Best Close a Deal Restaurants in Capri: 2026 Guide

Close a Deal dining · Capri · 2026 edition

Two Michelin stars. Twenty-eight seats. One terrace at 320 metres above sea level facing the Faraglioni stacks. That is L'Olivo at the Capri Palace, and it anchors a Capri deal-dinner short list that runs to seven rooms in 2026. The island is small (four square miles), seasonal (April through October), and built around a single funicular from Marina Grande to Capri town — which means the booking conversation is short and the logistics are the harder problem. Below are the rooms where the meeting works.

Why Capri Hosts a Deal

Capri's deal-dinner economics are extreme. Six restaurants on this list sit at hotels (Capri Palace, Punta Tragara, Quisisana, JK Place, Tiberio Palace) and run hotel-restaurant prices for hotel-restaurant clientele — €180-€350 per head with wine pairings. The island's season runs Easter through late October with the absolute peak from late June to early September; outside that window most of these rooms are closed entirely.

The view is the asset. L'Olivo and Le Monzù both sit on terraces with direct lines of sight to the Faraglioni; Riccio is at sea level on the Anacapri side with a swim platform; Da Paolino dines under a working lemon tree grove. For a deal dinner where the counterparty has flown in for the evening, the view is doing more work than the menu can — book the terrace, specify the table position at confirmation, and arrive twenty minutes before sunset to let the room land properly.

Aviation is the booking constraint. There is no airport on Capri. The two routes are: helicopter from Naples Capodichino or Salerno (12-18 minutes, €1,500-€3,500 per leg via Capri Helicopters or Sammartino), or the ferry/jet from Naples Beverello, Sorrento, or Positano (20-50 minutes depending on origin and weather). For a same-day closing dinner, the helicopter is the reliable option; the last public ferry off Capri leaves at 19:35 in season and 17:00 in winter.

The Seven Picks

Chef: Andrea Migliaccio (chef-owner since 2007)
Where: Capri Palace Jumeirah, Via Capodimonte 14, Anacapri (320m elevation)
Price: Tasting menu €195–€280 per person; wine pairing from €120
Cuisine: Modern Mediterranean; tasting menu format; ingredient-led
Proof point: 2 MICHELIN stars in the MICHELIN Guide Italy (held continuously since 2011); the only two-star restaurant on Capri
Andrea Migliaccio's two-star room at the Capri Palace — book the terrace for a closing dinner with the Faraglioni view as the witness.

Andrea Migliaccio has run L'Olivo at the Capri Palace since 2007 — the hotel is part of the Jumeirah group and sits in Anacapri at 320 metres above sea level, with a terrace facing east across the Bay of Naples to the Faraglioni stacks and Vesuvius beyond. The restaurant earned its first Michelin star in 2008 and a second in 2011; it is the only two-star restaurant on Capri. The menu is modern Mediterranean with a clear Campania accent: a tartare of red prawn from Mazara del Vallo, a paccheri with Cetara anchovy and capers, a slow-cooked rabbit with mountain herbs from the Sorrento Coast.

For a closing-meeting dinner the booking is the terrace — twenty-eight seats outdoors in the warmer months, sixteen seats indoors year-round. The 19:30 seating in May or September runs sunset exactly across the second course; in July and August the sunset lands closer to 20:30 and the room books out by April for those evenings. The wine programme is the deepest hotel-restaurant list on the island. Reserve six-to-eight weeks ahead for the terrace in peak season; mid-week is more reasonable.

What to order: The Mazara prawn tartare, the paccheri with Cetara anchovy, a Greco di Tufo for the table..

L'Olivo at Capri Palace restaurantRead the L'Olivo at Capri Palace verdict →
Chef: Vincenzo Esperti (Executive Chef since 2019); supervised by Luigi Tramontano
Where: Hotel Punta Tragara, Via Tragara 57, Capri (cliff-edge above Faraglioni)
Price: Tasting menu €175–€245 per person; wine pairing from €110
Cuisine: Modern Neapolitan; cliff-edge terrace; seafood-led
Proof point: 1 MICHELIN star in the MICHELIN Guide Italy (held continuously since 2017); Hotel Punta Tragara is a Le Corbusier-designed building from 1920
Vincenzo Esperti's star room at the Le Corbusier hotel above the Faraglioni — book it for a deal dinner where the architecture is the message.

