1149 Best Restaurants in Italy

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

La Spiga d'Oro

$

To complement its stone-clad dining room walls and lovely outside terrace, this intimate, family-run spot has a fab menu of selected pizzas, pasta dishes, and mains featuring the freshest Sicilian seasonal ingredients from land and sea. Service is warm, friendly, and very accommodating of children.

Via Margherita 74, Caccamo, 90012, Italy
091-8148968
Known For
  • Wood-fire pizzas
  • Quick meals to go
  • Bountiful antipasti and cold cut platters
Restaurant Details
Closed Wed.

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La Stanza del Gusto

$$ | Centro Storico

This restaurant's name translates roughly to "room of taste," but the tastes here are many and extend from the traditional to the gourmet and ultramodern. Start with the antipasto di pesce (seafood appetizer), experience the glory that is Naples in the gattò delle due Sicilie (cake of the two Sicilies; Sicilian eggplant with a cheese fondue and a pesto mustard), or bow to contemporary sensibilities with the menu vegetariano km zero (all local vegetables of the season). With its recycled chairs and tables and vintage-style ads outside, this place exhibits a strong but pleasing personality. The cheese-and-wine parlor downstairs has an easygoing ambience, while the room upstairs is more of a slow-food den.

Via S. Maria di Costantinopoli 100, Naples, 80138, Italy
081-401578
Known For
  • Innovative takes on local dishes
  • Outside seating that's ideal for people-watching
  • Downstairs cheese-and-wine parlor
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.

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La Stüa de Michil

$$$$

You’ll feel like you’re dining in a traditional Alto Adige hut at the Perla hotel's critically acclaimed restaurant, which features wood-beamed ceilings. Items in the seasonally changing six-course tasting menu are complex, modern takes on regional cuisine: even a simple veal dish might be served with reserve Alpine cheese and black truffle.

Strada Col Alt 105, Corvara, 39033, Italy
0471-831000
Known For
  • Romantic atmosphere
  • Interesting wine pairings (not all Italian)
  • Daring ingredient combinations
Restaurant Details
Closed Apr.–mid-June, and late Sept.–early Dec. No lunch

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La Tana Del Lupo

$$

For really big plates of meat and a wine cellar full of red wine, head to this little "wolf's lair" that looks exactly how you want a Sicilian steak house to look (stone walls, exposed wooden rafters, and arched alcoves packed with wine). The portions are ample, so it's best to go with a group and share.

Corso Ara di Giove 138, 95030, Italy
095-7800303
Known For
  • After-dinner fruit service
  • Wild boar ragù
  • Bone-in costata steaks
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues.

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La Taverna dell'Arte

$$ | Centro Storico

As its name suggests, this gracious trattoria atop a flight of steps on a small side street near Naples's main university is popular with the artsy intelligentsia, but it manages to remain welcomingly low-key. Warmed with touches of wood, it prides itself on its fresh interpretations of Neapolitan classics, with excellent salami, mozzarella, and frittura appetizers, cabbage soup fragrant with good beef stock, and meat and fish grilled over wood. Desserts include Sicilian cannoli—crisp pastry tubes filled with dark chocolate mousse or ricotta cream. Finish your meal with a choice of liqueurs or Neapolitan moka coffee.

Rampe San Giovanni Maggiore 1/a, Naples, 80134, Italy
081-5527558
Known For
  • Arty atmosphere
  • Old-school surroundings
  • Neapolitan cuisine
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and last 2 wks in Aug. No lunch

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La Tavernetta di Cortina

$$

These Tirolean-style wood-paneled dining rooms near the Olympic ice-skating rink are a Cortina institution. Join the local clientele in sampling terrific pizza along with house specialties such as pork cheek in Barolo sauce.

Via Castello 53, Cortina d'Ampezzo, 32043, Italy
0436-060268
Known For
  • Typical dishes
  • Nice wine selection
  • House-made desserts
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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La Tonnara

$

If it's seafood you're looking for, you'll feel at home at this harborside fish restaurant, where the day's catch is displayed in a chiller at the front. Couscous features among the starters, as does the outstanding busiate con gambero, pistacchio e bottarga (pasta with prawns, chopped pistachios, and tuna roe); mains change daily, but tuna cooked in citrus and the grilled swordfish are usually on the menu. The interior is modern, with small tables and a large glass front, and there's also a terrace for eating al fresco by the water.

Via Don Leonardo Zangara 29, Castellammare del Golfo, 91014, Italy
0924-32443
Known For
  • Fresh fish dishes
  • Pleasant outdoor terrace
  • Good wine list

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La Torre

$

You can enjoy straightforward Tuscan fare in the massive tower at the abbey's entrance, or, when it's warm, on a flower-filled terrace. The pici ai funghi (extra-thick handmade spaghetti with mushroom sauce) or zuppa di funghi (mushroom soup) take the sting out of a crisp winter day, and the grilled meats are a good bet at any time of year. If you want lighter fare, there's a bar serving panini that has outdoor seating.

