Madrid Restaurants

Spain is an essential foodie pilgrimage, and no city holds a candle to Madrid when it comes to variety of national and international cuisines. Its cutting-edge restaurants helmed by celebrated chefs make the city one of Europe's most renowned dining capitals.

When it comes to dining, younger madrileños gravitate toward trendy neighborhoods like bearded-and-bunned Malasaña, gay-friendly Chueca, rootsy La Latina, and multicultural Lavapiés for their boisterous and affordable restaurants and bars. Dressier travelers, and those visiting with kids, will feel more at home in the quieter, more buttoned-up restaurants of Salamanca, Chamartín, and Retiro. Of course, these are broad-brush generalizations, and there are plenty of exceptions.

The house wine in old-timey Madrid restaurants is often a sturdy, uncomplicated Valdepeñas from La Mancha. A plummy Rioja or a gutsy Ribera del Duero—the latter from northern Castile—are the usual choices for reds by the glass in chicer establishments, while popular whites include fruity Verdejo varietals from Rueda and slatey albariños from Galicia After dinner, try the anise-flavored liqueur (anís), produced outside the nearby village of Chinchón, or a fruitier patxaran, a digestif made with sloe berries.

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  • 1. Casa Hortensia Restaurante y Sidrería

    $$

    Approximate a vacation to northern Spain by dining at this true-blue Asturian restaurant (or at the more casual sidrería in the bar area), where that region's unsung comfort-food dishes—such as fabada (pork-and-bean stew), Cabrales cheese, and cachopo (cheese-stuffed beef cutlets)—take center stage. The obligatory tipple is sidra, bone-dry Asturian cider that's aerated using a battery-powered gadget designed for this task.

    Calle de la Farmacia 2, Madrid, 28004, Spain
    91-539–0090

    Known For

    • Authentic fabada
    • Cider bottles with fun DIY aerators
    • Local crowd

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Mon. No dinner Sun.
  • 2. Casa Salvador

    $$

    Whether you approve of bullfighting or not, the culinary excellence of Casa Salvador—a checkered-tablecloth, taurine-themed restaurant that opened in 1941—isn't up for debate. Sit down to generous servings of featherlight fried hake, hearty oxtail stew, and other stodgy (in the best way) Spanish classics, all served by hale old-school waiters clad in white jackets.

    Calle de Barbieri 12, Madrid, 28004, Spain
    91-521–4524

    Known For

    • Time-warpy decor
    • Walls packed with bullfighting paraphernalia
    • Cloud-light fried hake and stewed oxtail

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun. No dinner Mon.
  • 3. Golda

    $

    This cheery yellow-tiled café serving Middle Eastern-inflected sandwiches and pastries is packed from breakfast to lunch, when neighborhood-dwellers show up for falafel, shakshuka, and spinach pie. At 8:30 pm, Golda morphs into "Golfa," its boozier late-night alter ego serving tapas and natural wine. 

    Calle de Orellana 19, Madrid, Spain
    91-069–1070

    Known For

    • Laptop-friendly
    • Expertly pulled espresso drinks
    • Homemade salads and sweet and savory pastries
  • 4. Roostiq

    $$$

    Fire is the secret ingredient at Roostiq, where pizzas sizzle and puff in a wood-burning oven and meat, fish, and vegetables char until tender over white-hot embers. Even the cheesecake is of the Basque "burnt" variety, brown and caramel-y on the outside and gooey within. The open-hearth technology may be older than the hills, but the buffed concrete walls, zany ceramic plates, and sturdy wooden and marble tables are unmistakably cutting-edge.

    Calle de Augusto Figueroa 47, Madrid, 28004, Spain
    91-853–2434

    Known For

    • Open-hearth roasts and pizzas
    • 150 champagnes to choose from
    • Trendy industrial digs
  • 5. Celso y Manolo

    $$

    This hip neighborhood favorite has around a dozen tables and an extensive eclectic menu geared toward sharing that features game meats, seafood, and cheeses from the mountainous northern region of Cantabria. Organic wines sourced from around the country make for spot-on pairings.

    Calle de la Libertad 1, Madrid, 28004, Spain
    91-531–8079

    Known For

    • Market-driven cuisine
    • Cantabrian specialties
    • Varied menu
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  • 6. Cisne Azul

    $$ | Chueca | Spanish

    You may wonder why bland-looking Cisne Azul is crowded with locals in this style-obsessed neighborhood. The reason is simple: wild mushrooms. In Spain there are more than 2,000 different species, and here you can sample the best from the province of León, grilled with a bit of olive oil, and served perhaps with a fried egg yolk, scallops, or foie gras. Elbow up to the bar and order the popular mezcla de setas (mushroom sampler).