Hotel Punta Tragara was designed by Le Corbusier in 1920 as a private villa for Italian senator Emilio Vismara and converted to a hotel after WWII; the building sits at the eastern edge of Capri town on a cliff directly above the Faraglioni. Le Monzù is the hotel's rooftop restaurant; Vincenzo Esperti has run the kitchen since 2019 under the supervision of consulting chef Luigi Tramontano. The restaurant earned its Michelin star in 2017 and has held it continuously.

For a deal dinner the booking is the south-facing terrace — eighteen seats outdoors with the Faraglioni stacks at the foot of the cliff thirty metres below. The menu is modern Neapolitan with a tasting-only format: a seven-course tasting at €175, a ten-course at €245, both with sommelier-led pairings. The wine programme is heavy on Campania whites and rosés. Reserve six-to-eight weeks ahead for the terrace in season; the room operates April through late October only.

What to order: The tasting menu with the Campania pairing; ask the sommelier for a Falanghina to start..

Le Monzù at Punta Tragara restaurantRead the Le Monzù at Punta Tragara verdict →
#3
Chef: Salvatore La Ragione (chef since 2014); consulting chef Gennaro Esposito
Where: Via Madre Serafina 6, Capri town (off the Piazzetta, side street)
Price: Tasting menu €140–€195 per person; à la carte mains €38–€68
Cuisine: Modern Italian; Capri-and-Sorrento Coast ingredient-led; covered terrace
Proof point: 1 MICHELIN star in the MICHELIN Guide Italy (held continuously since 2014); Gennaro Esposito is the consulting chef and runs the two-star Torre del Saracino on the Sorrento Coast
Salvatore La Ragione's star room thirty seconds off the Piazzetta — book it for a deal dinner that has to be in Capri town proper.

Mammà opened on Via Madre Serafina in 2014 — a side street thirty seconds off the Piazzetta in Capri town centre — with Salvatore La Ragione running the kitchen and Gennaro Esposito (chef of the two-star Torre del Saracino on the Sorrento Coast) consulting. The restaurant earned its Michelin star in its first year and has held it continuously. The format is modern Italian with a clear Sorrento Coast accent: a hand-cut spaghettone with Cetara anchovy and lemon, a slow-cooked rabbit with Capri herbs, a baked scampi with bread crumbs.

For a closing-meeting dinner the booking is the covered terrace — twenty-two seats outdoors under a pergola of climbing jasmine. The volume in the room is conversation-easy and the service is jacketed; the wine programme is the strongest in Capri town proper (Le Monzù and L'Olivo are at hotels in different locations). Reserve four-to-six weeks ahead for high-season Friday-Saturday. Best for a deal where the counterparty is staying at one of the Piazzetta hotels (Quisisana, Tiberio Palace) and a thirty-second walk is the right post-dinner format.

What to order: The spaghettone with Cetara anchovy, the slow-cooked rabbit, a Greco di Tufo..

Mammà restaurantRead the Mammà verdict →
Chef: Salvatore Elefante (Executive Chef of Capri Palace beach operations)
Where: Capri Palace beach club, Via Gradola 4-6, Anacapri (sea-level, Grotta Azzurra side)
Price: Mains €38–€78; à la carte; lunch menu from €85
Cuisine: Seafood-led Mediterranean; beach-club setting; sea-level dining
Proof point: 1 MICHELIN star in the MICHELIN Guide Italy (held continuously since 2018); the only Michelin-starred sea-level restaurant on Capri
The Capri Palace's sea-level Michelin-starred beach club — book the lunch seating for a daytime deal session that runs to swim service.

