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Best Spanish Restaurants in Madrid 2026

"Tomamos a las diez y media." The maître'd at Coque says it without checking the book, because the question is rhetorical: in Madrid you eat at ten-thirty, and the kitchen does not negotiate. Madrid has three Michelin-starred restaurants in 2026 (DiverXO, Smoked Room, Deessa), a 1725 institution that still cooks cochinillo in the original wood oven, and a sobremesa culture that pushes lunch past sixteen-hundred. The nine rooms below cover all of it. Pick the register your evening needs.

Nine Spanish Restaurants Worth the Reservation

Chef: Dabiz Muñoz (chef-owner)
Neighborhood: NH Eurobuilding Hotel, Calle Padre Damián 23, Tetuán
Signature: the "lienzo" (canvas) tasting; pig's-ear dim sum; Iberico-pork char siu
Price: €395 tasting menu; pairing from €295
Recognition: Three Michelin stars since 2013; #4, The World's 50 Best 2023

Dabiz Muñoz opened the original DiverXO in 2007 and earned his third star in 2013, the first cook in Madrid to achieve it. The format is theatrical (servers in chef's whites, plates carried on large painter's canvases that become the table) but the cooking is the substance: Iberico char siu with a six-day cure, pig's-ear dim sum with Sichuan oil, and a sea-urchin course presented on a black-volcanic-sand mise-en-place that is the most-copied plating in Madrid. The tasting menu has remained twelve courses for six years, and Muñoz still cooks most evenings.

Madrid's only home-grown three-star kitchen and Dabiz Muñoz's twelve-course canvas — book 60 days ahead for the Tuesday dinner.

Read the full DiverXO review ›

Chef: Dani García (chef-owner; with head chef Massimiliano Delle Vedove)
Neighborhood: Hyatt Regency Hesperia, Paseo de la Castellana 57
Signature: wood-fired Galician beef chuletón; smoked oyster with ash mayonnaise
Price: €295 tasting menu; pairing from €200
Recognition: Three Michelin stars, promoted in the 2024 Michelin Spain guide

Dani García closed his three-star room in Marbella in 2019 and opened Smoked Room at the Hyatt Castellana with the deliberate small-room concept: fourteen seats, wood-fire-only cooking, and a tasting menu organised around degrees of smoke. The chuletón course is the headline — Galician beef from a single producer in Lugo, aged 60–90 days in-house, cooked over chestnut wood at the centre of the counter. García's pre-Marbella mentor (Martín Berasategui) makes a guest appearance most years for the New Year's menu. The 2024 Michelin promotion to three stars was widely expected; the room had been cooking at that level since 2022.

Dani García's third star returned in 2024 — book the wood-fire counter and try it once for the 60-day Galician chuletón.

Read the full Smoked Room review ›

Chefs: Mario Sandoval (chef-owner with brothers Diego and Rafael Sandoval)
Neighborhood: Calle del Marqués de Riscal 11, Almagro
Signature: suckling-pig course cooked in the wood oven; the five-room "journey" (sommelier room, kitchen, sacristía, dining room)
Price: €295 tasting menu; pairing from €185
Recognition: Two Michelin stars; the Sandoval family's fourth-generation restaurant

The Sandoval brothers moved Coque from Humanes de Madrid into the Almagro neighbourhood in 2017 and built a multi-room "journey" format: an aperitif in the sommelier's cellar, snacks in the kitchen with chef Mario Sandoval, a sherry course in the converted sacristía (the building is a 1920s former chapel), and the main tasting menu in the dining room above. The cochinillo course is the test dish — suckling pig cooked in a stone wood oven the family has used since 1955, served with the skin lacquered into a single sheet and a brown-sauce reduction from the bones.

A four-room journey through an Almagro former-chapel and the Sandoval family's 1955 suckling-pig recipe — pencil it in for the long Saturday lunch.

Read the full Coque review ›

Chef: Diego Guerrero (chef-owner)
Neighborhood: Calle de Regueros 8, Chueca
Signature: the rotating "DSTAgE Edition" tasting (numbered editions rather than seasons); aged-fish course
Price: €240 tasting menu; pairing from €145
Recognition: Two Michelin stars; named one of San Pellegrino's Top 10 European New Openings (2014)

Diego Guerrero opened DSTAgE in Chueca in 2014 after leaving the El Club Allard kitchen, where he had earned two stars by his late twenties. The format is open-kitchen, twenty-four seats, and a tasting menu that runs in numbered "editions" rather than seasons — Edition 17 was the spring 2025 menu, Edition 18 launches in autumn. The wine list is the most-natural-leaning of Madrid's two-star rooms; the aged-fish course (which uses a 30-day wet-aging technique Guerrero developed in 2017) is the recurring test dish.

