271 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.

Vinodiario

$ Fodor's Choice

Not only does Vinodiario offer all their wines by the glass, but the list focuses on natural bottles and local producers. A handful of wines are actually made by the restaurant's own winery; take a few home with you at a discount. Dishes are just as refreshing in the otherwise hearty cuisine, particularly daily salad specials and smoky garbanzos stewed with apricots. 

Adega O Bebedeiro

$$ Fodor's Choice

This tiny restaurant is beloved by locals for its authentic food. It feels like an old farmhouse, with stone walls and floors, a fireplace, pine tables and stools, and dusty wine bottles (adega is Gallego for bodega, or wine cellar). Appetizers such as pulpo con almejas al ajillo (octopus with clams in garlic sauce) are followed by fresh fish at market prices and an ever-changing array of delicious desserts.

C. Ángel Rebollo 34, A Coruña, 15002, Spain
981-210609
Known For
  • Octopus with clams in garlic sauce
  • Baked scallops
  • Wine cellar
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
Closed Mon., and 1st wk in Jan. No dinner Sun.

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Adrián Quetglas Restaurant

$$$$ | Centro Fodor's Choice

Adrián Quetglas, an Argentinian-born chef of Mallorcan descent, cooked in some of the finest kitchens in London, Paris, and Moscow before he returned to Mallorca in 2015 to launch this solo venture. Despite being awarded a Michelin star, Quetglas remains committed to the democratization of fine dining and delivering the pleasure of high-end gastronomy to a broader audience. His five-course lunchtime tasting menu is a steal at €55, while seven courses in the evening will set you back €85.

Passeig de Mallorca 20, Palma, 07012, Spain
971-781119
Known For
  • Five-course lunch menu only €55
  • Accessible fine dining
  • Awarded one Michelin star in 2023
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon.

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Recommended Fodor's Video

Albores

$$ Fodor's Choice

Opposite the city hall, this busy restaurant with swift service has pleasant outdoor seating under orange trees and a modern interior with low lighting. Albores serves innovative, modern dishes with a traditional base. The menu is extensive and changes often, although must-try staples include barriga de atún con salsa de soja y mermelada de tomate (tuna belly with soy sauce and tomato jam) and Retinta beef. Don't miss the crême brûlée with white chocolate and paired sweet wine.

Calle Consistorio 12, Jerez de la Frontera, 11408, Spain
956-320266
Known For
  • Tuna cooked any which way
  • Generous portions (sharing is encouraged
  • Half portions also available)
  • Desserts

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Aponiente

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

The recipient of a Michelin star annually since 2013 and maintaining the prized triple star since 2018, Ángel León showcases his creative seafood dishes in this unusual restaurant housed in an 18th-century tidal mill whose decor takes you under the sea with fishtail-back chairs and mermaids. Aponiente serves one tasting menu (€215 , wine pairing €100 extra), and you can expect plenty of gastronomic inventions such as pumpkin tacos with anchovy, cuttlefish with potatoes, and rice with plankton and sea cucumber.

Tables can be reserved only 1–2:15 for lunch and 8–9:15 for dinner, and only via the online booking form.

Calle Puerto Escondido 6, El Puerto de Santa María, 11500, Spain
Known For
  • Seafood (particularly sardines, shrimp, and cuttlefish)
  • Creative use of everyday ingredients
  • Tasting menus
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
Closed Sun. and Mon.
Reservations essential

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Asador Maribel

$$$ Fodor's Choice

A monstrous wood-fired stone oven welcomes diners into this traditional Segovian restaurant. While heralded as a prime spot for cochinillo, the restaurant's roasted lamb is what really sets it apart from the other asador-style spots in town. If the weather is nice, a table on the patio boasts views of the aqueduct and surrounding valley.

Av. Padre Claret 16, Segovia, 40001, Spain
Known For
  • Spoon-tender lamb
  • Great dining views
  • Famous wood-fired oven at entrance
Restaurant Details
No dinner Sun. and Mon.

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Atrio Restaurante Hotel

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

This jaw-droppingly elegant, award-winning restaurant and hotel, housed in a medieval building redesigned by star architect Mansilla + Tuñón, is the crown jewel of Extremaduran hospitality. The ground-floor restaurant specializes in refined contemporary cooking centered around the Iberian pig and chef Toño Pérez's private garden. The round wine cellar in the basement is an architectural marvel with a backlit Château d'Yquem "temple" that was the site of a $2 million wine heist in 2021 that made international news. There are 14 drool-worthy, high-design hotel rooms above the restaurant (and a rooftop pool), as well as 11 suites across the square in the 16th-century Casa Palacio Paredes Saavedra. 

Pl. de San Mateo 1, Cáceres, 10003, Spain
92-724--2928
Known For
  • Zero-kilometer Extremaduran cuisine
  • Interiors with bespoke furniture and original works by Warhol et al.
  • Phenomenal luxury hotel on-site
Restaurant Details
Reservations essential

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Aynaelda

$$ Fodor's Choice

Textbook-perfect paella in...Latina? Madrid is a notoriously disappointing city when it comes to the rice dishes popular on the Mediterranean coast, but Aynaelda slam-dunks with its sizzling paellas flavored with heady aromatics and concentrated stock. Be sure to scrape up the socarrat, that swoon-worthy layer of crisp rice that sticks to the bottom of the pan. Avoid Sunday lunch as there's usually a waitlist.

