608 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.

Hostal Restaurant Sa Rascassa

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

Dine on fresh seafood, grilled meats, and pasta on the tranquil, tree-shaded patio or inside the rustic-chic dining room. From here, it’s a short stroll to the secluded Aiguafreda swimming cove. It’s a great alternative in summer to Begur’s perpetually packed beachfront restaurants, and it also has five simple-but-stylish hotel rooms. 

Cala Aiguafreda 3, Begur, 17255, Spain
972-622845
Known For
  • Serving its namesake fish, rascassa (scorpion fish)
  • Grilled specialties
  • Attractive patio and large carpark
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. and Nov.–mid-Apr.

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Juana La Loca

$$$ | La Latina Fodor's Choice

This tony gastro bar serves newfangled tapas that are well worth their higher-than-usual price tag. Spring for the tempura soft-shell crab bao with chive mayonnaise, garlicky artichoke flatbread, or any other tapa del día, but whatever you do, order the famous tortilla de patata, irresistible with its molten core and handfuls of caramelized onions. The dulce de leche "volcano," cooled off by a scoop of banana ice cream, may be Madrid's most craveable dessert.

Pl. de Puerta de Moros 4, Madrid, 28005, Spain
91-366–5500
Known For
  • Nueva cocina tapas done right
  • Earth-shatteringly good tortilla de patata
  • Cheek-by-jowl crowds
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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Keki

$$ Fodor's Choice

Tucked away behind the cathedral, this small, modern restaurant justifies Murcia's fame as tapas capital of the Southeast. Local chef Sergio Martínez takes a creative stance on local cuisine in both the bite-sized tapas (from €3), such as ham croquettes or oxtail brioche and the larger main courses. Highlights here include duck cannelloni, artichokes 'flowers', and tuna tataki with yogurt and wasabi. Try the weekday lunchtime menu (€18) for an overview of the cuisine or the tasting menu with nine dishes (€45) to sample the best.

Calle Fuensanta 4, Murcia, 30002, Spain
968-220798
Known For
  • Nine-dish tasting menu
  • Local produce
  • Creative chef
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues.

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La Alcoba Azul

$$ | Barri Gòtic Fodor's Choice

One of Barcelona's most beloved bars, La Alcoba Azul offers a wide selection of tapas with a full-on immersive atmosphere. The decor reflects the Moorish influence of Andalucía mixed with the quirkiness of the original owners, so you'll get illuminated lanterns and broken birdcages hanging from the ceiling, while a years-old candle burns in a corner. In case you can't get a table here, try one of their sister restaurants a couple doors down, La Alcobita. 

La Bodega de Santiago

$$$ Fodor's Choice

Shaded by a splendid ficus that keeps the terraza cool in the midday heat, La Bodega de Santiago is worth going out of your way to visit. The traditional Canarian menu is exquisite, integrating meats and produce from the surrounding farms and complementing dishes with island wines. The rosemary-scented kid goat is memorable, as are the freshly pounded mojos and stewed garbanzos (chickpeas). Call ahead to book a patio table.

Calle Montañas del Fuego 27, Yaiza, 35570, Spain
928-836204
Known For
  • Romantic dining beneath a gorgeous tree
  • Terrific goat and roast meats
  • Locavore cuisine
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon.

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La Bodeguilla Lanciego

$$$ Fodor's Choice

This inviting white-tablecloth taberna established in 1959 serves soul-satisfying cuisine in a cabinlike dining room decorated with taupe curtains, blond wood chairs, and original artwork. Steak frites is the go-to here with roast turbot coming in a close second.

La Cabaña

$ Fodor's Choice

This homey, sun-drenched restaurant serves honest Extremaduran fare at an excellent price. What sets it apart from other local spots is the kitchen's careful attention to presentation and ingredient quality—evident in the not-too-greasy migas, wonderfully juicy Iberian pork dishes, and refreshing tomato salads.

La Carboná

$$$ Fodor's Choice

This eatery has a rustic atmosphere with arches, wooden beams, and a fireplace for winter nights. The chef has worked at several top restaurants, and his menu includes traditional grilled meats as well as innovative dishes such as gazpacho with carrots and sardines, and ham croquettes with a curry sauce. He also creates regular themed menus, often based on a sherry or a local winery. Try the menú de degustación (€75): five courses, each accompanied by a different type of sherry. Both the tapas menu and the wine list are excellent.

Calle San Francisco de Paula 2, Jerez de la Frontera, 11401, Spain
956-347475
Known For
  • Multiple-course sherry-tasting menu
  • Bodega setting
  • Innovative dishes
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. and July.

