10 Best Restaurants in Athens, Greece

Background Illustration for Restaurants

Doesn't anybody eat at home anymore? When you're on vacation, travelers don't have much choice in the matter, but these days—even in the throes of the current economic crisis—Athenians are going out to restaurants (many of which have lowered their prices accordingly) in record numbers. And it's easy for visitors to the capital to become a part of the clatter, chatter, and song, especially at the city's neighborhood tavernas.

These Athenian landmarks were famous for their wicker chairs that inevitably pinched your bottom, wobbly tables that needed coins under one leg, and hima wine drawn from the barrel. There are still plenty of them around, but today some of their clientele has moved up to a popular new restaurant hybrid: the "gastro-taverna," which serves traditional fare in surroundings that are more modern and creative. Most are located in the up-and-coming industrial-cum-arty districts of Central Athens, such as Gazi-Kerameikos and Metaxourgeio and attract youths who stay nibbling, sipping tsipouro (a distilled grape spirit), and laughing for hours. At the same time, enduring in popularity are the traditional magereia ("cookeries"): humble, no-frills eateries where the food, usually displayed behind glass windows, is cooked in grandma's style—it's simple, honest, time-tested, filling comfort food. Some noteworthy magereia are located around the bustling Ayias Irinis Square in the heart of Monastiraki. Of course cheap, filling, and delicious souvlaki is more popular than ever, and local favorites still have queues. Meanwhile, Athenians' evolving taste for exotic foods, combined with a tighter budget, has led to the opening of numerous ethnic street food restaurants—some just holes in the wall—serving expertly made, authentic options.

Trends? Athens has them. Health-centric restaurants specializing in vegan, vegetarian, and raw food seem to be blossoming more, as well as sophisticated juice bars. These would have stood out just a few years ago; now they have competitors. Organic food stores can be found in every neighborhood, many selling Greek-grown concoctions made in the traditional style by small producers, many of whom returned to the rural homeland after facing unemployment; look for local truffle oils, unpasteurized craft beer, and gold leaf honey. Most Greeks value pure, high-quality, and easily accessible staples like the seasonal vegetables and fruit, medicinal handpicked herb teas, and nuts that they hunt for at the weekly neighborhood laiki market, as well as the multitude of Greek product stores. With less money to spend, Athenians now order more discerningly and in smaller quantities, but they resolutely linger outside, which never seems to be a problem for restaurant owners.

But some things remain eternal. Athenian dining is seasonal. In August, when residents scatter to the hills and seaside, many restaurants and tavernas close, with the hippest bar-restaurants reopening at choice seaside positions. And visitors remain shocked by how late Greeks dine. It's normal (even on a weekday) to show up for a meal at 9 or 10 and to leave long after midnight, only to head off for drinks. Hotel restaurants, seafood places, and Plaka tavernas keep very late hours. Most places serve lunch from about noon to 4 (and sometimes as late as 6) and dinner from about 8 or 9 until at least midnight. When in Athens, don't hesitate to adopt this Zorbaesque lifestyle. Eat, drink, party, and enjoy life—knowing full well that, as a traveler, there can always be a siesta the next day.

Aleria

$$$$ | Metaxourgeio Fodor's choice

Restaurants, including this multiple-award-winning Michelin-starred gem of Neoclassical design and inventive Mediterranean cuisine, are the reason Metaxourgeio's profile is on the rise. As soon as you arrive in the beautiful garden, lit with fairy lights and scattered with creative decor details, you'll want to stay for hours; the winter dining area indoors is very elegant, too, if less uplifting. Chef Gikas Xenakis's cooking is a serious candidate for notoriety, with two tasting menus, "earth & sea" or "garden & nature," with a choice of five or six dishes. There is also an excellent wine pairing alongside a wide-ranging wine list. 

Megalou Alexandrou 57, Athens, 10435, Greece
210-522–2633
Known For
  • Inventive gourmet tasting menus
  • Beautiful garden setting
  • Fresh Greek ingredients
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. No lunch
Reservations essential

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Cafe Boheme Barbagiannis

$$ | Exarcheia Fodor's choice

Here you'll find contemporary, flavor-packed, and elegant Greek dishes you'll want to linger over for hours. Housed in a Neoclassical building where in 1915 wine and coal was sold, and which in the 1950s turned into the classic Barbagiannis taverna, Cafe Boheme moved from its former base on Omirou Street and opened here during the quiet pandemic years and has quickly developed a loyal clientele. Using fresh, seasonal, and high-quality ingredients inspired by recipes from around Greece with a touch of artistic inspiration, the cuisine at this friendly restaurant is fresh, unpretentious yet sophisticated and worth returning to try more of. Don't miss out on the succulent grilled sea bream with crispy skin that's served with horta (wild) greens, the goat cheese and dried fig salad, or the turkey meatballs with a cumin-tomato dip. 

Emmanouil Benaki 94, Athens, 10681, Greece
210-360--8018
Known For
  • Delicious modern Greek cuisine
  • Fresh, hand-picked ingredients
  • Friendly, cozy atmosphere

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Herve

$$$$ | Petralona Fodor's choice

A stupendous, 17-course gastronomic journey based on the European, Middle Eastern, and Asian culinary endeavors of awarded owner-chef Herve Ponzato awaits you at this restaurant. You'll arrive to a place that looks closed because all the windows are curtained and entrance can only be achieved by punching in a code that's sent to your phone when you book. The set menu changes every season and is based on exotic as well as local, mostly organic and wild-growing ingredients sourced from organic farmers around Greece. You can sit in the dark and intimately lit interiors at the chef's table or outdoors in a pretty yard. The chef's mottos are #blessed, #grateful and #expecttheunexpected. One thing you can surely expect is to be delighted repeatedly, to spend at least three hours on a memorable tasting adventure and to feel incredibly satisfied after a series of tiny gourmet dishes. There is also an excellent wine pairing menu offered (optional).

