69 Best Restaurants in Bilbao and the Basque Country, Spain

Antonio Bar

$$ | Centro Fodor's choice

Tuna carpaccio with pickled Basque peppers, battered hake cheeks, tripe and pork jowl stew—these are some of the classics you'll find on the menu at Antonio, a neighborhood standby that serves unpretentious pintxos at fair prices. Ask about specials, which vary depending on what's in season.

Arzak

$$$$ | Alto de Miracruz Fodor's choice

One of the world's great culinary meccas, award-winning Arzak embodies the prestige, novelty, and science-driven creativity of the Basque culinary zeitgeist. The restaurant and its high-tech food lab—both helmed by founder Juan Mari Arzak's daughter Elena these days—are situated in the family's 19th-century home on the outskirts of San Sebastián. The ever-changing dishes (€240 for four courses or €270 for the tasting menu) are downright thrilling for their eye-popping presentations, unexpected flavor combinations, and rare ingredients. The best seats in the house are in the newly renovated upstairs dining room.

Av. Alcalde Jose Elosegui 273, San Sebastián, Basque Country, 20015, Spain
94-327--8465
Known For
  • scintillating yet unpretentious culinary experience
  • old-school hospitality
  • fresh flavors and striking plating
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon., June 15–July 2, and 3 wks in early Nov., Reservations essential

Asador Bedua

$$$$ Fodor's choice

This idyllic fourth-generation asador in a centuries-old house draws the crowds with its flawless tortilla de bacalao, txuleta de buey, and local game and fish of all kinds such as besugo a la donostiarra (roast sea bream with garlic-vinegar sauce) and, when in season, becada (Eurasian woodcock) cloaked in meaty wine sauce. Fizzy Txakolí is the standard tipple, but there's also a surprisingly deep list of Champagnes and international bottles to choose from.

Cestona, Barrio Bedua, Cestona, Basque Country, 20750, Spain
94-386--0551
Known For
  • pristine seafood and home-grown vegetables
  • ancient building overlooking a tidal river
  • warm service in both the stone-wall dining room and glassed-in terrace

Recommended Fodor's Video

Asador Etxebarri

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Of all the three-Michelin-star temples in Spain, Bittor Arginzoniz's Etxebarri is hands down the most exclusive, since it serves only lunch and reservations are limited. Here, grilling is elevated to an art form, with various types of woods, coals, and handmade tools carefully selected for the preparation of each dish. The obligatory €264 tasting menu (no vegetarian option) generally includes Etxebarri classics like homemade chorizo, smoked caviar, and—if you're lucky—baby elvers. 

Pl. San Juan 1, Axpe, Basque Country, 48291, Spain
94-658--3042
Known For
  • no. 3 spot on "World's 50 Best" restaurants list
  • temple of open-hearth cuisine
  • unexpectedly unpretentious, laid-back atmosphere
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon. No dinner. Closed Aug., Reservations essential

Azurmendi

$$$$ Fodor's choice

The immersive gastro-experience at the envelope-pushing eco-restaurant by renowned Basque chef Eneko Atxa starts with nibbles in the indoor garden, continues on to the kitchen with a quick tour, and culminates in the dining room with a conceptual tasting menu featuring dishes like "dew water" and "essence of the forest."

Legina Auzoa, Bilbao, Basque Country, 48195, Spain
94-455--8866
Known For
  • three-Michelin-star dining
  • Bilbao's most innovative and sustainable restaurant
  • a 10-minute drive from town
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon., No dinner Tues.–Thu., Reservations essential

Bihotz

$ | Casco Viejo Fodor's choice

Rest your legs at this third-wave coffeehouse that uses a sleek La Marzocco machine and is furnished with cushy armchairs and floor lamps. There are also small-production vermouths and local craft beers to try alongside soups, sandwiches, and other snacks.

Bistró Guggenheim Bilbao

$$ | El Ensanche Fodor's choice

Museum restaurants tend to be underwhelming, overpriced tourist traps, but Bistró—with its exuberantly colorful dining room and meticulously prepared modern Basque cuisine served by a knowledgeable waitstaff—is a blissful exception to the rule. Tartares, roast meats, local seasonal vegetables, and top-grade seafood are the building blocks of the three set menus, the most expensive of which is a five-course degustación for a paltry €40.

