors
  • Warm service
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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Casa Carola

$$$$ | Salamanca

Locals flock to Casa Carola for one dish, cocido madrileño, Madrid's famous boiled dinner whose roots can be traced to a medieval Sephardic stew called adafina. Served ritualistically in three courses, or vuelcos—broth, then chickpeas and vegetables, then meats—it's an essential Madrid experience, especially in cold weather. Madrid has several famous cocido restaurants, but Casa Carola stands out for its ultrabuttery garbanzos, nostalgic decor (think black-and-white photos and old newspaper clippings), and service with panache. Tie on your starched cloth bib and prepare to feast.

Calle de Padilla 54, Madrid, 28006, Spain
91-401–9408
Known For
  • Cocido madrileño served in three courses
  • Old-timey interiors
  • Warm service
Restaurant Details
No dinner. Closed mid-June–mid-Sept.

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Casa Lafu

$$

If you haven't tried Chinese food in Madrid, you're missing out—the city has some of the best Chinese restaurants in Europe thanks to a vibrant immigrant community. Casa Lafu, with its serene white-tablecloth dining room, stands out for its expertly prepared repertoire of regional dishes, from Sichuan-style málà (spicy) plates to Shanghainese wine-cooked meats and Cantonese dim sum. Well-priced tasting menus and hot pot options round out the offerings. 

Calle de la Flor Baja 1, 28013, Spain
91-548–7096
Known For
  • Hot pot
  • Upscale Chinese cuisine at affordable prices
  • Rare regional specialties

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