445 Best Restaurants in England

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We've compiled the best of the best in England - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Lunya

$ | City Centre Fodor's Choice

An 18th-century warehouse on the edge of the Liverpool One shopping district houses this impressive Catalan fusion restaurant and deli, where you can feast on classic and creative tapas dishes. An extensive breakfast menu makes this a great place to start your day, while the children's menu tempts those with junior foodies. There's a second venue, Lunyalita, overlooking the Albert Dock, with a sun terrace.

Lympstone Manor

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

Exeter-born master chef Michael Caines has breathed new life into this elegant Georgian mansion overlooking the Exe estuary 5 miles south of Exeter, where he has created a Michelin-starred showcase for his sophisticated and highly original recipes. The wow-factor starts the moment you arrive, with unforgettable estuary views—a fitting prelude to seasonal three- or four-course lunches (£85–£110), à la carte fixed-price dinners (£185), and multicourse tasting menus (£230 and £240) that might feature shellfish mousseline with langoustine bisque; steamed Cornish cod with Jerusalem artichoke and mussels; or chicken and smoked ham hock terrine with duck liver, pistachio, and truffle mayonnaise. The separate vegetarian and vegan menu has choices like roasted leek terrine with pickled mushrooms, hazelnut, and black garlic, while typical desserts include rhubarb soufflé with vanilla sorbet, and coffee parfait with candied almonds and white chocolate ice cream. For less formal dining and more modestly priced menus (£48 and £60), try the Pool House Restaurant and Bar, where tables overlook the outdoor pool. Luxurious accommodations are also available on site.

L’amuse Bouche

$$$ Fodor's Choice

One of Malvern’s best restaurants specializes in creative French cuisine with a contemporary English edge and top-notch English produce. Start with the Severn and Wye Valley smoked salmon before sampling the Herefordshire fillet of beef or the twice-baked mature Godminster Cheddar soufflé. It also does a very good afternoon tea. The restaurant is part of the Cotford Hotel, which has pleasantly traditional rooms.

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Magpie Café

$$ Fodor's Choice

Seafood is the draw here, and although the long menu includes freshly caught Whitby crab, salmon, haddock, halibut, cod, and lobster, the crowds come for the outstanding traditional fish-and-chips. Fans say a meal here is worth the wait, which can stretch to an hour on busy nights.

Maison Bertaux

$ | Soho Fodor's Choice

Once frequented by the likes of Virginia Woolf and Karl Marx, locals still cherish this quirky 1871 French pâtisserie, vintage tea parlor, and occasional pop-up art space, where nothing seems to have changed much since the 1920s. Colorful pastries, tarts, croissants, and sweet cakes are well-loved and expertly baked on-site. You can choose from the gooey chocolate and fruit éclairs, Black Forest gâteaux, marzipan figs, and flaky almond croissants. Still run by Soho legend Michele Wade, Maison Bertaux also hosts a cheery retro afternoon tea service, which comes with pleasing savories like Dijon slice or broccoli quiche.

Maison Bleue

$$$ Fodor's Choice

This stylish French restaurant, with the same owners as the Great House in nearby Lavenham, specializes in locally caught seafood. Typical choices include king scallops with squid ink and saddle of lamb with parsley and mushroom stuffing. Leave room for dessert, such as the indulgent Opera gateau, a rich chocolate and almond pudding. The three-course £42 lunch offers good value.

31 Churchgate St., Bury St. Edmunds, IP33 1RG, England
01284-760623
Known For
  • Elegant French cooking
  • Special-occasion dining
  • Great seafood
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon.
Reservations essential

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Master Wei

$ | Bloomsbury Fodor's Choice

Founder and head chef Guirong Wei is that rarity of rarities on the Chinese culinary scene: a woman. Tucked down an alleyway just off Southampton Row, her unpretentious eatery features the spicy, surprising cuisine of Wei’s native Xi'an, the city in northwest China that's home to the famed Terracotta Army statues (pictures of which hang above the bar). This is Chinese street food at its finest. Popular dishes include the spicy cumin beef "burger" (minced meat inside a flattened bao), fried pot-sticker dumplings, and delicate homemade coldskin noodles called liángpí.