Località Monteoliveto Maggiore 2, Asciano, 53041, Italy
0577-707022
Known For
  • Flavorful home cooking
  • Pici all'aglione (a local specialty)
  • Simple food in historic setting
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues.

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La Torricella

$$ | Testaccio

This family-run institution has been serving seafood in the working-class Testaccio neighborhood for more than 40 years, and if you visit the local market early enough you might spot the owner selecting the freshest fish, which mainly arrives from Gaeta, south of Rome. The menu changes every day, but look for house specialties like paccheri (a very large tubular pasta) with totani (baby calamari), pasta with telline (small clams), or the wondrously simple spaghetti with lobster. Start with appetizers from the cart that the waiter can wheel over to the table, or opt for the excellent moscardini fritti (fried, small squid). Although the menu has non-seafood Roman classics like cacio e pepe and pajata (intestines of an unweaned calf), this really is the place to order fish.

Via Evangelista Torricelli, 2/12, Rome, Italy
06-5746311
Known For
  • Fresh, local seafood
  • Relaxed but refined setting with outdoor seating
  • Polpette di pesce al sugo (fish balls in tomato sauce)
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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La Tortuga

$$$$

This trattoria is more sophisticated than it first appears: not only does it serve local dishes with novel twists, but it also has an extensive wine cellar. Capesante scottate con salse ai diversi sapori (seared scallops with different sauces) and tavolozza di piccoli campioni di lago e di mare (mixed lake and sea fish palette) are worthy introductions to regional delights.

Via XXIV Maggio 5, Gargnano, 25084, Italy
0365-71251
Known For
  • Fish and meat tasting menu
  • Extensive cheese selection
  • Delightful service
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. and Dec.–Mar. No lunch
Reservations essential

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La Trattoria dai Tosi

$ | Castello

Getting off the beaten track to find good, basic local cuisine isn't easy in Venice, but La Trattoria ai Tosi (aka Ai Tosi Piccoli) fits the bill with its somewhat remote, tranquil location, homey atmosphere, and variety of fine traditional fare at prices that make it worth the walk from anywhere in the city. The baccalà mantecato (whipped salted cod) "sanwicini" are excellent, as are the classic frittura mista and the traditional Venetian bigoli in salsa (thick, homemade spaghetti with an anchovy-onion sauce). The fixed-price lunch menu, created for local workers with limited time, is another good deal, and there's even decent pizza.

Castello 738, Venice, 30122, Italy
041-5237102
Known For
  • Outdoor seating for a spritz aperitivo (pre-meal drink)
  • Excellent pizza
  • Fried seafood
Restaurant Details
Closed Wed. No lunch Tues.

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La Trattoria di Vincenzo

$

This cheerful family-run hostelry a few miles outside Cosenza, in the hamlet of Castiglione Cosentino, offers an authentic Calabrian experience, with dishes highlighting maialino nero (local black pork), Podolica beef, truffles, pistachios, and wild mushrooms. In the homey dining room, locals feast enthusiastically—perhaps starting with a wooden board piled with salumi and formaggi—at tables adorned with brightly checked tablecloths.

Via Ponte Crati 1, Castiglione Cosentino, 87040, Italy
0984-401828
Known For
  • <PRO>hunks of local black pork and Podolica beef sizzling at your table</PRO>
  • <PRO>Calabrian cured meats and cheeses</PRO>
  • <PRO>friendly and family run</PRO>
Restaurant Details
No dinner Sun.

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La Vecchia Cucina di Soldano

$

This place could be mistaken for a grandmother's kitchen—it's completely unpretentious, with red-and-white-checked tablecloths and a waitstaff who treat you like an old friend. The restaurant teems with locals who appreciate the rock-bottom prices for well-prepared Tuscan specialties that include a superb tagliolini sui fagioli (thin noodles with beans).

Via Pomeria 23, Prato, 59100, Italy
0574-34665
Known For
  • Tuscan specialties
  • Superb tagliolini sui fagioli
  • Very reasonably priced
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.

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La Vecchia Nicchia

$$

Wonderful wines pair beautifully with the tasty morsels served atop toasted bread, though if you want something more substantial than the delicious cheese plate, consider the soup of the day. This place is an oasis in a town overrun with day visitors; though it's still very much in the center, it's far from the madding crowds.

Via San Martino 12, San Gimignano, 53037, Italy
0577-573172
Known For
  • Wines by the bottle
  • Locally sourced ingredients
  • Genial hosts
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.–Thurs.

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La Vinaigrette

$$

Within shell-like earshot of the sea, this professionally run trattoria with sleek white interiors and a panoramic terrace serves some of the finest seafood in the Salento. Expect classic Pugliese salty preparations like crudi, grigliate, and fritture (raw, grilled, and fried) beautifully cooked and elegantly presented.