Calle de los Yébenes 38, 28047, Spain
91-710–1051
Known For
  • Rice dishes up to Valencian standards
  • Bright airy dining room
  • Excellent croquettes
Restaurant Details
No dinner Sun.

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Bar Trafalgar

$$ | Chamberí Fodor's Choice

In this chic, dimly lit barroom that's perfect for dates and boisterous dinners, the move is to order an abundance of tapas to share; non-negotiables include the anchovy-smoked butter crostini, roasted leeks with romescu (almond-roasted pepper) sauce, and grilled pluma ibérica (crackly Iberian pork blade steak).

Calle Alburquerque 14, Madrid, Spain
60-970–2673
Known For
  • Well-made classic cocktails
  • Pool table
  • Private club feel
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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Bodega de la Ardosa

$$ | Malasaña Fodor's Choice

A 19th-century bodega (wine vendor), with barrel tables and dusty gewgaws hanging from the walls, Bodega de la Ardosa is a welcome anachronism in modern Malasaña and a tourist magnet for good reason. The bar's claim to fame—and the dish Madrileños make special trips for—is its award-winning tortilla española, or Spanish omelet, always warm with a runny center. The fried ortiguillas (sea anemones) dunked in lemony aioli are the menu's sleeper hit.

Bodega Salvaje

$ | Arganzuela Fodor's Choice

If you can't make it to the windmill-dotted planes of Don Quixote's La Mancha, you can at least get a taste of that region's flavorful, rib-sticking cuisine at this beloved neighborhood bar within walking distance from the Matadero. Beyond the Manchegan classics—atascaburras (potato-bacalao mash), machacón (mashed fresh tomato-pepper salad), and asadillo (cumin-scented roasted red peppers)—there's a long ever-changing list of Spanish craft beers.

Bodegas Campos

$$ | San Pedro Fodor's Choice

A block east of the Plaza del Potro, this traditional old bodega with high-quality service is the epitome of all that's great about Andalusian cuisine. The dining rooms are in barrel-heavy rustic rooms and leafy traditional patios (take a look at some of the signed barrels—you may recognize a name or two, such as the former U.K. prime minister Tony Blair). Magnificent vintage flamenco posters decorate the walls. Regional dishes, starring local produce, include solomillo del Valle de los Pedroches dos salsas y patatas a lo pobre (local pork with two sauces—green and sherry—and creamy potatoes) and pâté de perdiz (partridge pâté) with Pedro Ximénez wine. Vegetables come from the restaurant's own market garden, and it makes its own Montilla. There's also an excellent tapas bar (from €3.50).

Bodegas Monje

$$ Fodor's Choice

A five-minute drive from the Casa del Vino, in the township of El Sauzal, you'll find this award-winning winery and restaurant perched on a bluff overlooking the ocean. After a lunch of crackly pulled (local heritage-breed cochino negro) pork and roasted potatoes, waddle over to the bodega for a tour and tasting, and if you're looking for a gluggable souvenir, snap up a bottle of the tintilla, a smoky, complex red aged in French oak barrels that's nearly impossible to find in shops.

Calle Cruz de Leandro 36, Sauzal, 38360, Spain
922-585027
Known For
  • Heritage breed pulled pork
  • Mojo-making demonstrations (call ahead to book)
  • Produces some of the finest wines on the island
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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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 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 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 or try its sister restaurant, Arte Puro, down the block at No. 55.

Calle Corralón de los Carros 66, Cádiz, 11002, Spain
956-213603
Known For
  • Tortilllas de camarán (baby shrimp fritters)
  • Delicious cold cuts
  • Manzanilla sherry

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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 grilled venison with honey sauce or the local baked river trout. Book ahead online as hours are unpredictable.

Carrer Sant Jaume 8, Salardú, 25598, Spain
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 in summer

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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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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 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 is available for days when a hot stew doesn't appeal. 

Calle Floridablanca 24, San Lorenzo de El Escorial, 28200, Spain
91-890–5975
Known For
  • Probably the world's best cocido madrileño
  • Cozy historical decor
  • Within walking distance of the palace
Restaurant Details
Cocido is only available Mon., Wed., and Fri.

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Choco

$$$$ | Centro Fodor's Choice

The city's most veteran Michelin-star restaurant (renewed 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 €120), 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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Damasqueros

$$$$ | Realejo-San Matías Fodor's Choice

The modern wood-paneled dining room and warm lighting form the perfect setting for the creative Andalusian cuisine cooked here by local chef Lola Marín, who learned her trade with some of Spain's top chefs, such as Martín Berasategui. The eight-course tasting menu changes weekly (cold and hot starters, fish, meat, and dessert), and you can opt for wine pairings.