Riccio is the Capri Palace's beach club operation — a fifteen-minute taxi from the hotel on the Anacapri side, accessed by stone stairs cut into the cliff above the Grotta Azzurra. Salvatore Elefante runs the kitchen and the restaurant earned its Michelin star in 2018; it is the only sea-level Michelin-starred restaurant on Capri. The format is seafood-led Mediterranean: a tartare of red prawn from Mazara del Vallo, a hand-cut chitarra pasta with sea-urchin, a wood-grilled spigola for the table, an octopus carpaccio with Cetara anchovy.

For a deal dinner the booking is the lunch seating — Riccio is the canonical daytime business venue on Capri, with the swim platform and the bar open for the afternoon. The dinner service is more relaxed than L'Olivo's and the format works for a daytime meeting that has to flex into a dinner. Reserve four weeks ahead; the restaurant operates Easter through late October only.

What to order: The Mazara prawn tartare, the chitarra with sea-urchin, the wood-grilled spigola..

Riccio at Capri Palace restaurantRead the Riccio at Capri Palace verdict →
Chef: Stefano Mazzone (Executive Chef, Grand Hotel Quisisana)
Where: Grand Hotel Quisisana, Via Camerelle 2, Capri town (Piazzetta-adjacent)
Price: Tasting menu €140–€185 per person; à la carte mains €36–€68
Cuisine: Modern Mediterranean; hotel-restaurant format; Capri-and-Campania ingredient-led
Proof point: 1 MICHELIN star in the MICHELIN Guide Italy (held since 2024); Grand Hotel Quisisana opened in 1845 and is the oldest hotel on Capri
The Quisisana's newly Michelin-starred restaurant — pencil it in for a deal dinner at the island's 180-year hotel institution.

Grand Hotel Quisisana opened in 1845 as a sanitarium-with-a-view and converted to a luxury hotel by the late 19th century — it has been the social and political anchor of Capri town for 180 years. Stefano Mazzone runs the hotel's flagship restaurant Quisi and the kitchen earned its first Michelin star in the 2024 guide. The menu is modern Mediterranean with strong Campania weight: a Sorrento-lemon-marinated tuna, a hand-cut paccheri with octopus and Pachino tomato, a wood-grilled chicken stuffed with mountain herbs.

For a deal dinner the booking is the indoor dining room (forty seats) or the terrace (twenty-eight seats overlooking the hotel's formal garden). The wine programme is the deepest hotel-restaurant list in Capri town and includes proper Burgundy and Bordeaux options for European counterparties. Reserve four-to-six weeks ahead; the hotel concierge handles bookings for guests and external diners alike. Best for a counterparty who is staying at the Quisisana itself.

What to order: The Sorrento-lemon tuna, the paccheri with octopus, a Greco di Tufo or a Burgundy first growth..

Quisi at Grand Hotel Quisisana restaurantRead the Quisi at Grand Hotel Quisisana verdict →
Chef: Paolino family kitchen (operating since 1980)
Where: Via Palazzo a Mare 11, Marina Grande (terrace in a working lemon grove)
Price: Mains €28–€52; à la carte; group sharing menu from €65 per head
Cuisine: Traditional Capri-and-Sorrento Coast; family-served; lemon-grove setting
Proof point: Operating since 1980; the working lemon grove canopy is the most-Instagrammed restaurant setting in Capri and the kitchen serves the canonical Capri-Sorrento dishes
Capri's 46-year lemon-grove tavern — book it for a deal dinner where the setting itself does ninety per cent of the work.

Da Paolino has operated since 1980 in a working lemon grove ten minutes' walk from Marina Grande — the restaurant's dining terrace sits underneath a canopy of mature Sorrento lemon trees, with the fruit hanging from the branches over the diners' heads. The format is traditional Capri-and-Sorrento Coast cuisine served family-style: a mozzarella di bufala the size of a softball, a hand-cut spaghetti with clams, a baked aubergine parmigiana, a Sorrento-lemon-glazed roast chicken for the table. The pastry programme finishes with the canonical caprese-flourless-chocolate-and-almond cake.