13 Cosmo Pl., London, WC1N 3AP, England
020-7209–6888
Known For
  • Flat, wide biang biang noodles, served in a variety of sumptuous broths and sauces
  • Authentic, fresh, and flavorful Chinese street food
  • Prompt, efficient service

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Midsummer House

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

Beside the River Cam on the edge of Midsummer Common, this gray-brick 19th-century villa holds a two–Michelin star restaurant set in a comfortable conservatory. Fixed-price menus for lunch and dinner (with five to eight courses) present innovative dishes—perhaps freshwater prawn with gazpacho mousse or sautéed duck liver and Comté cheese—that emphasize seasonal, often local, ingredients. Service is both informal and informative. If you don't want to pay the eye-watering cost of dinner here (£250 per person), come for lunch, which is £150 per person.

Milk Beach

$$ | Soho Fodor's Choice

It's all beach coastal cool at this sleek Aussie stunner, tucked away in a modern courtyard enclave off Greek Street. The seafood- and vegetable-forward menu is inspired by the Sydney food scene and has wide-ranging hints of the Mediterranean and Southeast Asia, like a fine raw kingfish crudo bathed in macadamia milk or a crunchy gluten-free grilled aubergine karaage. At night, the lighting's low, the tunes are upbeat, and the fun and friendly service is relaxed but on point. 

Mountain

$$$$ | Soho Fodor's Choice

Star chef Tomos Parry pulls off an audacious blend of Welsh-meets-Basque country cuisine at this always-busy spot near Carnaby and Regent streets. Diners come to dip restaurant-baked heritage grain bread in Balearic terra-cotta pots of Welsh Anglesey lobster Caldereta and mop up the juices with magical wood-fired rice. You can also sample spider crab omelets, Pembrokeshire cockles, and plancha-grilled whole John Dory, and marvel at the calm synchronicity of the open kitchen crew. There are also basement bar booths and a solid wine list. 

16--18 Beak St., London, W1F 9RD, England
No phone
Known For
  • Brilliant mix of awesome Welsh ingredients and Basque dishes
  • Heritage grain bread baked daily by an in-house bakery team
  • Wood-fired aged mutton chops and smoked potatoes
Restaurant Details
No dinner Sun.
Reservations essential

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Mowgli

$ | City Centre Fodor's Choice

Indian street food and home-cooking are the draws at this fun and colorful spot that has lights upcycled from old birdcages and a bar created from former railway sleepers. Many of the vibrant dishes, such as the hugely popular yogurt chat bombs (crispy, filled bread puffs), are served in tiffin boxes (traditional Indian lunch containers) to charming effect. There are also great vegan, gluten-free, and kids’ menus. There's a second Liverpool branch at Water Street and branches in Manchester and around the country; founder Nisha Katona has now been awarded an MBE both for her services to the food industry and to charity (her Mowgli Trust donates more than £300,000 to local and world causes every year).

Noble Rot

$$$ | Bloomsbury Fodor's Choice

There's an old Amsterdam coffeehouse vibe at this dark and creaky wine bar and restaurant on historic Lamb's Conduit Street in Bloomsbury. Run by two wine buffs and cult wine magazine publishers, you'll find deceptively simple ingredient-driven British dishes like roast Yorkshire pheasant with bread sauce and quince. There's an ever-changing French and British cheese plate menu, fantastic focaccia, sourdough, and soda bread, and an ambrosial wine list.

51 Lamb's Conduit St., London, WC1N 3NB, England
020-7242–8963
Known For
  • Paradise for oenophiles
  • Unpretentious seasonal British and French wine-friendly fare
  • Excellent value two- and three-course set lunch menu
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.

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Noble Rot Soho

$$$ | Soho Fodor's Choice

Fans of French bistro cuisine and fine wine flock to this glorious wood-paneled Georgian town house for masterful dishes like roast chicken with morel mushrooms and creamy vin jaune sauce alongside a marvelous 28-page French-focused wine list. Set in what used to be a famed Hungarian dining and left-wing political salon known as the Gay Hussar, these days diners bliss out on boudin noir and one of London's finest and most accessible wine lists, with numerous rare gems available by the glass.

