95 Best Restaurants in Spain

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

La Bodeguilla de San Roque

$$

This is one of Santiago's favorite spots for tapeo (tapas grazing) and chiquiteo (wine sampling); it's just a five-minute walk from the cathedral. The traditional bar area takes center stage, playing host to locals, pilgrims, and tourists alike, all gathering for wine, Iberian cured meats, cheeses, and seasonal dishes. It can get crowded, but this only adds to the atmosphere. The tapas live up to their reputation, and they're a better choice than the main dishes.

La Bóveda

$$

This popular restaurant serves huge, tasty portions of tapas and inexpensive platters such as chicken or ham croquetas, grilled cod, garlic shrimp, and revueltos de ajos con morcilla (scrambled eggs with garlic and black sausage). Within hailing distance of the Llotja, the tables in the back are always at a premium (they're cooler on summer days), but there's additional seating at the counter or on stools around upended wine barrels. The traditional tapas are nothing fancy but they are very good. A sister restaurant, La Taberna de la Bóveda (Paseo Sagrera 3), has a terrace with views of the marina.

Carrer de la Botería 3, Palma, 07012, Spain
971-714863
Known For
  • Down-to-earth portions of traditional tapas
  • Ham croquettes
  • Local vibe
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
Closed Sun.

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La Burlona

$$ | Lavapiés

This sunlight-flooded gastro-tavern with minimalist decor serves creatively plated dishes that taste as good as they sound (think porcini and foie fideuà or Cantonese-style Iberian pork ribs). There's a clandestine coctelería, Trilero Club, downstairs in the arcaded brick basement if you fancy a cocktail after your meal.

Calle de Santa Isabel 40, Madrid, 28012, Spain
91-018–0018
Known For
  • Eye-popping modern tapas
  • More than 30 small-production wines by the bottle
  • Secret bar below open Thursday–Saturday
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues.

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La Casa del Abuelo

$$ | Sol

This rustic tapas hall is the oldest of three branches of a beloved local chain, and it has barely changed since it was founded in 1906. The tapa to try here is gambas al ajillo, shrimp sautéed with garlic. Enjoy them with the house red from Toro or branch out with a vino del abuelo, a throwback off-dry red from Alicante.

Calle de la Victoria 12, Madrid, 28012, Spain
91-521–2319
Known For
  • Generous portions
  • Bold proprietary Toro wines
  • Back-in-time atmosphere

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La Castela

$$ | Retiro

Blocks from El Retiro Park, this 34-year-old tapas spot is always teeming with locals clamoring over plates of sautéed wild mushrooms, tuna ventresca (tuna belly) and roasted pepper salad, and stewed chickpeas with langoustines. Stop in for a quick bite at the bar—they'll serve you a free tapa with every drink—or enjoy heartier choices in the homey dining room at the back.

Calle del Doctor Castelo 22, Madrid, 28009, Spain
91-574–0015
Known For
  • Colorfully plated tapas
  • Friendly staff
  • Neighborhood crowd
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.

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La Cepa de Bernardo

$$ | Parte Vieja

This boisterous tavern established in 1948 has walls covered with old photos and a dining room packed with locals and tourists in equal measure. Everything from the Iberian ham to the gildas (olive-pepper-anchovy pintxos) will whet your appetite, but those who opt for a full meal shouldn't overlook the dry-aged txuleton.

Calle 31 de Agosto 7, San Sebastián, 20003, Spain
94-342--6394
Known For
  • Hand-cut Iberian ham
  • Melt-in-your-mouth steak
  • Value prix-fixe lunch

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La Colmada

$ | Malasaña

Sure, you could cobble together a full meal from the menu of delectable cheeses, cured sausages, hams, and conservas (canned seafood; seek out La Pureza and Ana María brands), but La Colmada is better suited to casual, booze-fueled snacking. In love with a certain cheese or chorizo? The staff will happily sell you a goodie bag. The first thing you'll notice about this teeny seafood-centric tapas bar is its bright blue walls, a nod to the sea.