Calle Damasqueros 3, Granada, 18009, Spain
958-210550
Known For
  • Fresh local produce
  • Local wine pairings
  • Being an authentic, non-touristy spot
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No dinner Sun.

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El 7 de Sillerías

$$$ Fodor's Choice

Locals will point you here for fresh, reasonably priced tapas and mains including croquetas (try the wild mushroom rendition) and secreto ibérico (seared Iberian pork shoulder steak). The weekday lunch menú del día—three courses plus wine—is a steal.

El Bodegón

$$ Fodor's Choice

An invitingly cozy space awaits behind the ancient stone facade of this restaurant, 200 meters (656 feet) from the main plaza. Part of the house is original, but much has been renovated, providing an attractive combination of traditional mountain design and modern construction. The menu is all well-priced highland comfort food—think leeks in vinaigrette, braised beef tongue, and cocido lebaniego (braised meats, chickpeas, and vegetables). The lunch menu is one of the best values in the area.

Calle San Roque 4, Potes, 39570, Spain
942-730247
Known For
  • Standout wines
  • Popular spot
  • Affordable mountain cooking
Restaurant Details
Closed Wed.

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El Chacón

$ Fodor's Choice
All the Galician greatest hits are on the menu at this Latina stalwart with an old tile floor and wooden benches. Paprika-dusted octopus, smoky lacón (cooked ham), and weighty slabs of empanada gallega (tuna pie) go down a bit too easily when accompanied by gallons of the house Albariño.
Calle de Saavedra Fajardo 16, 28011, Spain
91-463–1044
Known For
  • Galician peasant food
  • Devoted local crowd
  • Hefty free tapa with every drink
Restaurant Details
Closed Wed.

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El Paraguas

$$$$ | Salamanca Fodor's Choice

This low-ceiling dining room filled with plush armchairs, starched white tablecloths, and colorful bouquets is a welcoming spot to feast on refined Asturian dishes like sea urchin gratin, morels stuffed with truffled foie gras, pheasant with braised green beans, and suckling lamb confit. Weather permitting, you can request a patio table to watch Madrid's one percent parade down Calle de Jorge Juan. For power lunches and special-occasion meals, El Paraguas delivers every time.

Calle de Jorge Juan 16, Madrid, 28001, Spain
91-431–5950
Known For
  • Haute Asturian cuisine
  • Romantic dining room and terrace
  • Fantastic seafood

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El Puchero de la Nieta

$ Fodor's Choice

The drab interiors of this Mérida standby belie a well-executed menu of must-try dishes including migas (fried bread crumbs with bacon), spicy chorizo scrambles, gazpacho, and whatever puchero del día (stew of the day) happens to be burbling out back.

Calle José Ramón Mélida 14, Mérida, 06800, Spain
92-411--1793
Known For
  • Crowd-pleasing local comfort food
  • €14 prix-fixe lunch
  • Small digs (so call ahead!)
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. No dinner Mon.

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El Trébol

$ Fodor's Choice

You can't leave Toledo without indulging in one of El Trébol's famous bombas, fried fist-size spheres of mashed potato stuffed with spiced meat and anointed with aioli. They're best enjoyed on the twinkly outdoor patio with a locally brewed beer in hand.

El Trillo

$$$ | Albaicín Fodor's Choice

Tucked away in the warren of alleyways in a restored Albayzín villa, this lovely restaurant offers what may be the best food in the area. There's a formal dining room, an outside garden with pear and quince trees, and a roof terrace with Alhambra views. House specialties include codillo asado con salsa de manzanilla (roast pork with dry sherry). The owner welcomes diners personally and keeps a very close eye on the kitchen.

Callejón del Aljibe del Trillo 3, Granada, Spain
958-225182
Known For
  • Tasting menu with wine-pairing option
  • Rice with wild boar and mushrooms
  • Decadent desserts
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues.
Reservations via the website only

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El Tubo Neighborhood

$$ Fodor's Choice

El Tubo, the area surrounding the intersection of Calle Estébanes and Calle Libertad, is tapas central. Try to stick to one tapa per bar so you can sample as many spots as possible. El Champi (Calle Libertad 16) isn't much to look at, but this tiny establishment serves killer griddled mushrooms stacked on bread to soak up the garlic-infused oil. Bodegas Almau (Calle Estébanes 10) has shelves heaving with wine bottles and a bar stacked with gargantuan pinchos, which regulars gobble down in the standing-room-only barroom. The vermut con anchoas (a small plate of anchovies and a serving of house vermouth) is classic. La Republicana (Calle Casto Méndez Núñez 38) is a quaint antique space with a wide selection of tapas and migas (fried breadcrumbs) that rival those of the more famous La Miguería (Calle Estébanes 4), laden with garlic, olive oil, crispy chorizo, and optional lacy fried egg. A few steps away, Taberna Doña Casta (Calle Estébanes 6) fries up a lengthy list of inventive croquettes. Sin Nombre (Calle Libertad 7) serves cheffier tapas than the aforementioned and accompanies them with a varied wine list. 

Calle Estébanes, 50003, Spain
Known For
  • Variety of tapas bars
  • Lively atmosphere
  • Packed pedestrianized streets

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