Trion Ierarchon 170, Athens, 11852, Greece
210-347--1332
Known For
  • A completely unique menu
  • Delicate, multidimensional, and surprising tastes
  • Excellent and friendly service

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Kokkion

$ | Psirri Fodor's choice

An ice-cream workshop (dare we say laboratory) and store, Kokkion is the brainchild of a Cordon Bleu patissiere and serves ice cream like no other in Athens. The parlor uses only superfresh ingredients like cow's milk from a small farm in northern Greece, high-quality French chocolate, and homemade caramel, seasonings, and flavorings. Most exciting of all are the unique flavors, like milk chocolate with orange and pepper and coconut sorbet with chocolate steamed biscuit and chocolate pieces, as well as classics like bitter chocolate, salted caramel, and vanilla. Lactose-free vegan options are available, too.

Lukumades

$ | Monastiraki Fodor's choice

Try (and probably get addicted to) one of Greece's most popular and traditional desserts—loukoumades. These doughnutlike balls are deep-fried, then stuffed and slathered with an impressively enormous variety of delicious fillings and toppings. You can sit at the bench outside to feast on your selected sweets, or take them to go. The dough is freshly prepared every day using quality ingredients, as are the sauces and toppings that are sprinkled over them.

Aiolou 21 and Agias Eirinis St., Athens, 105 51, Greece
210-321--0880
Known For
  • Top-quality ingredients
  • Great variety of toppings and fillings
  • Excellent flavor every time

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Margaro

$$ | Piraeus Fodor's choice

With one of the most refreshingly simple menus in Athens (it's limited to fried, crispy crayfish or shrimps and red mullet with a side of Greek salad and house wine), this taverna is always busy. On weekends lines form, as there is a no-reservation policy and because it's become an institution. Although located next to the seafront Naval Academy, there is no view to speak of—all the more reason to focus on the fresh flavors. Eating the shrimps with your hands will only add to the pleasure.

Marias Chatzikiriakou 126, Athens, 18539, Greece
210-451--4226
Known For
  • Basic yet rewarding menu
  • Very fresh fish, fried to a perfect crisp
  • Delicious Greek salad
Restaurant Details
No dinner Sun.

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Proveleggio's

$$ | Gazi-Kerameikos Fodor's choice

This is a refreshing addition to the Athenian dinner scene created by the Greek-Japanese owner-chef of (also very hip) Nolan. Diners keep returning to delight in an inventive, improvisational, and experimental menu based on the season's best-quality ingredients from small producers as well as the restaurant's incredibly fluffy, crunchy, and mouthwatering homemade sourdough and "lactic" cheese. There is nothing predictable about this low-profile, affordably priced yet gourmet restaurant, where tables sprawl along a pedestrian road surrounded by graffiti-covered Neoclassical mansions. Try the marinated seafood, wild buffalo tartare, ceviche, and pizza cooked in a wood fire oven, and don't overlook the cocktail menu.

Paramithias 11, Athens, 10435, Greece
210-523--4749
Known For
  • Experimental, playful, and exciting dishes
  • Excellent homemade sourdough
  • Artfully made cocktails

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Soil

$$$$ | Pangrati Fodor's choice

With an original style of cuisine that the restaurant describes as being imbued with an "earthy philosophy" because all of its fresh ingredients are organically grown in chef Tassos Mandis's garden in Aleopochori village just outside of Athens, this new restaurant certainly offers a unique dining experience. Set in a beautiful 1920s mansion with a warmly lit two-level garden, Soil serves a gourmet set menu of 14 dishes that changes every season and takes diners from the ground up to ethereal space and then back down again, but with a gentle and indulgently pleasant landing.

Taverna Filippou

$$ | Kolonaki Fodor's choice

An unassuming yet high-profile and recently renovated taverna, this restaurant has just celebrated a century of opening, and its devotees enjoy simple, traditional yet top-quality Greek food. From cabinet ministers, diplomats, and actors to intellectuals, its repertoire of loyal diners fills out the place at lunch and dinnertime. The appeal is simple: skillfully prepared, flavorsome Greek classics such as moussaka (layered eggplant and ground beef in fluffy béchamel sauce), and memorable side dishes like sweet shrimps in a homemade mayonnaise. The menu adapts daily to what's fresh at the open-air market with mainly ladera-style specials cooked in olive oil.

Xenokratous 19, Athens, 10675, Greece
210-721–6390
Known For
  • Excellent traditional Greek cuisine
  • Familial atmosphere
  • Sophisticated clientele
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and mid-Aug. No dinner Sat.

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Vassilenas

$$ | Ilisia Fodor's choice

With a 100-year history and humble beginnings, Vassilenas was once a highly popular fish tavern in Pireus that gained cult status among Greece's leading intelligensia and the world's glitterati for its 18-course set of mouthwatering seafood meze dishes. Today it has been taken over from the owner's grandson and modernized in every way, moving to the Ilisia location and taking a new conceptual direction, with polished decor and elegant service. Offering an à la carte or well-priced set menu, the fish restaurant remains loyal to the authentic value of its traditional-Greek inspired dishes, tastefully made with premium quality, seasonal ingredients in a gourmet style. The set menu is made up of eight courses, from an amuse-bouche to dessert, paired with three different wines. Indeed, excellent wine is a strong point at this establishment, which has its own glass cava. During summer the restaurant's garden with strings of lights makes for a particularly pleasant escape from the feeling of urbanity. Vassilenas has since June 2022 also opened a restaurant in Antiparos in the Cyclades.