Calle del Espíritu Santo 19, Madrid, 28004, Spain
91-017–6579
Known For
  • Doubles as a grocery store selling fancy foods and vermouth
  • Affordable Spanish wines
  • Jovial atmosphere
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.

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La Cuchara de San Telmo

$$ | Parte Vieja

You may have to throw an elbow or two to get into this teeming bar, but it's worth braving the sardine-can digs for outstanding pintxos like mushroom-and-Idiazabal risotto and seared foie gras with Basque cider compote.

Calle 31 de Agosto 28, San Sebastián, 20003, Spain
94-343--5446
Known For
  • Internationally inflected pintxos
  • Constant crowds
  • Fabulous foie gras
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted

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La Dolores

$ | Barrio de las Letras

A lively corner bar with a colorful trencadís (broken up tiles)-tiled facade, this is a solid spot for a cold beer and a nosh after visiting the nearby museums. Try the matrimonio ("marriage") tapa, which weds one pickled and one cured anchovy on a slice of crusty baguette.

Pl. de Jesús 4, Madrid, 28014, Spain
91-429–2243
Known For
  • Affordable no-nonsense tapas
  • Refreshing cañas
  • Mixed crowd of foreigners and locals

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La Flauta

$ | Eixample

The name of this boisterous bar refers to the flutelike baguettes used for sandwiches but there's also a seemingly infinite number of tapas and small portions of everything from wild mushrooms in season to wild asparagus or xipirones (baby cuttlefish). Although the food is fresh and flavorsome, service can be brusque—perhaps a result of the sheer number of customers—and you may feel pressure to eat quickly when the queue outside is particularly long. A second branch—the original but perhaps not as good—is at Carrer Balmes 171.

Aribau 23, Barcelona, 08006, Spain
93-323–7038
Known For
  • Tightly packed space
  • Can get very busy
  • Delicious in-season vegetables
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and 3 wks in Aug.
Reservations not accepted

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La Navarra

$

Join the locals leaning on wine-barrel tables to watch soccer and snack on Galician cheeses and spicy chorizo, which hangs from ceiling racks above the bar.

Rúa Princesa 13, Pontevedra, 36002, Spain
986-851254
Known For
  • Local hangout
  • Family-owned atmosphere
  • Good charcuterie and tostas
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.

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La Panxa del Bisbe

$$ | Gràcia

Literally "The Bishop's Belly," this casual spot achieves a rare feat: putting modern international twists on Mediterranean cuisine without ruining it. La Panxa is a bit off the beaten path and thrives on a steady stream of repeat customers, who come for superb tapas and the restaurant's own craft beer on tap.

Torrent de les Flors 158, Barcelona, 08024, Spain
93-213–7049
Known For
  • Good stop on way back from Park Güell
  • Nice patio at the back
  • Affordable tasting menu
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon.

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La Taberna del Gourmet

$$$$

This wine bar and restaurant in the heart of the casco antiguo (old town) earns high marks from locals and international visitors alike. There's a wide selection of montaditos (sandwiches), paella, and fresh seafood tapas—oysters, mussels, razor clams—complemented by a well-chosen list of Spanish wines.

La Tapería

$

This tiny taberna, which serves some of the best tapas in town, is always packed with locals. Order a few tostas (open-faced sandwiches on crusty peasant bread) and raciones (shared plates), and pair them with Extremaduran wines.

Calle Sánchez Garrido 1, Cáceres, 10003, Spain
92-722--5147
Known For
  • Fresh, filling tostas
  • Local hangout
  • Reliable tapas
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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La Tasca de Ana

$$

One of the best tapas bars in town, La Tasca de Ana is boisterous and filled with locals. With only a handful of tables and standing room by the bar, it's not the setting for a quiet romantic dinner, but it's a fine place to kick-start the evening with local wine and tapas like rodolfitos (battered prawns) and pork paté and eggplant toasts.

Calle Ramiro I 3, Jaca, 22700, Spain
974-363621
Known For
  • Quick and efficient service
  • Fabulous desserts
  • Lively atmosphere
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. No lunch Wed.–Fri.