Diego Guerrero's open-kitchen Chueca two-star with numbered tasting "editions" — book the Tuesday dinner and try it once for the aged-fish course.

Read the full DSTAgE review ›

Chef: Quique Dacosta (executive chef; with resident chef Ricard Tobella)
Neighborhood: Mandarin Oriental Ritz Madrid, Plaza de la Lealtad 5
Signature: red prawn from Dénia; the "Universo Local" tasting menu
Price: €280 tasting menu; pairing from €220
Recognition: Three Michelin stars (with the 2023 promotion); part of Dacosta's wider three-star empire from Dénia

Quique Dacosta's Madrid outpost opened with the Mandarin Oriental Ritz refurbishment in 2021 and earned its third star within two years — the fastest three-star rise in Madrid's recent guide history. The dining room is the most architecturally serious on this list (the Ritz's belle-époque ballroom, restored under the 2017–2021 refurb) and the red prawn course from Dacosta's Dénia supplier is the recurring signature. Tobella runs the daily kitchen and Dacosta visits monthly; the consistency is identical to the Dénia flagship.

Quique Dacosta's three-star Madrid outpost in the restored Ritz ballroom — reserve weeks ahead for the Dénia red prawn.

Read the full Deessa review ›

Chef: Martín Berasategui (executive chef; resident chef Iván Suárez)
Neighborhood: Bless Hotel Madrid, Calle de Velázquez 62, Salamanca
Signature: Basque-Spanish tasting; the foie-and-eel terrine (Berasategui's most-imitated dish since 1995)
Price: €185 tasting menu; pairing from €120
Recognition: One Michelin star; Berasategui has 13 Michelin stars total across his group, the most of any living Spanish chef

Martín Berasategui is the most-decorated living Spanish chef (thirteen Michelin stars across his group) and Etxeko Madrid is the smaller, smarter Madrid expression of his Lasarte flagship. The terrine of foie gras, smoked eel, apple, and spring onions — a dish Berasategui put on the original Lasarte menu in 1995 and which has remained there for thirty years — is on the Madrid menu too, and it is the test course. The room is smaller than Lasarte (sixty seats) and the price is approximately half.

Martín Berasategui's Madrid one-star in the Bless Hotel — book it for the 1995 foie-and-eel terrine and try it once.

Read the full Etxeko Madrid review ›

Chef: Antonio González (head chef; restaurant operated by the González family for four generations)
Neighborhood: Calle de Cuchilleros 17, La Latina (steps from Plaza Mayor)
Signature: cochinillo asado (suckling pig) roasted in the original 1725 wood oven; cordero asado
Price: €50–80 per person (cochinillo €30, sides €8–15)
Recognition: Guinness World Records: oldest continuously-operating restaurant in the world (since 1725)

The Guinness record-holder for the oldest restaurant in the world, operating continuously since 1725 from the same address on Calle de Cuchilleros. The cochinillo asado is the booking — suckling pig roasted whole in the original 1725 wood-fired oven, which has not been extinguished in three hundred years (the kitchen banks it nightly). Hemingway wrote about Botín in The Sun Also Rises and ate here on his Madrid visits; the cellar from the 17th century is now a small museum visible from the lower dining room.

Not for: diners who avoid tourist-saturated rooms. Sobrino de Botín runs at full reservation every lunch and dinner with a heavily international clientele. Book for the cochinillo and the wood oven; do not book expecting the local Madrid crowd you would find at Casa Lucio.
The world's oldest restaurant (1725) with cochinillo from a three-hundred-year-old wood oven — book it once for the institution.

Read the full Sobrino de Botín review ›

Chef: Lucio family (Lucio Blázquez founded 1974; now run by his children)
Neighborhood: Cava Baja 35, La Latina
Signature: huevos estrellados con jamón (broken eggs over fried potatoes with Iberico ham)
Price: €40–65 per person
Recognition: The most-cited traditional-Madrid dining room by local chefs; political and journalistic canteen since 1974

Lucio Blázquez opened Casa Lucio in 1974 on Cava Baja and the room became Madrid's political-and-journalistic canteen — every Spanish prime minister since Felipe González has eaten here at some documented point. The huevos estrellados con jamón (broken fried eggs over thinly-sliced fried potatoes, finished with grated Iberico ham and salt) is the test dish; it sounds simpler than it eats, and the potato-to-egg ratio is what nobody else gets right. Service is the warmest in La Latina and runs to two in the morning on Friday and Saturday.

Madrid's political-canteen institution since 1974 and the home of huevos estrellados — book it for a late Tuesday with the local crowd.