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La Cascada

$$ Fodor's Choice

Set in the pine-clad foothills of Sierra Blanca with panoramic views of the Mediterranean, this “secret oasis in Marbella” offers Andalusian-French fusion cooking, with innovative dishes created by award-winning chefs (and brothers) Jacques and Matthieu Lagarde. Their maxim is sustainable local produce—they have their own garden and orchard, and forage in the nearby woods—and all dishes showcase the seasonal food calendar. Don’t miss the charcuterie of the day (the Lagardes make and cure their own), the butternut with Mexican red pipian or the fresh fish dishes. You’ll also find perhaps the only mashed potato with horseradish in southern Spain. Good-value tasting (€85) and lunchtime (€32) menus are available. The outside terrace enjoys a fresh breeze and sea views, while inside is rustic with an open fire for cooler days. La Cascada also has a pop-up, Le Patio, with quick bites and live music on July and August evenings. 

La Casona del Judío

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

The two exquisite tasting menus at this tranquil Michelin-star establishment offer a whirlwind tour of modern Cantabrian cooking. They also bear a green Michelin star for their dedication to sustainable practices. Request a table in the romantically lighted brick wine cellar, and savor such delicacies as cod with smoked egg yolk, Cantabrian monkfish, and sea urchin croquettes. 

Calle de Repuente 20, Santander, 39012, Spain
942-342726
Known For
  • Tasting menus
  • Award-winning environmental sustainability
  • Modern Cantabrian cuisine
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. No dinner Wed., Thurs., and Sun.
Reservations essential

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La Catapa

$$$ | Retiro Fodor's Choice

La Catapa's tapas are classic but never old hat, inventive but never pretentious. The burst-in-your-mouth croquetas and garlicky razor clams may lure the crowds, but the hidden gems are in the vegetable section: it's hard to decide between the artichoke menestra with crisped jamón (cured ham), ultra-creamy salmorejo (gazpacho's richer, more garlicky sibling), and umami-packed seared mushrooms. Be sure to ask about daily specials.

La Cuchara de San Telmo

$$ | Parte Vieja Fodor's Choice

For pintxos that deftly toe the line between traditional and experimental, there is no better bar than this Parte Vieja cubbyhole renowned for its seared foie gras, braised veal cheeks, and garlicky razor clams a la plancha. Throw a few elbows, order a couple glasses of txakoli, and get ready for pintxo paradise.

Calle Santa Korda 4, San Sebastián, Spain
94-344--1655
Known For
  • Dependably tasty—and well-portioned—pintxos
  • Sardine-can digs
  • Parte Vieja standby
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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La Galana

$$$ Fodor's Choice

La Galana is a typical Asturian sidrería with colossal barrels lining the walls, thick wooden tables, and plenty of standing room at the bar, where locals munch on Cabrales cheese. The kitchen serves refined cider-house fare: expect cheeses with quince jam, bubbling cauldrons of fabada, and a range of creative tapas. There is also a terrace overlooking the porticoed Plaza Mayor and a sit-down dining area beyond the bar with fancier fare including coal-fired steaks, suckling lamb, and grilled sea bass. 

La Marina

$ Fodor's Choice

The third-generation owner of this beloved bar keeps alive endangered Cacereño dishes such as crispy-seared kidneys, spicy stewed pig ear, and zarangollo, a garlicky, vinegary salad of blistered roasted peppers and parsley topped with flaked Spanish tuna. There is outdoor seating available.

Av. Virgen de la Montaña 18, Cáceres, 10002, Spain
60-568--6738
Known For
  • Sensational offal dishes
  • Griddled seafood and meats
  • Above-and-beyond service
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. No dinner Sun.

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La Pepita

$ | Gràcia Fodor's Choice

Don't be deterred by the graffitied walls: the innovative tapas at La Pepita lives up to the hipster hype. The room is dominated by a long marble-topped bar—there are only a handful of tables in the narrow space—so it’s best for couples or small groups; next door, sister eatery La Mini Pepita offers up further stool seating.

La Platilleria

$$ | Montjuïc Fodor's Choice

Standards like Ibérico ham and patatas bravas are on offer at this snug tapas bar, but it’s the rotating selection of seasonal small plates that really make it worth a visit. There’s no menu; a chalkboard brought to your table lists the main ingredient—cod, pork rib, sweetbreads, for example—and friendly servers will explain the daily preparation for each.

Carrer Roser 82, Barcelona, 08004, Spain
93-463–5401
Known For
  • Hearty, no-frills cuisine
  • Nice selection of Catalan wines by the glass
  • Passionate service
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.–Tues.

