Madrid Restaurants

Spain is an essential foodie pilgrimage, and no city holds a candle to Madrid when it comes to variety of national and international cuisines. Its cutting-edge restaurants helmed by celebrated chefs make the city one of Europe's most renowned dining capitals.

When it comes to dining, younger madrileños gravitate toward trendy neighborhoods like bearded-and-bunned Malasaña, gay-friendly Chueca, rootsy La Latina, and multicultural Lavapiés for their boisterous and affordable restaurants and bars. Dressier travelers, and those visiting with kids, will feel more at home in the quieter, more buttoned-up restaurants of Salamanca, Chamartín, and Retiro. Of course, these are broad-brush generalizations, and there are plenty of exceptions.

The house wine in old-timey Madrid restaurants is often a sturdy, uncomplicated Valdepeñas from La Mancha. A plummy Rioja or a gutsy Ribera del Duero—the latter from northern Castile—are the usual choices for reds by the glass in chicer establishments, while popular whites include fruity Verdejo varietals from Rueda and slatey albariños from Galicia After dinner, try the anise-flavored liqueur (anís), produced outside the nearby village of Chinchón, or a fruitier patxaran, a digestif made with sloe berries.

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  • 1. Cadaqués

    $$$$

    Never has an open kitchen in Madrid been so mesmerizing: at Cadaqués, black-clad cooks tend to rows of paella pans sizzling over pluming orange wood embers and flip Flintstones-worthy steaks and whole fish licked by open flame. It feels like the type of rustic experience you'd encounter at the Mediterranean seaside, but Cadaqués sits squarely on Jorge Juan, Madrid's poshest street. Achieving that transportive vibe was no small feat: the chef spent months fishing and cooking with seafaring communities along the coast prior to writing the menu, which features all sorts of pristine shellfish and raw-bar dishes in addition to the standout rice and grilled meat and fish preparations.

    Calle de Jorge Juan 35, Madrid, 28001, Spain
    91-360–9053

    Known For

    • Best rice dishes in town
    • A slice of the Levant in Madrid
    • Refined Mediterranean decor with well-heeled clientele to match
  • 2. Desde 1911

    $$$$

    One of the buzziest restaurants in Madrid, this modern seafood mecca—with sleek wooden tables and floor-to-ceiling windows—serves rare delicacies from the country's top fishing fleets. On the ever-changing menu, you might find quisquillas de Motril (sweet white shrimp with bright blue roe), precious little elvers, or Basque lobster stew—all accompanied by wines selected by Sergio Otero, of DiverXO fame.

    Calle del Vivero 3, Madrid, 18613, Spain
    91-545--7286

    Known For

    • Finest seafood in Madrid
    • Uber-trendy hot spot
    • Twee old-school cheese cart

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon. No dinner Tues. and Wed., Reservations essential
  • 3. El Paraguas

    $$$$

    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
  • 4. Sacha

    $$$$

    Settle into an unhurried feast at Sacha, a cozy bistro with soul-satisfying food and hand-selected wines, and you might never want to leave—especially if you strike up a conversation with chef Sacha himself, who's quite the storyteller. The cuisine is regional Spanish—think butifarra sausages with sautéed mushrooms or razor clams with black garlic emulsion—with just enough imagination to make you wonder why the restaurant isn't better known.

    Calle de Juan Hurtado de Mendoza 11, Madrid, 28036, Spain
    91-345–5952

    Known For

    • Spanish bistro fare
    • Impeccable steak tartare
    • Hard-to-find wines

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun., Reservations essential
  • 5. Saddle

    $$$$

    Roast duck carved tableside, truffled pâté en croûte, flambéed Grand Marnier soufflé—Saddle does old-school opulence exceptionally well. Multi-course meals unfold in the anachronistically corporate-chic dining room (think LED backlighting and mid-century modern accents), and feature rare seasonal delicacies including de lágrima (tear-shaped) baby peas and buttery new potatoes flown in from the Canary Islands. Cheese, butter, and cocktail carts rove from table to table and encyclopedic wine stewards go above and beyond, regaling you with curious anecdotes about each individual bottle.