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La Tasquería

$$ | Salamanca

La Tasquería, which moved to Chamberí from Salamanca in 2024, draws restaurant industry pros and food writers with its bold menu revolving around off-cuts like liver, kidneys, tripe, and tongue—onetime staples of the Spanish diet that fell out of favor but are now getting a modern makeover. Even the squeamish will be won over by delectable dishes like ravioli filled with lamb sweetbreads, and cod tripe fideuà (pasta "paella").

Calle del Duque de Sesto 48, Madrid, 28009, Spain
91-451–1000
Known For
  • Offal everything
  • Good-value €59 tasting menu
  • Craft beers and sherries
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. No dinner Sat.

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La Tita Rivera

$

This budget-friendly bar—specializing in hot stuffed bread rolls (called casis) and flavored hard cider—has an industrial vibe, thanks to exposed pipes, high ceilings, and a semi-open kitchen. The best part, however, is the under-the-radar courtyard with room for spreading out.

Calle de Pérez Galdós 4, 28004, Spain
91-522–1890
Known For
  • Stuffed bread rolls
  • Hidden interior patio
  • Flavored draft ciders

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Las Tortillas de Gabino

$$$ | Chamberí

At this lively restaurant you'll find crowds of Spaniards gobbling up one of the city's finest, most upscale renditions of tortilla española (Spanish omelet) with unconventional add-ins like octopus, potato chips, and truffles. The menu also includes plenty of equally succulent non-egg choices (the rice dishes stand out).

Calle de Rafael Calvo 20, Madrid, 28010, Spain
91-319–7505
Known For
  • Fantastic Russian salad
  • Date-night ambience
  • Carefully selected wines
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.

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Llamber

$$ | Born-Ribera

This dapper, friendly space attracts a crowd with its excellent wine list and the well-crafted tapas based on classic Catalan and Asturian recipes. Consider the black pudding with grilled squid and fabada (Asturian bean stew). Year-round late-night hours make it a handy option.

Fusina 5, Barcelona, 08003, Spain
93-319–6250
Known For
  • Well-crafted tapas
  • Slow-food philosophy
  • Good option for late-night eats

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Los Victorinos

$$

Named after a much-feared and respected breed of fighting bull, this rustic tavern, located behind La Seo, is dripping with taurine paraphernalia. It offers an elaborate and inventive selection of pinchos and tapas. Jamón ibérico de bellota (acorn-fed Iberian ham), Spain's culinary crown jewel, is a no-brainer, though quail eggs or the tapa de la casajamón, foie, and mushrooms, with port sauce—is hard to resist. 

Calle José de la Hera 6, Zaragoza, 50001, Spain
625-588257
Known For
  • Melt-on-your-tongue Iberian ham
  • Creative homemade pinchos
  • Lively old-school atmosphere
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. (hrs can be sporadic)

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Mercado de la Reina

$$

Perhaps the only worthwhile tapas restaurant on Gran Vía, Madrid's main commercial artery, Mercado de la Reina serves everything from croquetas to grilled vegetables to tossed salads. Enjoy them in the casual bar area, in the slightly more formal dining room, or on the outdoor patio. A downstairs lounge bar with an extensive gin menu accommodates those who want to keep the night rolling.

Mesón del Champiñón

$

The scenic cobblestone street that winds down to La Latina from Mercado de San Miguel is lined with mediocre touristy tapas bars—this, however, isn't one of them. Inside the stone-walled tavern, locals and visitors alike chow down on the house specialty: griddled mushrooms with jamón (dry-cured ham) and garlic-parsley oil. 

Mesón del Champiñón

$

This bar opened in 1964 and has been feeding garlicky griddled mushrooms to the hungry masses ever since.

Cava de San Miguel 17, Spain
91-559–6790
Known For
  • Steps from the Plaza Mayor
  • Garlicky mushrooms on a toothpick
  • Rustic stone-walled bar area

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Mundial Bar

$$ | Born-Ribera

Opened in 1925 and still decorated with murals of old-time boxers, Mundial no longer packs the punch of years gone by when it served some of the best-value, no-frills tapas in the area. It retains its unfussy charm but inflated prices---especially for seafood---and inconsistent service suggest its best days are behind it. Pop in for a taste of the authentic atmosphere and classic dishes such as thin-sliced aubergines with goats' cheese, but check the prices before you order.

