19 Best Restaurants in Barcelona, Spain

Background Illustration for Restaurants

Barcelona's restaurant scene is an ongoing adventure. Between avant-garde culinary innovation and the more rustic dishes of traditional Catalan fare, there is a fleet of brilliant classical chefs producing some of Europe's finest Mediterranean cuisine.

Catalans are legendary lovers of fish, vegetables, rabbit, duck, lamb, game, and natural ingredients from the Pyrenees or the Mediterranean. The mar i muntanya (literally, "sea and mountain"—that is, surf and turf) is a standard. Combining salty and sweet tastes—a Moorish legacy—is another common theme.

The Mediterranean diet—based on olive oil, seafood, fibrous vegetables, onions, garlic, and red wine—is at home in Barcelona, embellished by Catalonia's four basic sauces: allioli (whipped garlic and olive oil), romesco (almonds, nyora peppers, hazelnuts, tomato, garlic, and olive oil), sofregit (fried onion, tomato, and garlic), and samfaina (a ratatouille-like vegetable mixture).

Typical entrées include faves a la catalana (a broad-bean stew), arròs caldós (a rice dish more typical of Catalonia than paella, often made with lobster), and espinacas a la catalana (spinach cooked with oil, garlic, pine nuts, raisins and cured ham). Toasted bread is often doused with olive oil and rubbed with squeezed tomato to make pa amb tomàquet—delicious on its own or as a side order.

Beware of the advice of hotel concierges and taxi drivers, who have been known to falsely warn that the place you are going is either closed or no good anymore, and to instead recommend places where they get kickbacks.

Aside from restaurants, Barcelona is brimming with bars and cafés, the latter of which can serve as an outdoor meeting spot or a place to socialize and enjoy a cocktail. Be advised that the sidewalk cafés along La Rambla are noisy, dusty, overpriced, and exposed to pickpockets.

Catalan wines from the nearby Penedès region, especially the local méthode champenoise (sparkling white wine, known in Catalonia as cava), pairs perfectly with regional cuisine. Meanwhile, winemakers from the Priorat, Montsant, Empordà, and Costers del Segre regions are producing some of Spain's most exciting new wines.

Casa Maians

$$ | Barceloneta Fodor's choice

You’ll mainly hear Catalan conversations in this 10-table establishment that feels like eating at a Spanish relative’s house, with food as locally sourced as its clientele. Rice dishes are the main event, particularly the squid-ink variety and, if you're lucky, the seasonal special topped with perfectly cooked steak.

C. de Sant Carles 28, Barcelona, 08003, Spain
93-627--1585
Known For
  • Market-fresh ingredients and seasonal twists
  • Homemade desserts, such as cheesecake
  • Service is run single-handedly, so don’t come in a rush
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. No dinner Sun., Wed., and Thurs.
Reservations essential

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Enoteca Paco Pérez

$$$$ | Port Olímpic Fodor's choice

The sleek white-on-white dining room inside the Hotel Arts sets the tone for chef Pérez's contemporary take on Mediterranean cuisine. Tasting menus present around a dozen courses, most with a seasonal, seafood-centric focus, like a sea cucumber pasta with bone marrow and young artichokes. If your wallet allows, indulge in a wine pairing, which includes some wonderful surprises like a Spanish-made sake. Exemplary service and a posh location make this a true two-Michelin-star experience.

Via Veneto

$$$$ | Sant Gervasi Fodor's choice

Open since 1967, this elegant, family-owned temple of fine Catalan dining was a favorite of Salvador Dalí and now attracts local sports stars and politicians. The menu is a mix of contemporary offerings punctuated by old-school classics, and you can trust the expert sommelier to guide you through the daunting 10,000-bottle-strong wine list. The starter of squid stew with Iberian ham and piparra chilis threatens to be a showstopper, but the theatrical presentation of roast baby duck, deboned and pressed at the table, provides a memorable second act. Looking for a romantic venue for a special occasion? This is it.

Ganduxer 10, Barcelona, 08021, Spain
93-200–7244
Known For
  • Celebrity clientele
  • Tasting menu
  • Theatrical presentation of roast baby duck
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun., Mon., and Aug.
Reservations essential

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Recommended Fodor's Video

1881 per Sagardi

$$$ | Barceloneta

Enjoy fabulous views of yachts sailing out into the glittering Mediterranean while dining on market-fresh seafood, quality steaks, and in-season specials, much of which is prepared on the wood-fired grill. This stylish restaurant is perched atop a renovated warehouse that now houses the Museum of the History of Catalonia.

Pl. de Pau Vila 3, Barcelona, 08003, Spain
93-221–0050
Known For
  • Terrace with great harbor and city views
  • All-day kitchen
  • Locally sourced seafood

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Agua

$$ | La Ciutadella

Hit Agua's beachfront terrace on warm summer nights and sunny winter days, or just catch rays inside through immense windows; either way you'll have a prime spot for people-watching and fresh seafood-eating. Expect good-if-not-spectacular fare and hit-or-miss service at this popular tourist favorite. Reserve in advance for a coveted seat on the terrace.