Bodega Donostiarra Gros

$$ | Gros Fodor's choice

A Gros neighborhood stalwart, the ever-bumping Bodega Donostiarra is famous for its down-home dishes centered on Basque conservas such as oil-packed anchovies, pickled hot peppers (piparrak), and bonito del norte (albacore). All three of these find their way onto the "completo," a locally famous mini-baguette sandwich that's deliciously tart, juicy, and salty all at once. 

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.

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, Basque Country, 20110, Spain
94-352--3699
Known For
  • pier-side dining
  • pristine shellfish
  • quaint, old-timey ambience
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon., No dinner Sun.–Thu., Reservations essential

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 number of pours from the 1,000-bottle-strong wine list.

Calle Hurtado de Amézaga 5, Bilbao, Basque Country, 48008, Spain
94-443--2172
Known For
  • deep wine list with hard-to-find selections
  • delectable txuleton de buey
  • homey dining room
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun., Reservations essential

Casa Urola

$$$ | Parte Vieja Fodor's choice

Don't be put off by the slightly outdated decor of this Parte Vieja stalwart—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 multi-course meal. In the dining room, savor appetizers made with hard-to-find regional vegetables like cardoon, borage, and tiny 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.

El Mesón

$$ Fodor's choice

Textbook-perfect Basque classics draw a local crowd at this Ensanche restaurant run by a seasoned husband-and-wife team on the cusp of retirement—so visit while you still can! Seasonal Basque delicacies, like earthy perretxico mushrooms, meaty fresh anchovies, and tender white asparagus, round out a perennial menu whose star dishes include squid braised in its own ink and hake in salsa verde.

Calle Ramon Ortiz de Zarate 5, Vitoria, Basque Country, 01005, Spain
94-514--6191
Known For
  • over-and-beyond service
  • varied wine list
  • Basque restaurant classics done right
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues.

Elkano

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Ever since Anthony Bourdain waxed poetic about award-winning Elkano's grilled turbot on Parts Unknown, the dish has become something of a holy grail among in-the-know foodies. Order the famous flatfish (at its fatty prime in May and June), and you'll receive what Bourdain called an "anatomy lesson" as the maître d' extols the virtues of each separate cut, culminating with the gelatinous fins---which you're encouraged to suck between your fingers, caveman style.

Calle Herrerieta 2, Getaria, Basque Country, 20808, Spain
94-314--0024
Known For
  • grilled turbot
  • reputation as an Anthony Bourdain favorite
  • impressive Champagne selection
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Tues., No dinner Sun.–Thurs.

Ganbara

$$$ | Parte Vieja Fodor's choice

This busy bar and sedate downstairs restaurant near Plaza de la Constitución is run by the third generation of the same family. Exquisite minimalist morsels range from white Huelva prawns to homemade foie gras to roast squab and—the house specialty—wild mushrooms topped with an egg yolk.

Gaucho

$ Fodor's choice

This legendary tavern (est. 1968), which remains surprisingly calm even during San Fermín, serves some of the city's best tapas. Choose between classics like garlicky mushroom brochettes and jamón-filled croquetas, or spring for more modern creations such as seared goose liver toasts or almond-encrusted morcilla. It opens at 9 am. 

Gure Toki

$$ | Casco Viejo Fodor's choice

You'd be hard-pressed to find a more pleasant outdoor lunch in Bilbao than at this chic little pintxo bar with sunlit tables smack on the charming Plaza Nueva. Fried rabas (squid strips), croquetas, and locally made txistorra (smoky chorizo sausage) never come off the menu for good reason.

Hermandad de Pescadores

$$$ Fodor's choice

Presided over by a legendary Basque fishermen's guild, this central restaurant serves the freshest fish money can buy at fair prices. At simple wooden tables and a handsome mahogany bar, locals dig into local comfort food—think sopa de pescado, steamed mussels, and clams a la marinera (in a thick, garlicky sauce).

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 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, Basque Country, Spain
94-344--1655
Known For
  • dependably tasty—and well-portioned—pintxos
  • sardine-can digs
  • Parte Vieja standby
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon.

La Mañueta

$ Fodor's choice

In 2022, Spain's oldest churrería—perhaps Pamplona's top culinary attraction—rang in 150 years. In this hole-in-the-wall resembling a medieval foundry, hypnotic whorls of dough fry to crackly perfection in vats of Navarran extra-virgin olive oil set over beechwood flame. La Mañueta keeps bizarre hours: 7–11 am on Sundays in October, 8–11:30 am on the two Saturdays prior to San Fermín, and 6–11 am during San Fermín week.