    Calle de Amador de los Ríos 6, Madrid, 28010, Spain
    91-216–3936

    Known For

    • Madrid's most reliably superb fine-dining restaurant
    • Impeccable service
    • Technically impressive cooking without smoke and mirrors

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun.
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  • 6. 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, Madrid, 28006, Spain
    91-401–9408

    Known For

    • Cocido madrileño served in three courses
    • Old-timey interiors
    • Warm service

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No dinner
  • 7. 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 the cold-weather months. 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.  Lunch only.

    Calle de Padilla 54, Madrid, Madrid, 28006, Spain
    91-401--9408

    Known For

    • Cocido madrileño served in three courses
    • Old-timey interiors
    • Warm service

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No dinner. Closed mid-June–mid-Sept.
  • 8. DiverXO

    $$$$

    When you ask a Madrileño about a remarkable food experience—something that stirs the senses beyond feeding one's appetite—DiverXO is the first name you'll hear. The take-no-prisoners tasting menu incorporates a dizzying array of international ingredients and chemical processes. Getting a table at this foodie shrine is akin to scoring a ticket for the Super Bowl, so plan well ahead—there's an online reservation system that requires that you to pay in full in advance.

    Calle del Padre Damián 23, Madrid, 28036, Spain
    91-570–0766

    Known For

    • Punk-rock fine dining
    • Courses that use the whole table as a canvas
    • Madrid's only Michelin three-star

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun.–Tues., Reservations essential
  • 9. El Señor Martín

    $$$$

    Pristine fish, salt, roaring open flame—these are the main ingredients at El Señor Martín, a white-table seafood restaurant beloved by local food critics that makes a great venue for romantic dinners and special occasions. Consider springing for a gloriously obscure fish you've never heard of, like Mediterranean sand eel, wreckfish, plaice, or alfonsino—all meticulously filleted and grilled to juicy perfection. 

    Calle del General Castaños 13, Madrid, 28004, Spain
    91-795–7170

    Known For

    • Basque chef who grills with panache
    • Fantastic fish and seafood
    • Secret gourmet hangout

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon.
  • 10. Gofio

    $$$$

    Savor a rare taste of Canary Island cuisine—with quite a few twists—at this envelope-pushing, Michelin-starred restaurant helmed by Tenerife-born chef Safe Cruz. Expect foaming, smoking concoctions that incorporate traditional Canarian specialties like green mojo, Gomero goat cheese, and—of course—gofio (stone-ground corn flour). 

    Calle de Lope de Vega 9, Madrid, 28014, Spain
    91-599–4404

    Known For

    • Canarian fine dining at a value
    • Smoky volcanic wines
    • Gorgeous uncontrived plating

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues.
  • 11. Horcher

    $$$$

    A beacon of old-world Spanish hospitality, Horcher is a Madrid classic with German influences. Wild game—boar, venison, partridge, and duck—is the centerpiece of the menu, which also includes comfort-food classics like ox stroganoff with a Pommery mustard sauce and pork chops with sauerkraut. The dining room is decorated with brocade and antique Austrian porcelain; an ample selection of French and German wines rounds out the menu.

    Calle de Alfonso XII 6, Madrid, 28014, Spain
    91-522–0731

    Known For

    • Wild game dishes
    • German-inflected wine list
    • To-die-for baumkuchen (a German-style spit cake)

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun. No lunch Sat., Reservations essential, Jacket required (tie optional)
  • 12. Kappo

    $$$$ | Chamberí

    Kappo delivers a classic, ultrarefined omakase experience free of fusion fripperies—a reminder that when the quality of fish is this good, there's no need for showy garnishes and tableside pyrotechnics. On a given night, chef Mario Payán might grace your chopsticks with grouper, yellowtail, horse mackerel, or scallop anointed with, say, a drop of ponzu or a scraggle of pickled daikon. Spanish line-caught tuna often figures heavily on the menu, which has a set price of €58 and includes a starter, 15 pieces of sushi, and dessert. If you're feeling social, sit at the u-shape bar, where you can watch the sushi masters work their magic; for a quiet meal, request a table.