Notes Coffee Roasters & Bar

$ | Westminster Fodor's Choice

Located next door to the London Coliseum (home of English National Opera), this hip café serves some of the best sandwiches, salads, and coffee in the neighborhood. In the evening (it’s open until 9 pm, Tuesday through Saturday), there’s more of a wine-bar vibe.

Number 7 Fish Bistro

$$ Fodor's Choice

Seafood fans can indulge their passion at this unpretentious, convivial spot, where a location near the harbor, as well as wooden floors, colorful wall tiles, and maritime knickknacks, all set the mood. Fresh, locally caught fish is brought to your table for inspection before being simply but imaginatively prepared. The extensive menu offers dishes ranging from humble—but abundant and beautifully cooked—fish-and-chips to lobster and crab grilled with garlic and brandy. There's a wine bar upstairs for a pre- or postprandial drink.

7 Beacon Terr., Torquay, TQ1 2BH, England
01803-295055
Known For
  • Freshest seafood in Torquay
  • Wine bar upstairs
  • Lively atmosphere
Restaurant Details
Closed 3 wks in Feb., 1st wk in Nov., Sun. in Oct.–June, and Mon. in Nov.–May. No lunch Sun.–Tues.
Reservations essential

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Oak & Poppy

$$ | Hampstead Fodor's Choice

The "oak" in this all-day restaurant is a hand-crafted wooden "tree" that sits under a retractable roof that combines with blonde oak furnishings and pink walls to create a light, airy feel. The menu ranges from comfort food favorites like mac-and-cheese croquettes and mini-slider burgers to Asian-influenced dishes like duck bao buns or miso cod with egg noodles, bok choy, and shiitake mushrooms to Mexican-influenced plates like fish tacos with pickled slaw and chipotle mayo or pulled-beef quesadillas. There are also inventive cocktails and indulgent brunch dishes like buttermilk pancakes with berries that have made the place a favorite with locals often accompanied by attendant children and dogs. 

Old Fire Engine House

$$ Fodor's Choice

Scrubbed pine tables fill the main dining room of this converted fire station near Ely Cathedral, and another room, used when there's a crowd, has an open fireplace and a polished wood floor, and also serves as an art gallery. The menu could include fenland recipes like sea bass with shrimp and dill sauce, as well as more familiar rustic English fare, such as steak and kidney pie. Desserts might include treacle pudding (a sticky, steamed cake) or housemade ice cream.

Old Stamp House

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

The quality of locally sourced and foraged food has been raised to a new level by this Michelin-starred restaurant, which, together with the Lake Road Kitchen, has given Ambleside unexpected status on the British gastro map. Chef Ryan Blackburn has created a menu anchored to Cumbrian traditions but at the same time mouthwateringly innovative and contemporary. Look for dishes such as scallops with pumpkin, braised daube of beef with smoked celeriac, and Cumbrian gingerbread. The restaurant has an unprepossessing setting, down steps in a dim room, but there's history in the whitewashed, rough-hewn walls: Wordsworth once worked here as "Distributer of Stamps.” A tasting menu is also available at lunch and dinner.

Church St., Ambleside, LA22 0BU, England
01539-432775
Known For
  • Creative seasonal set menu (no à la carte)
  • Celebrity chef so reservations essential
  • Excellent wine list
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.--Tues. No lunch Wed.
Reservations essential

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The Oyster & Fish House

$$$ Fodor's Choice

A solo venture from celebrity chef Mark Hix, this restaurant combines stunning views overlooking the Cobb with his trademark high standards and originality. The menu changes twice daily, but the focus is always on simply cooked and beautifully presented locally sourced seafood dishes, such as grilled monkfish tail with caponata, chargrilled black sea bream, and, of course, local oysters. There's a limited vegetarian menu, but the dessert menu is extensive, with dishes like Brazilian chocolate mousse. Book well ahead to sit by the floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the coast, on the small terrace, or for the six-course Kitchen Table experience, where Hix cooks for you in his own home.