Riviera Armando Diaz 75, Gallipoli, 73014, Italy
0833-264501
Known For
  • Pick from the freshest catch on display
  • Well-considered wine list
  • Sea views and sushi-like crudi like tuna carpaccio

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La Zanzara

$$ | Prati

This bright, white-subway-tiled bistro functions as a bar, café, and restaurant all in one, with plenty of indoor and outdoor seating. Salads, pastas, steaks, and seafood run the international gamut, but the beef burger is a standout. Although the restaurant buzzes from morning till night, things are especially busy in the late afternoon and early evening, when the waitstaff serves cocktails and light bites.

Via Crescenzio, 84, Rome, 00195, Italy
06-68392227
Known For
  • Bacon cheeseburger
  • Extensive, international wine list
  • Large grill for freshly cooked meats

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La Zucca

$$$

Simple place settings, wood lattice walls, and a mélange of languages make La Zucca (The Pumpkin) feel much like a typical, somewhat sophisticated vegetarian restaurant that you could find in any European city. What makes La Zucca special is simply great cooking and the use of fresh, local ingredients—many of which, like the particularly sweet zucca itself, aren't normally found outside northern Italy. Although the menu has superb meat dishes, more attention is paid to dishes from the garden; don't miss the house's signature dish—the flan di zucca, a luscious, naturally sweet, pumpkin pudding topped with slivered, aged ricotta cheese.

Santa Croce 1762, 30135, Italy
041-5241570
Known For
  • Seasonal vegetarian-focused dishes
  • Homestyle Italian cooking
  • Flan di zucca (pumpkin pudding)
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.
Reservations essential

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Lalibera

$

Modern and subdued, this small spot on a quiet backstreet is conducive to a leisurely meal while trying a huge selection of Barolo wines. On the menu you'll find Piedmontese starters, pastas, and a variety of tasty meat dishes, and there's also a superb selection of local cheeses.

Via Elvio Pertinace 24/a, Alba, 12051, Italy
0173-293155
Known For
  • Tajarin pasta al ragù
  • Piedmontese wines and cheeses
  • Locally sourced meat and produce
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon., 3 wks in Aug., and late Dec.–mid-Jan.

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Lard Rock Café Colonnata & Lardarium

$

This unpretentious locale excels in preparing its namesake dish—lardo, which is essentially cured pork fat seasoned with salt, pepper, rosemary, and garlic, and then thinly sliced and eaten with unsalted Tuscan bread. It hails from Colonnata and is much loved all over Tuscany. Order the salumi misti e lardo charcuterie board with sgabei (fried dough) to get a taste of everything. 

Via Fossacava 9, 54033, Italy
0585-768071
Known For
  • Lardo di Colonnata
  • Homemade jams and persimmon pastes
  • A decent wine list of mostly reds

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Le Arcate

$$

Under the old fishermen's arches of Atrani you can choose from an extensive menu that features great-value seafood scialatielli, paccheri, and other primi as well as 20-odd wood-fired pizza options. Get a table on the large beach-view terrace to lean over and see where your meal came from.

Largo Buonocore, Atrani, 84010, Italy
089-871367
Known For
  • Catch of the day cooked grilled or all'acqua pazza
  • Bountiful prix-fixe options
  • Beach views and warm hospitality
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. mid-Sept.–mid-June, and mid-Jan.–mid-Feb.

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Le Barrique

$

Steps away from the Duomo's exquisitely patterned apse, this backstreet wine bar, restaurant, and deli is enticing. You won't be disappointed thanks to the top-quality fare, whether you order a bulging panino, a tagliere (tray) of cold meats, cheeses, and preserves, or a more substantial dish of veal or pork involtini (roulades) or fennel-flavored sausages. Accompany your meal with a glass of wine, a beer, or a cocktail. The interior decor is warm and inviting, the stone walls are decorated with ceramics, mosaics, and hanging salamis and cheeses, and there are tables outside in fine weather. It stays open late, too.

Via Arcivescovado 4, Monreale, 90046, Italy
393-5580298
Known For
  • Quality meats and cheeses
  • Good range of antipasti
  • Late-night hours
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and 2 wks in Jan. and Feb. No dinner Sun.

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Le Café

$ | San Marco

On Campo Santo Stefano across from Paolin, Le Café has see-and-be-seen tables outside year-round. It also has bar service, light lunches, and a variety of hot chocolate drinks and desserts.

Le Calandre

$$$$

Traditional Veneto recipes are given a highly sophisticated and creative treatment here, and the whole theatrical tasting-menu experience and gorgeous table settings can seem by turns revelatory or overblown at this high-profile place. Owner-chef Massimiliano Alajmo's creative, miniscule-portion dishes, passion for design (bespoke lighting, carved wooden tables, and quirky plates), and first-class wine list make this an option for a pricey celebratory meal.