Pl. Sant Agustí Vell 1, Barcelona, 08003, Spain
93-319–9056
Known For
  • Old-fashioned charm
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
Closed Mon.

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Paco Meralgo

$$$ | Eixample Esquerra

The name, a pun on para comer algo ("to eat something" with an Andalusian accent), may be only marginally amusing, but the tapas here are no joke, from the classical calamares fritos to the pimientos de Padrón (green peppers, some fiery, from the Galician town of Padrón). Whether at a table, at the counter, or in the private dining room upstairs, this modern space does traditional tapas that reliably hit the spot.

Perretxico Chamberí

$$ | Chamberí

The Madrid outpost of a legendary Vitoria-Gasteiz pintxo bar, Perretxico is known for its cocido doughnut—cocido being Spain's famous boiled dinner of chickpeas, various meats, and sausages. These are blended into a paste, stuffed inside a doughnut, and served alongside a demitasse of umami-packed bone broth for dunking, a wink to the classic doughnut-coffee combo.

Calle de Rafael Calvo 29, Madrid, 28010, Spain
91-192–0069
Known For
  • Devilishly rich cheesecake served with apple compote
  • Inventive Basque pintxos
  • Chamberí hot spot

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Quimet & Quimet

$ | Poble Sec

The secret is out about this tiny, century-plus-old tapas bar, which has become so overrun with visitors in recent years that locals have mostly started steering clear. Nevertheless, it's an atmospheric place, and the innovative tapas—largely made using conservas (foods from cans or jars) and served as bite-size open-sandwiches called montaditos—are well worth the visit. You can’t reserve a table, so arrive early (around noon or at 6 pm when it reopens) to snag a spot.

Poeta Cabanyes 25, Barcelona, 08004, Spain
93-442–3142
Known For
  • Mini-sandwich tapas
  • Own beer and house vermouth
  • No reservations, so arrive when it opens
Restaurant Details
Closed weekends

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San Marcial

$$ | Centro

Nearly a secret, this quintessential Basque spot has big wooden tables and a monumental bar filled with cazuelitas (small earthenware dishes) and tapas of all kinds. It is in the center of town but tucked away downstairs.

Calle San Marcial 50, San Sebastián, 20003, Spain
94-343--1720
Known For
  • Oversize ham-and-cheese croquettes called gavillas
  • Unfussy Basque pintxos and sandwiches
  • "hidden" location in the old town off the tourist track
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
Closed Tues.

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Taberna de San Miguel

$ | Centro

Just a few minutes' walk from the Plaza de las Tendillas and opposite the lovely San Miguel Church, this popular tapas spot—also known as the Casa el Pisto (Ratatouille House)—was established in 1880. You can choose to squeeze in at the bar and dine on tapas (from €4) or spread out a little more on the patio decked with ceramics and bullfighting memorabilia, where half and full portions are served. Legendary toreador Manolete is particularly revered here. The menu is one long list of typical local dishes, so expect to find oxtail, salmorejo, flamenquín (bacon-wrapped pork loin that's breaded and fried), and, of course, pisto (ratatouille), plus the daily special stew.

Pl. de San Miguel 1, Córdoba, 14002, Spain
957-470166
Known For
  • Tapas, including pisto
  • Historic ambience
  • Patio with bullfighting memorabilia
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon.

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Tapas 24

$$ | Eixample Dreta

The tapas emporium of celebrity chef Carles Abellán shows us how much he admires traditional Catalan and Spanish bar food, from patatas bravas to croquetes de pollastre rostit (roast chicken croquettes), although the star dish is the truffled "bikini," or ham and cheese toastie. The counter and terrace are constantly crowded and the service can be iffy at times, but the food is worth elbowing your way through the crowd for.