Cobb Rd., Lyme Regis, DT7 3JP, England
01297-446910
Known For
  • Local seafood and great views of the coast
  • Tempting desserts
  • Reservations essential
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No lunch Tues. No dinner Sun.
Reservations essential

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Padella

$ | Borough Fodor's Choice

Sit at the galley kitchen counter and you can watch the chefs toss hot pans of authentic handmade (on-site) Italian pasta, generally considered among the best in London. The acclaimed but amazingly affordable small plates include ravioli with Neal's Yard ricotta and sage butter, burrata with Puglian olive oil, pappardelle with a slow-cooked beef-shin ragù, and Dorset crab tagliarini with chili and lemon. An Italian cocktail favorite like a Negroni or Aperol Spritz (plus Italian wine on draft starts at £4.50) make the perfect accompaniment. Lone diners might get a stool at the counter overlooking the kitchen right away. Otherwise, leave your name at the door or join the "virtual queue" and they will message you when your table is ready, but the combination of high quality and low prices means you could be waiting an hour. The early bird catches the table.

6 Southwark St., London, SE1 1TQ, England
No phone
Known For
  • Low-priced, high-quality, handmade Italian pasta
  • Pappardelle with eight-hour beef-shin ragù
  • No reservations and long waits
Restaurant Details
Reservations not accepted

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The Palomar

$$$ | Soho Fodor's Choice

It's Jerusalem meets Beirut at this pan-Arab-Israeli spot on Rupert Street off Chinatown. Sit at the zinc open-kitchen counter and down shots of arak while trading quips with the brilliant Middle Eastern chefs, who offer an exuberant medley of Levantine delights, including Yemenite Jewish kubaneh (a light, fluffy pull-apart bread), Persian oxtail stew, Jerusalem truffled mushroom polenta, and paprika-rich pork belly tajine with Israeli couscous. Look, too, for the lavish Kurdish-style mussels inspired by the head chef's beloved grandmother.

Paradise

$$ | Soho Fodor's Choice

London's top contemporary Sri Lankan spot dazzles with Ceylonese spiced prawns, Brixham crab kiri hodi, authentic Sri Lankan egg hoppers, and fabulous char-smoked chicken curries. Located on Rupert Street in the heart of Soho, the diminutive space is a brilliant study in tropical brutalism, with its polished concrete walls, brown-leather cushions, stainless steel counters, and hand-thrown Tamil and Sinhalese typography clay tableware. Paradise's Sri Lankan--born founder and owner, Dom Fernando, can almost always be found somewhere on-site. 

61 Rupert St., London, W1D 7PW, England
No phone
Known For
  • Sri Lankan family recipes with Portuguese, Malay, South Indian, and Dutch influences
  • Sri Lanka–sourced spices combined with top British produce
  • Colombo-style cocktails and house infusions
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. No lunch Mon.
Reservations essential

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Paul Ainsworth at No6

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

Paul Ainsworth has been expanding his culinary presence in Padstow to rival that of Rick Stein, and, for many foodies, Ainsworth offers the better experience at this intimate bistro—his original foothold in the town—where diners seated in a series of small, stylish rooms feast on ingeniously concocted dishes that make the most of local and seasonal produce. The four-course set-price menus (£160) for lunch and dinner might include smoked pike roe with pink grapefruit and Cornish jack crab to start, followed by pigeon with salted plum condiment and black cardamom or wild turbot with Iberian ham mousseline. Just be sure to leave room for dessert. The atmosphere is warm and lively, with swift, ultra-attentive staff.

Penny Pot Cafe

$ Fodor's Choice

Nestled among trees beside Edale Station, this charming spot has outdoor seating and cozy interiors warmed by a log-burner in chillier months. Walker-, cyclist-, and dog-friendly, it serves everything from panini and fresh soups to homemade cakes and scones amid images of local spots accompanied by poems.

Petersham Nurseries Café

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

Bucolic beauty and rustic Italian cuisine combine wonderfully at Petersham Nurseries Café, a delightfully charming and informal dining experience housed within the serene environment of Richmond's poshest garden center. Prices are high, but your farm-fresh dishes do come surrounded by a backdrop of hanging plants, succulents, shrubs, and climbers that create London's most whimsical greenhouse dining room. The restaurant has also been rewarded with a Michelin Green Star in recognition of its sustainable credentials. 

Church La., TW10 7AB, England
020-8940–5230
Known For
  • Sustainable ingredients and Slow Food philosophy
  • Stunning ramshackle interiors filled with plants
  • Relaxed, rustic fine dining
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No dinner Sun., Tues., and Wed.