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La Ponderosa

$ Fodor's Choice

La Ponderosa is a quintessential yet elevated Castilian bar where locals mingle at high volume while tossing back local wine and munching on well-priced seasonal delicacies like griddled wild asparagus, suckling lamb chops, and seared wild mushrooms. It's a standing-room-only joint, so if you want to sit, you'll have to come early and find a place on the terrace.

Calle de San Francisco 20, Cuenca, 16001, Spain
96-921–3214
Known For
  • Hidden-gem local wines
  • Simple and delicious vegetable dishes
  • Buzzy atmosphere
Restaurant Details
Closed weekends

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La Seu

$$$ Fodor's Choice

Under co-owners Fede and Diana Cervera and chef Xicu Ramón, this distinguished restaurant in the center of town continues to reinvent and deconstruct traditional Valencian cuisine. The setting is an architectural tour de force: a 16th-century town house transformed into a sunlit modern space with an open kitchen and a three-story-high wall sculpted to resemble a billowing white curtain. The midweek menus, available for lunch or dinner, include a selection of creative tapas—minicourses, really, that might include a soup or a salad—and one rice dish or other main course, giving you a good idea of the chef's repertoire at an unbeatable price.

Calle Loreto 59, Dénia, 03700, Spain
966-424478
Known For
  • Creative tapas
  • Unbeatable midweek menu prices
  • Inventive take on Valencian cuisine
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
Closed early Jan.–early Feb. Closed Mon.

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La Taberna de Baco

$ Fodor's Choice

This bright, modern bar is a great spot to try seasonal, market-fresh tapas like heirloom tomato salad with chilies and raw onion or cheesy mushroom "carpaccio," but locals flock here for one dish in particular: oreja a la plancha, griddled pig's ear swimming in punchy brava (spicy) sauce. Shatteringly crisp and unapologetically rich, it's one of the best versions you'll have in Spain.

Calle de San Agustín 10, Logroño, 26001, Spain
94-121--3544
Known For
  • Offal even the squeamish can learn to love
  • Wide selection of small-production wines
  • Amiable bartenders

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La Tabernilla

$$$ Fodor's Choice

Step outside the historic center for some of the most spectacular stews in Oviedo. Whether it's fabada, pote, callos, or lentils, chef Lucía Fernández has the accolades to prove every dish's worth---the walls are covered in "best of" awards from stew competitions throughout the region. One is usually featured on the weekday menú del día, but if it doesn't work for your schedule, make sure you call ahead to specifically reserve a pot.

Calle Tomás Crespo 6, Oviedo, 33013, Spain
636-560424
Known For
  • Award-winning stews
  • Long-standing family-run restaurant
  • Weekday three-course menus
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. No dinner Sun.--Wed.

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La Teranga

$ | Lavapiés Fodor's Choice

To get a literal taste of Lavapiés's vibrant West African community, step into this family-run Senegalese hole-in-the-wall that serves the neighborhood's best mafé (meat-and-peanut stew), samousas (spicy meat-filled turnovers), and thieboudienne (Senegal's national dish, made with fish and vegetables)—at exceptionally affordable prices.

La Viña del Ensanche

$$$ | El Ensanche Fodor's Choice

Furnished with simple wood tables beneath hams hanging from the rafters, this lively, deceptively simple bar attracts locals and tourists alike for its exceptional pintxos and affordable breakfasts. Don't pass up the deconstructed Galician-style octopus on a bed of mashed potatoes laced with pimentón (paprika) or the appetizer of house-made foie gras with three preserves. For a more exclusive (and pricier) fine-dining experience, reserve a table at the abutting El Taller, and be sure to peruse the gourmet food store stocked with local conservas, cured meats, wines, and cheeses.

La Xarxa

$$ | Gràcia Fodor's Choice

This beautifully restored, historic wine bar doesn't get much tourist traffic but the focus on local produce and outstanding service means that the cozy patio stays busy from lunchtime on. Don't miss the veal cheek macaroni or the anchovies marinated in sherry vinegar.

Pl. Molina 2, Barcelona, 08006, Spain
+34-93-200--1348
Known For
  • Local gem
  • Beautifully restored historic wine bar
  • Anchovies marinated in sherry vinegar
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon., No dinner Sun.

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Lambuzo

$$ | Sol Fodor's Choice

This laid-back Andalusian barroom embodies the joyful spirit of that sunny region. Let the cheerful waitstaff guide you through the extensive menu, which includes specialties from Cádiz such as fried seafood, unconventional croquetas (flecked with garlicky shrimp, for instance), and heftier shareables like creamy oxtail rice and seared Barbate tuna loin. The ensaladilla rusa (tuna-and-potato salad) is one of Madrid's best. In summer, outdoor seating is in high demand.