Calle Mañueta 8, Pamplona, Navarre, Spain
94-822--7627
Known For
  • churros with over a century of history
  • limited hours
  • San Fermín rite of passage
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Aug.–Sept., Nov.–June

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.

La Viña

$$ | Parte Vieja Fodor's choice

This centrally located, no-frills bar is almost always crowded, drawing busloads of tour groups as well as locals, who come to try the worth-the-hype "burnt" cheesecake with an oozy core. This silky, creamy dessert pairs perfectly with a cup of coffee, while, on the savory side, the underrated pintxos—red peppers stuffed with bacalao, croquetas, veal meatballs, what have you—sing alongside a glass of Rioja.

La Viña del Ensanche

$$$ | El Ensanche Fodor's choice

Littered with used napkins and 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.

Martín Berasategui

$$$$ | Lasarte Fodor's choice

Basque chef Martín Berasategui has more Michelin stars than any other chef in Spain, and at his flagship in the dewy village of Lasarte-Oria, it's easy to see why. Dishes are Basque at heart but prepared with exacting, French-inflected technique that comes through in dishes like artfully composed salads, elegant caviar preparations, and eel-and-foie-gras mille-feuilles—a Berasategui signature. Of all the three-stars in and around San Sebastián, Martín Berasategui—despite its rather lackluster dining room—consistently delivers when it comes to sheer hedonistic deliciousness.

Calle Loidi 4, San Sebastián, Basque Country, 20160, Spain
94-336--6471
Known For
  • once-in-a-lifetime dining experience
  • idyllic, white-tablecloth outdoor terrace
  • artful mix of classic and avant-garde
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon., Tues., and mid-Dec.–mid-Jan. No dinner Sun., Reservations essential

Pentxo

$ | Casco Viejo Fodor's choice

Consistently delicious, shockingly affordable, and unapologetically old-school, Pentxo is the sort of restaurant Bilbaínos like to keep to themselves. Whether you pop in for a pintxo at the bar (the flash-fried antxoas rellenas, or stuffed anchovies, are a must) or come for breakfast or a €16 prix-fixe lunch (opt for whatever seafood main is listed), you'll leave wishing you could be a regular.

Segore Etxe-Berri

$$ Fodor's choice

Hidden in the lush, hilly countryside southwest of Tolosa—and many miles off the tourist track—is this idyllic agroturismo comprised of a restaurant and five-room bed-and-breakfast housed in a traditional caserío (Basque farmhouse) perched on a hilltop. After snapping a few pics of the jaw-dropping views, tuck into a soul-satisfying Basque feast of roast chicken (raised on the property), stewed game meats, or fresh fish.

Calle Valle Santa Marina, Albiztur, Basque Country, 20495, Spain
94-358--0976
Known For
  • culinary gem in the middle of nowhere
  • outdoor playground for kids
  • meats and vegetables from the estate
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Tues., No dinner Mon.--Thurs.

Terete

$$$ Fodor's choice

A perennial local favorite, this rustic spot has been roasting lamb in wood ovens since 1877 and serves a hearty menestra de verduras (vegetables stewed with bits of ham) that is justly revered as a mandatory sidekick. With rough hand-hewn wooden tables distributed around dark stone and wood-beam dining rooms, the medieval stagecoach-inn environment matches the traditional roasts.

Calle Lucrecia Arana 17, Haro, La Rioja, 26200, Spain
94-131--0023
Known For
  • 19th-century wood-burning oven
  • succulent roast lamb and suckling pig
  • stock of some of La Rioja's best reservas and crianzas
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed 1st 2 wks in July, and last 2 wks in Nov. No dinner Sat. and Sun., Reservations essential

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.

Zelaia Sagardotegia

$$$ Fodor's choice

This traditional sagardotegi 7 km (4 miles) south of San Sebastián is where the region's top chefs—Juan Mari Arzak, Martín Berasategui, and Pedro Subijana, to name a few—ring in every cider season with a resounding ¡txotx! ("cheers" in Basque). Removed from the tourist track and open from mid-January to late April, 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 also available).

B0 Martindegi 29, Basque Country, 20120, Spain
94-355--5851
Known For
  • authentic cider house
  • food that's an echelon above other sagardotegis
  • unlimited cider drinking
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and late Apr.–mid-Jan., Reservations essential