Via Liguria 1, Sarmeola, 35030, Italy
049-630303
Known For
  • Theatrical, sensory dining experience
  • Playful (or to some, pretentious) touches
  • Reservations essential
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch Tues.
Reservations essential

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Le Camerelle

$$$ | Capri Town

When you've had enough of the florid Caprese decor, head to this restaurant, where the interior design is Parisian but the ambience evokes New York's trendy Meatpacking District. You can't go wrong with the fresh fish or spaghetti alla Nerano (with zucchini, basil, and Parmigiano cheese), and the wine list is a hefty 23 pages. Enjoy a fine bottle and settle in, on the raised terrace or on the street, for some nice people-watching.

Via Camerelle 81/A, Capri, 80073, Italy
081-8378677
Known For
  • Sleek atmosphere
  • Vast and worldly wine list
  • People-watching
Restaurant Details
Closed mid-Oct.–Mar.

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Le Grotte del Funaro

$

Dine inside tufa caves under central Orvieto, where the two windows afford splendid views of the hilly countryside. The traditional Umbrian food is reliably good, with simple grilled meats and vegetables and pizzas—oddly, though, the food is outclassed by an extensive wine list, with top local and Italian labels and quite a few rare vintages.

Via Ripa Serancia 41, Orvieto, 05018, Italy
0763-343276
Known For
  • Unusual setting
  • Crusty pizzas
  • Good choice of wines
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and 10 days in July
Reservations essential

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Le Grottelle

$$

This extremely informal trattoria enjoys a distinctive setting up against limestone rocks not far from the Arco Naturale, with the kitchen in a cave at the back. Whether you stumble over it (and are lucky enough to get a table) or intentionally head for it after an island hike, Le Grottelle will prove memorable, thanks to the ambience, the views of Li Galli islands, and a menu that includes ravioli and local rabbit but is best known for seafood dishes such as homemade mezzi paccheri pasta with swordfish and eggplant.

Via Arco Naturale 13, Capri, 80073, Italy
081-8375719
Known For
  • Breathtaking cliff-clinging location
  • Seafood and rabbit dishes
  • Cool grotto interiors and rustic terrace
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues., and Nov.–-Mar.

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Le Logge del Vignola

$$

In this small and cozy dining room, owner and sommelier Massimo Stella, his daughter Virginia, and chef Carlo Gutierrez bring fine dining flair to traditional Tuscan dishes like handmade pici pasta with black garlic and potato gnocchi. The wine list, which has many options by the glass, focuses on regional favorites.

Via delle Erbe 6, Montepulciano, 53045, Italy
0578-717290
Known For
  • Attentive service
  • Well-curated wine list
  • Elegant desserts
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. No lunch Wed.

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Le Mossacce

$ | Duomo

Come to this tiny, cramped, and boisterous place for hearty, stick-to-your-ribs Florentine dishes such as ribollita (Tuscan bread soup). Seating is communal, with diners sharing big, straw-covered flasks of wine; service is prompt and efficient; and two nimble cooks with impeccable timing staff the small kitchen.

Via del Proconsolo 55/r, Florence, 50100, Italy
055-294361
Known For
  • Authentic home cooking
  • Frequented by locals
  • Generous portions
Restaurant Details
Closed Sat.
Reservations suggested

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Le Vin de l'Assassin

$$ | Ortigia

A short walk from the Fontana di Diana, this quirky restaurant with a cozy dining room and artsy courtyard takes quality Sicilian ingredients and adds a French influence to a changing seasonal menu. One of the mainstays on the menu is tuna lasagna served in its earthenware pot, which has fans worldwide, explains owner Sarò.

Via Roma 115, Siracusa, Italy
0931-66159
Known For
  • Interesting interpretations of traditional Sicilian dishes
  • Warming winter menu fave zuppa di cipolle (onion soup)
  • Run by exuberant Sarò and friendly staff
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No lunch Tues.–Sat.

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Leon d'Oro

$

Housed within a hotel of the same name on the outskirts of town, this reliable and refreshing meal stop for visitors to Corleone offers a range of local dishes that includes steaks and seafood. Choose from an enticing array of antipasti and pastas, which you might follow up with a fillet of beef with porcini mushrooms from the nearby Ficuzza forest or a fritto misto of fried fish in a barbecue sauce. The spacious, modern setting and the friendliness of the staff help to create a warm and welcoming atmosphere. It is located north of Corleone's center, a 20-minute walk (or five-minute drive) from the Anti-Mafia museum.

Via Madre Teresa Cortimiglia 9, Corleone, 90034, Italy
091-8464287
Known For
  • Good range of antipasti
  • Steaks and grills
  • Warm and friendly staff
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues.

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