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The Pig – near Bath

$$$ Fodor's Choice

The Bath outpost of the growing Pig empire is a funky but chic restaurant with rooms in a converted country house in the Mendip Hills. It's all about the local and seasonal here (everything famously comes from within a 25-mile radius): kale, arugula, and other leaves and veggies are sourced from the Pig’s kitchen garden; apples, pears, and apricots come from its orchard; and pork, chicken, quail, and venison are provided by animals raised on the property. Salmon, pancetta, and bacon are smoked on-site. The results are exceptionally fresh and flavorsome dishes like loin of home-reared venison or “Kentucky-fried” wild rabbit. Dining alfresco in summer, when the wood-fired oven gets going, is a delight. The 29 comfortable and reasonably priced rooms are decorated with an elegant simplicity and have glorious views. It's located about 8 miles from Bath, off the A368. 

The Pig, Brockenhurst

$$$ Fodor's Choice

The funkier sister of glamorous Lime Wood, this New Forest "restaurant with rooms" is a local favorite that puts the emphasis on local produce (with all ingredients sourced within 25 miles if not the restaurant's own kitchen garden) and seasonality. Lunch and dinner are served in a large Victorian greenhouse overlooking the lawns, and the twice-daily changing menu may include dishes like an Isle of Wight eggplant with Romano peppers or a whole Poole sea bass. You may also accompany the "staff forager" on expeditions to find shellfish or edible flora like wild garlic and berries. Overnight in one of the 26 comfortable rooms in the main building (an 18th-century former royal hunting lodge) and the converted stable block or one of seven huts and lodges. All combine a slightly retro, shabby-chic style with modern bathrooms.

Beaulieu Rd., Brockenhurst, SO42 7QL, England
01590-622354
Known For
  • Excellent porcine dishes, as the name suggests
  • Foraging expeditions with the staff
  • The original member of the expanding Pig family

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Poppies of Spitalfields

$$ | Spitalfields Fodor's Choice

Established in 1952, this East London staple strikes a balance between a 1950s American-style diner and a traditional British fish-and-chip shop, with a bright, vibrant retro interior and efficient service. There's a wide variety of fish suppers on the menu, including whole lemon sole, all caught daily and arriving via the City's Billingsgate fish market. If fish-and-chips isn't your thing, try the free-range rotisserie chicken, served with chips and gravy, for a traditional British twist.

6–8 Hanbury St., London, E1 6QR, England
020-3161–1422
Known For
  • Wider range of fish than at most traditional fish-and-chip places
  • Walls covered with fun mix of maritime and rock and roll paraphernalia
  • Wine, beer, and cocktails available (uncommon for a chip shop)

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Portland

$$$$ | Fitzrovia Fodor's Choice

Consistently brilliant modern European fare in a low-key setting characterizes this Michelin-starred restaurant located just northeast of Oxford Circus. Marvel at the chef's brigade in the open kitchen busily turning the inventive seasonal produce–driven menu into a delicious reality. Dishes feature superior British produce such as succulent Cornish cod served with caramelized cauliflower and black truffle and cep cream or Devonshire duck breast with beetroot, clementine, and chard. Desserts are always worth a second look; try the dark chocolate parfait with coffee liqueur, mascarpone and malt crumble. 

Purnell’s

$$$$ | City Centre Fodor's Choice

Business moguls and sophisticated foodies alike can be found sampling an aperitif in a comfy armchair before moving to the sleek contemporary, slate-floor dining room at this Michelin-starred establishment. Located in a Victorian terra-cotta and redbrick building, this is where chef Glyn Purnell creates his adventurous Modern British fare. In addition to a reasonable set menu, theràe is a bigger and more adventurous tasting menu that might haddock and eggs served with cornflakes, alongside monkfish masala. Chef Purnell is also turning his hand to vegan cooking. Price quoted is for three courses.

55 Cornwall St., Birmingham, B3 2DH, England
0121-212--9799
Known For
  • Innovative cooking, including impressive tasting menu
  • Reservations essential two months in advance
  • No à la carte menu
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.--Tues.
Reservations essential

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