    Calle Gravina 19, Madrid, Madrid, 28004, Spain
    91-521–3799
  • 7. DSpeak

    $$$

    Diego Guerrero, the punk-rock chef of two-Michelin-star Dstage, also runs this more casual outpost. The menu turns classic Spanish dishes—for example, monkfish in salsa verde, Canarian wrinkly potatoes, stewed verdinas (baby favas)—on their heads by adding unorthodox ingredients like seaweed, kimchi, whey, and liquid-nitrogen-frozen fruit, and the result is thrilling. A quirky wine list heavy on natural and low-yield producers complements the cuisine nicely. Take the stairs one flight down to the cocktail bar for a preprandial personality drink or nightcap.

    Calle de Fernando VI 6, Madrid, 28004, Spain
    91-319–5435

    Known For

    • Experimental Spanish dining
    • Big-name chef
    • Buzzy subterranean cocktail bar

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Mon. No dinner Sun.
  • 8. El Señor Martín

    $$$$

    Pristine fish, salt, roaring open flame—these are the main ingredients at El Señor Martín, a white-table seafood restaurant beloved by local food critics that makes a great venue for romantic dinners and special occasions. Consider springing for a gloriously obscure fish you've never heard of, like Mediterranean sand eel, wreckfish, plaice, or alfonsino—all meticulously filleted and grilled to juicy perfection. 

    Calle del General Castaños 13, Madrid, 28004, Spain
    91-795–7170

    Known For

    • Basque chef who grills with panache
    • Fantastic fish and seafood
    • Secret gourmet hangout

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon.
  • 9. Faraday

    $

    Faraday is a chic little café known for its meticulously roasted beans, mathematically precise baristas, and gorgeous midcentury modern furniture. Laptops are allowed.

    Calle de San Lucas 9, Madrid, 28004, Spain

    Known For

    • Great music
    • Closed 2–4 pm
    • Excellent coffee

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Mon.
  • 10. 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, Madrid, 28004, Spain
    91-522–1890

    Known For

    • Stuffed bread rolls
    • Hidden interior patio
    • Flavored draft ciders
  • 11. Lettera Trattoria Moderna

    $$

    Sicilian chef Francesco Ingargiola recreates the bold flavors of his childhood—with plenty of fine-dining flourishes—at this inviting ultramodern trattoria one block from the Gran Vía thoroughfare. Start with an order of crispy artichokes, flavored with lardo and topped with Italian foie gras, before moving on to homemade pastas like linguini with shrimp or Madrid's best carbonara. 

    Calle de la Reina 20, Madrid, 28004, Spain
    91-805–3342

    Known For

    • Regional Italian cooking
    • Unusual homemade pastas
    • Romantic dining room

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Tues.
  • 12. 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.

    Calle Gran Vía 12, Madrid, 28013, Spain
    91-521–3198

    Known For

    • Inexpensive eats
    • Convenient location
    • Lounge bar downstairs
  • 13. Mercado de San Antón

    $$ | Chueca | International

    Following the successful transformation of the Mercado de San Miguel, near the Plaza Mayor, the city completely refurbished this old neighborhood market into a more cosmopolitan enclave. Above the traditional market, join madrileños for booze and international food—think sushi, Greek, Italian—and tapas (seafood options are particularly noteworthy). On the third level is a casual restaurant, La Cocina de San Antón, and a large terrace, perfect for indulging in a cold daiquiri or a caipirinha on a hot summer night.

    Calle Augusto Figueroa 24, Madrid, Madrid, 28004, Spain
    913-300730

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun.
  • 14. Trattoria Pulcinella

    $$

    When Enrico Bosco arrived in Madrid from Italy in the early '90s, he couldn't find a decent Italian restaurant, so he decided to open one. Always bustling and frequented by families and young couples, this trattoria seems like a direct transplant from Naples with its superb fresh pastas, pizzas, and focaccias. 

    Calle de Regueros 7, Madrid, 28004, Spain
    91-319–7363

    Known For

    • Affordable down-home Italian fare
    • Family friendly
    • Excellent fresh pastas

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Reservations essential

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