Read the full Casa Lucio review ›

Chef: Sacha Hormaechea (chef-owner since 1972)
Neighborhood: Calle Juan Hurtado de Mendoza 11, Chamartín
Signature: falsa lasaña de txangurro (spider-crab "lasagna" of pasta sheets and crab); steak tartare
Price: €60–100 per person; à la carte
Recognition: The chef's-day-off pick of Madrid; San Pellegrino "World's Best Bistro" finalist 2019

Sacha Hormaechea has run his eponymous Chamartín bistro since 1972 and the room remains the chef's-day-off pick of Madrid — Berasategui, Dacosta, and Muñoz all eat at Sacha when they are off. The falsa lasaña de txangurro (which substitutes thin pasta sheets for the crab's own shell layers) is the most-imitated dish in Madrid and almost nobody else gets it right. The wine list reads Burgundy-heavy and the steak tartare is finished tableside with Hormaechea's own mustard.

Madrid's chef's-day-off bistro since 1972 and the home of the falsa lasaña de txangurro — try it once on a Wednesday.

Read the full Sacha review ›

How to Pick the Right Madrid Restaurant for the Evening

By register. Three-star modern (DiverXO, Smoked Room, Deessa) for the once-a-trip evening at €280–395 per head. Two-star modern (Coque, DSTAgE) at €240–295. One-star modern (Etxeko Madrid) at €185. Traditional Madrid (Sobrino de Botín, Casa Lucio, Sacha) at €40–100 — the most-honest food in the city and a third of the price.

By meal clock. Lunch is Madrid's strongest service. The 14:00–14:30 sittings at DiverXO, Smoked Room, and Coque run at the same price as dinner with less competition and meaningfully better daylight. The 22:00–22:30 dinner is the cultural prime time at the traditional rooms; arrive earlier and you will eat alone.

By neighbourhood. Tetuán and Chamartín for the modern flagships (DiverXO, Sacha). Salamanca and Castellana for the hotel-attached rooms (Smoked Room, Etxeko Madrid). Almagro for Coque, Chueca for DSTAgE. La Latina specifically for the traditional pair (Sobrino de Botín, Casa Lucio).

By reservation difficulty. DiverXO and Deessa open 60 days ahead; book the day they open. Smoked Room takes 30 days. Coque, DSTAgE, and Etxeko Madrid take 14 days. Sobrino de Botín requires 3–5 days for prime sittings (10–14 days for groups). Casa Lucio and Sacha take same-day weekday reservations.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best Spanish restaurant in Madrid?
DiverXO under Dabiz Muñoz is the editorial pick. It is Madrid's only home-grown three-Michelin-star restaurant (since 2013), and Muñoz's tasting menu is the most-imitated modern-Spanish format in Spain. Smoked Room under Dani García is the recently-promoted rival — it earned its third star in the 2024 Michelin Spain guide and runs at half the seat count of DiverXO. For traditional Madrid food, Sobrino de Botín (established 1725) is the institutional pick at a third of the price.
How do you book DiverXO?
DiverXO opens its book exactly 60 days ahead at 11:00 Madrid time through its own website. Weekend dinner slots are gone within minutes; the better strategy is the Tuesday or Wednesday dinner (more available) or the weekday lunch (released at the same time, less competitive). The tasting menu is €395 per head plus drinks. Smoked Room books through Resy 60 days ahead with similar dynamics; weekday lunch is the easier slot.
What time do Madrid restaurants serve dinner?
Madrid's first dinner seating is 21:00 at the earliest; the cultural prime time is 22:00–22:30, and many kitchens take last orders at 23:30. Fine-dining rooms like DiverXO, Smoked Room, and Coque accept a 20:30 booking only because of international diners; locals fill the 22:00 sittings. Lunch culture is equally late — 14:30 to 16:00 is the prime sobremesa window. If you are over from London or New York, build the trip around the Spanish meal clock.
What is the dress code for Madrid fine dining?
Smart-casual at DiverXO and Smoked Room (no shorts, no trainers, jackets not required). Coque and DSTAgE accept a more relaxed register. Etxeko Madrid and Deessa at the Mandarin Oriental Ritz lean formal — jackets recommended at dinner, particularly in the bar. Sobrino de Botín, Casa Lucio, and Sacha have no dress code; the room runs jeans-and-blazer through three-piece-suit on the same evening.
Should I eat traditional or modern Spanish in Madrid?
Both, on different nights. Modern Spanish (DiverXO, Smoked Room, Coque) is what Madrid has become over the last fifteen years and what justifies the city's three-star count. Traditional Madrid food (Sobrino de Botín for cochinillo, Casa Lucio for huevos estrellados, Sacha for the chef's-canteen pick) is what the city has been for two hundred years. Doing one without the other under-reads Madrid.