Aleia

$$$$ | Eixample

Take a historic luxury hotel and add one of Barcelona's most avant-garde, yet ultra-elegant fine-dining restaurants, and what have you got? Aleia restaurant at Casa Fuster. Set in a opulent dining room overlooking Passeig de Gràcia, Aleia is the kind of place you'll get dressed up for when you want to impress someone special. Choices are limited: there's one tasting menu, priced at €172 (or €134 at lunchtime), the contents of which may vary, but the quality of the produce will never disappoint---like white prawns from Tarragona, de-boned Bresse quail, or Kaluga caviar.

Passeig de Gràcia 132, Barcelona, 08008, Spain
93-502--0041-Casa Fuster
Known For
  • Opulent tasting menus
  • Chic setting overlooking Passeig de Gracia
  • Michelin-starred elegance
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch Tues.

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Boca Grande

$$$ | Eixample

This three-floor design triumph by Spain's hottest interior decorator, Lázaro Rosa Violán, makes up for in sheer panache what it lacks in consistency. Don't plan on a quick visit: the fresh seafood and rice dishes on offer here can take a while to reach your table. Abandoning the post-Modernisme minimalism that has dominated Barcelona for the last decades, Boca Grande is a baroque celebration of colonial and safari-chic, from the second floor bar, Boca Chica, with its enormous elephant tusks behind the counter, to the spectacular unisex restrooms downstairs. You'll want to linger for a postprandial cocktail on the roof terrace.

Passatge de la Concepció 12, Barcelona, 08008, Spain
93-467–5149
Known For
  • Innovative interior design
  • Glamorous terrace
  • Boca Chica bar
Restaurant Details
Reservations essential

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Camping Mar

$$ | La Ciutadella

Slightly hidden in the exclusive yachting marina behind the W hotel, this restaurant only attracts those in-the-know, which might explain why it's largely devoid of tourists. The menu includes healthy starters like salmon tartare and ceviche, and there's a nice selection of seafood-, vegetable- and meat-based paellas.

Contracorrent Bar

$ | Eixample

Famous among local foodies for being a great restaurant in an area devoid of culinary hype, Contracorrent fulfills its “against the tide” name by conjuring up imaginative dishes (such as potato foam with truffle and egg, or steamed mussels with tapioca) alongside only natural, small-batch wines. Highly recommended if you're near Arc di Triomf or the Estació del Nord bus station, and your stomach is getting vocal.

Carrer de Ribes 35, Barcelona, 08013, Spain
61-784--0060
Known For
  • Small outdoor terrace
  • Tapas with a novel, often Italian, interpretation
  • Lesser-known local wines
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. and Wed. No lunch Mon. and Thurs.
Reservations essential

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Denassus

$ | Poble Sec

Don’t let the cheeky caricature art on the shutters fool you: food is taken very seriously here; ditto the vinous goodness it’s washed down with. The lovably unstuffy atmosphere is typical of its Carrer de Blai location, but the platesseasonal, adventurous, and served all dayare a cut above the conveyor-belt tapas that the street is famous for.  

Carrer de Blai 53, Barcelona, 08004, Spain
93-387--7645
Known For
  • Fantastic, sommelier-picked wine selection
  • Charming service
  • In-season gems, from sea urchins to Maresme peas
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues.
Reservations essential

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Dos Pebrots

$$$$ | El Raval

Albert Raurich of the upscale Dos Palillos restaurant, transformed his favorite neighborhood haunt, Bar Raval, into a cutting-edge tapas bar that explores the history of Mediterranean cuisine. The gleaming makeover hasn't robbed the space of its old-town feel, though, thanks to little touches like the restored original facade and vintage cutlery.

FiskeBar

$$$ | Port Vell

Sleek Scandinavian interiors and striking water-edge views over Port Vell make this contemporary seafood restaurant a hit for special occasions or romantic meals, despite its somewhat surprising location near the Maremagnum shopping mall. Cold bar options, such as oysters and sushi, precede pasta, rice dishes, and mains that favor fish fans and carnivorous types.

Passeig d’Ítaca, 3, Barcelona, 08039, Spain
93-609--3692
Known For
  • Classy design
  • Lighter seafood options
  • Beware of high charges for bread (per slice) and daily fish specials
Restaurant Details
No dinner Sun.