Calle de las Conchas 9, Madrid, 28013, Spain
91-143–4862
Known For
  • Carefree Andalusian vibe
  • A shoal's worth of seafood dishes
  • Free marinated carrots with every drink
Restaurant Details
No dinner Sun.

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Las Torres

$$$ Fodor's Choice

Huesca's top restaurant makes inventive use of local ingredients like wild mushrooms, wild boar, venison, and lamb. The glass-walled kitchen is as inviting as the food that emerges from it, and the wine list is strong on Somontano, Huesca's own D.O. A recent menu included dishes like crispy pork knuckle with revolcona (paprika-garlic) mash and roast turbot with crab cream and a seafood macaron.

Calle María Auxiliadora 3, Huesca, 22002, Spain
974-228213
Known For
  • Aragonese with a modern twist
  • Terrific tasting menus
  • Excellent value
Restaurant Details
No dinner Sun.–Tues. Closed 2 wks over Easter and last 2 wks of Aug.

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Lasarte

$$$$ | Eixample Fodor's Choice

While Martin Berasategui, one of San Sebastián's corps of master chefs, no longer runs the day-to-day operations of this Barcelona kitchen (it's in the capable hands of chef Paolo Casagrande) the restaurant continues to be a culinary triumph. Expect an eclectic selection of Basque, Mediterranean, and off-the-map creations, a hefty bill, service that's second-to-none, and fierce perfectionism apparent in every dish. If you're not in the mood for the full tasting menu, this is one of few Michelin stars that also offers an à la carte option.

Mallorca 259, Barcelona, 08008, Spain
93-445–3242
Known For
  • Inventive cuisine at one of the best restaurants in Barcelona
  • Magnificent tasting menu plus an à la carte option
  • Heavenly grilled pigeon
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.–Tues.
Reservations essential

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Lluritu

$$ | Gràcia Fodor's Choice

There's no need for complicated sauces here—the superfresh grilled fish and seafood speaks for itself, simply drizzled with olive oil or served with a lemon slice. The diminutive dining space is equally unadorned, with plain white walls and bright, somewhat industrial-style lighting; an illuminated panel above the bar lists what’s available that day, which might include razor clams, octopus, sardines, and the restaurant’s namesake fish. A same-concept sibling, Lluritu 2, is a 10-minute walk away.

Torrent de les Flors 71, Barcelona, 08024, Spain
93-855–3866
Known For
  • Fresh grilled seafood
  • Daily specials
  • Casual, diner-style aesthetic
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No dinner Sun.
Reservations essential

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Los Patios de Beatas

$$ Fodor's Choice

Sandwiched between the Museo Picasso and Fundación Picasso is one of Málaga's largest wine collections (there are more than 600 on the list). The two historic mansions that make up this restaurant include an original patio and 17th-century stone wine vats; you can sit on barstools in the beamed tapas section, where the walls are lined with dozens of wine bottles, or dine on the airy patio, which is covered with stained glass. Each of the creative dishes here can be paired with its own wine if you wish: crujiente de ternera (crispy beef) with fino sherry, for instance, and black cod with purple potato and coconut sauce arrive with white Málaga wine. Wine and olive-oil tasting sessions, led by the owner, are available on request.

Marc Fosh

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

While Palma suffers no dearth of rough-and-ready eateries, Marc Fosh has little or no competition in the fine-dining category. The renowned chef Marc Fosh offers several tasting menus, which are executed superbly, with the best local seasonal produce transformed into remarkable dishes with surprising twists. The restaurant occupies the glorious medieval former refectory of the Mission of San Vicente de Paul, with high vaulted ceilings, a 210-foot gallery with stone arches, and an interior courtyard. White walls display contemporary art, and the smaller dining room has palm trees growing through the ceiling. The lunchtime menu, priced from €29.50, is a steal.

Carrer de la Missió 7A, Palma, 07003, Spain
971-720114
Known For
  • Award-winning cuisine
  • Tasting menus based on local produce
  • Good-value weekday lunch menu
Restaurant Details
Reservations essential

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Mardeleva

$$$ Fodor's Choice

On a hill overlooking the port, this small family-run restaurant is all about the catch of the day (try the barracuda if available), served either fried or grilled and always accompanied by papas arrugadas. Arroz caldoso con bogavante (soupy rice with lobster) is another highlight. Try to score a table on the outdoor terrace, where you can watch the boats ply across the harbor; inside, eclectic family artworks are on display.