    Calle de Bretón de los Herreros 54, Madrid, Madrid, 28003, Spain
    91-042--0066

    Known For

    • Multihour omakase experience
    • Impeccably fresh fish
    • Exclusive atmosphere

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon.
  • 13. Kappo

    $$$$

    Kappo delivers a classic, ultra-refined omakase experience free of fusion fripperies—a reminder that when the quality of fish is this good, there's no need for showy garnishes and tableside pyrotechnics. On a given night, chef Mario Payán might grace your chopsticks with grouper, yellowtail, horse mackerel, or scallop anointed with a drop of ponzu or a scraggle of pickled daikon. Spanish line-caught tuna often figures heavily on the set menu, which includes a starter, 15 pieces of sushi, and dessert. If you're feeling social, sit at the u-shape bar, where you can watch the sushi masters work their magic; for a quiet meal, request a table.

    Calle de Bretón de los Herreros 54, Madrid, 28003, Spain
    91-042–0066

    Known For

    • Multihour omakase experience
    • Impeccably fresh fish
    • Exclusive atmosphere

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon.
  • 14. Lhardy

    $$$$

    Opened in 1839, Lhardy—with its spiral staircase, varnished leather walls, gleaming chandeliers, and marble fireplaces—is one of Madrid's most treasured restaurants, and it maintains much of its original decor despite being acquired by a local restaurant group in 2021. Meals, as always, begin with hot consommé poured from a silver samovar and spiked with a chispín (sip) of sherry and continue with French-inflected dishes, ranging from duck à l'orange to sole in champagne sauce. Though the kitchen is still ironing out a few kinks, the grand museum-like surroundings more than make up for any foibles, especially if you stick to the cava, charcuterie, and pastries in the downstairs bar.   

    Carretera de San Jerónimo 8, Madrid, 28014, Spain
    91-521–3385

    Known For

    • Veritable museum of local culinary history
    • Old-school Spanish and French dishes
    • Freshest seafood

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No dinner Sun.
  • 15. Paco Roncero Restaurante

    $$$$

    In an aerie above one of Madrid's oldest, most exclusive gentlemen's clubs, the dining room and rooftop terrace of this tasting-menu-only restaurant (formerly known as La Terraza del Casino) are decorated with playful, almost circus-like elements such as bright blue pushcarts, checkered floors, and yellow velvet chairs. The cuisine is as thrilling and whimsical as the decor, with dishes ranging from crunchy sardines with ají romesco sauce to spicy ethereal pig ear fritters. This is fine dining for the lighthearted.

    Calle Alcalá 15, Madrid, 28014, Spain
    91-532–1275

    Known For

    • Instagrammable interiors
    • Two Michelin stars
    • Foams, jellies, and flamboyant flourishes

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon., Reservations essential, Jacket required
  • 16. Sua by Triciclo

    $$$$

    Madrid's best modern steak house, Sua ("fire" in Basque) is dedicated to meats and wild-caught fish cooked over open flame. Occupying a stunning circular indoor courtyard, the restaurant has an ample list of Champagnes, cavas, and bold Spanish reds, fittingly luxurious sidekicks to a 40-day dry-aged sirloin from Galicia or roasted scarlet shrimp plucked from Andalusia's Atlantic coast. Desserts, particularly the cheesecake, punch above their weight.

    Calle de Moratín 22, Madrid, 28014, Spain
    91-527–7165

    Known For

    • Flame-licked steaks and seafood
    • Impressive cathedral-like dining room
    • Attentive service

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Tues.
  • 17. Tripea

    $$$$

    Chef Roberto Martínez Foronda turns food critics' heads with his Spanish-fusion restaurant hidden inside the Mercado de Vallehermoso, Chamberí's traditional market. The ever-changing tasting menu—a steal at €45—takes cues from chifa (Peruvian-Chinese) and nikkei (Peruvian-Japanese) culinary canons and incorporates fresh ingredients from the market.

    Calle de Vallehermoso 36, Madrid, 28015, Spain
    91-828–6947

    Known For

    • Experimental tasting menus
    • Spanish-fusion cuisine
    • Foodie buzz

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon.

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