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Hofmann

$$$$ | Gràcia

The late Mey Hofmann, German-born and Catalonia-trained, was revered for decades for her creative Mediterranean and international cuisine based on carefully selected raw materials prepared with unrelenting quality. Her team carries on her legacy in this graceful designer space with a glassed-in kitchen as center stage. Sardine tart, beef cannelloni with foie, truffle, Mediterranean-style rice, or paella, with seafood, and pastries that are second to none are what keep people coming back to this carefully managed culinary tour de force. The adjoining Racó Hofmann is a relaxed, informal café featuring a short menu of classic tapas with a contemporary twist, such as the calamari with kimchi mayonnaise or steak tartare with mustard ice-cream. The Hofmann universe has further expanded in recent years to include a bakery at C/Flassaders 44 and a café nearby at C/Flassaders 40, both in the Born neighbourhood, as well as the Taverna Hofmann at C/Girona 145. The lunchtime set menu is a steal at €42. 

La Granada del Penedès 14, Barcelona, 08006, Spain
+34-93-218–7165
Known For
  • Sardine tart
  • Adjoining Racó Hofmann café
  • Great value set menu at lunch time
Restaurant Details
No lunch Sat., Closed Sun.
Reservations essential

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Mana 75º

$$ | Barceloneta
Catalan fashion firm Desigual, whose offices sit above Mana 75º, has added fabrics and flair to the restaurant's beautifully airy interior, which evokes a sophisticated sea shack. Service is friendly and the high-tech open kitchen fires out precisely perfect rice dishes such as paella, but portion sizes are on the ungenerous side. The outdoor terrace is a pleasant spot and there's even free parking—a rarity in crowded Barcelona.
Passeig de Joan de Borbó 101, Barcelona, 08039, Spain
93-832--6415
Known For
  • Superb paellas and rice dishes
  • Open kitchen
  • Free parking
Restaurant Details
No dinner Sun.--Wed.

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Mordisco

$$ | Eixample Esquerra

The columns and skylights of this former high-class jewelry shop now frame a Mediterranean restaurant that emphasizes wholesome, market-fresh produce in dishes such as artichoke hearts and veal carpaccio that comes sizzling from the charcoal grill. Cocktails are served until late in the elegant upstairs bar from Thursday to Saturday.

Passatge de la Concepció 10, Barcelona, 08008, Spain
+34-93-487–9656
Known For
  • Enclosed patio
  • Cocktails at the upstairs bar
  • Veal carpaccio

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Santamasa Sarrià

$ | Sarrià

Right on Sarrià’s main square, this popular, informal eatery serves an eclectic menu of tapas and main dishes, from cocas (Catalan-style focaccia) with Ibérico ham and brie to hummus, quesadillas, and hamburgers piled high with four cheeses, all in generous, affordable portions. Weather permitting, grab a table out on the Plaça, in full view of the village’s 10th-century church. 

Sense Pressa

$$$ | Eixample

Sense pressa means "without hurry" or "no rush" in Catalan, and if you can score one of the coveted half dozen tables here at the corner of Carrer Còrsega, you will want to linger as long as possible to enjoy this miniscule winner. Risotto de ceps (wild mushroom risotto), garbanzos con espardenyes y huevos fritos (chickpeas with sea cucumbers and fried eggs), or filet mignon of Girona beef cooked to perfection are all good choices. A wall of racked wine bottles dominates the rustic decor, perfectly appropriate for this intimate spot.

Enric Granados 96, Barcelona, 08008, Spain
93-218–1544
Known For
  • Intimate tavern atmosphere
  • Fresh local produce
  • Toothsome risotto de ceps
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
Closed Sun. and 2 wks in Aug. No dinner Mon.
Reservations essential

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Tiberi Bar

$ | Poble Sec

Perhaps the only restaurant in Poble Sec to pull off “cool,” Tiberi is fashionable in just about every sense, from the fresh flowers and candle-lit interiors to its all-natural wine, often served in jugs. What stops it from becoming too cool is the unpretentious food, much of which demands messy fingers and oil-dribbled chins, such as toasted sandwiches and toothpick-skewers of olives, anchovies and cheese (called gildas).

Carrer de Vila i Vilà 67, Barcelona, 08004, Spain
64-337--4005
Known For
  • Vegetarian options prioritized, not an afterthought
  • Hip design and crowd
  • Large selection of orange wines
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. No lunch Wed.--Fri.

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Tragaluz

$$ | Eixample

Tragaluz means "skylight" (the sliding roof opens to the stars in good weather), and this is a solid choice if you're a design lover. The Mediterranean cuisine is traditional yet light and will please most palates, and it's a popular lunch spot. The entrance from the street is through a Japanese tavern that rides the currently cresting wave of sushi cravings in Catalonia. The main dining room upstairs is reached via the kitchen, and the top floor is an informal space for coffee or an after-dinner drink.

Passatge de la Concepció 5, Barcelona, 08008, Spain
+34-93-487–0621
Known For
  • Open-air dining
  • Coffee or postdinner drink upstairs
  • Entrance is through Japanese tavern

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