For a deal dinner Da Paolino is the variation room — book it when the brief is for a casual, theatrical evening rather than a formal Michelin-starred negotiation. The terrace seats one hundred and ten under the lemon canopy; private groups of twenty are placed at a long table at the rear with a custom sharing menu at €75 per head. The wine programme is short but the Campania selection is proper. Reserve three-to-four weeks ahead; operates April through late October only.

What to order: The mozzarella for the table, the spaghetti alle vongole, the lemon-glazed roast chicken, the caprese cake..

Da Paolino "Lemon Trees" restaurantRead the Da Paolino "Lemon Trees" verdict →
#7
Chef: D'Alessio family kitchen (operating since 1900s)
Where: Via Fuorlovado 18-22, Capri town (60 seconds from the Piazzetta)
Price: Mains €28–€48; pizza menu €18–€28 per pie; sharing menus from €65
Cuisine: Traditional Capri; pizza-led; family-owned for four generations
Proof point: Operating since the early 1900s; the D'Alessio family has owned and run the restaurant for four generations; the signature Pizza all'Acqua is named for and was created at Aurora in the 1970s
Aurora's family-run pizzeria sixty seconds off the Piazzetta — pencil it in for a working dinner where formality is off the table.

Aurora has been owned and operated by the D'Alessio family for four generations — Mia, Franco and Massimo run it now, and the restaurant has been on Via Fuorlovado for over a hundred years. The format is traditional Capri with a serious pizza programme: the signature Pizza all'Acqua (water-fried, finished with mozzarella and Pachino tomato) was created at Aurora in the 1970s and has been on the menu unchanged since. The kitchen also runs the canonical Capri-Sorrento dishes — a hand-cut linguine alle vongole, a wood-fired sea bass, a parmigiana di melanzane.

For a deal dinner Aurora is the working-dinner room — informal, family-served, and ninety seconds' walk from any of the Piazzetta-area hotels. The covered front terrace seats forty-eight; the back room handles private groups of fourteen at a long table. The wine programme is short but the Campania and Sicilian selections cover the dishes correctly. Reserve two-to-three weeks ahead. Best for a counterparty who would find the Michelin-starred hotel rooms too formal and wants a real Capri restaurant experience.

What to order: The Pizza all'Acqua, the linguine alle vongole, a Greco di Tufo for the table..

Aurora restaurantRead the Aurora verdict →

How to Book a Capri Deal Dinner

Capri's season runs Easter through late October with peak from late June to early September. Outside that window the island is largely closed — most of the restaurants on this list shut from November through March, with only the Quisisana and Capri Palace running shoulder-season service into November. For a winter deal dinner, Capri is not the island; consider Naples or the Amalfi Coast (Le Sirenuse in Positano) instead.

In peak season (July-August), the booking lead at L'Olivo, Le Monzù, Mammà and Riccio sits at six-to-eight weeks for Friday-Saturday terrace seating. Mid-week and the shoulder months (May-June, September-October) are more reasonable — three-to-four weeks at the same rooms. Da Paolino, Aurora and Quisi at the Quisisana run lighter leads (two-to-three weeks in season). For terrace bookings, confirm the table position at the time of reservation; the south-facing tables at Le Monzù and the Faraglioni-side tables at L'Olivo are the bookings worth chasing.

Aviation and ferry logistics define the schedule. Helicopter from Naples Capodichino (NAP) is twelve minutes and from Salerno-Costa d'Amalfi (QSR) eighteen minutes; both run scheduled commercial service plus private charter from Capri Helicopters and Sammartino Aviation (€1,500-€3,500 per leg depending on aircraft). The helicopter pad is at Damecuta in Anacapri and a ten-minute taxi to Capri town. Ferries from Naples Beverello run 50-90 minutes; the SNAV high-speed jet covers it in 45. The last ferry off Capri leaves at 19:35 in season and 17:00 in winter.

Dress code at the seven rooms reads as Capri-evening-formal in the season: a blazer with dress shirt for men (tie optional), tailored separates or a dress for women. L'Olivo, Le Monzù, Mammà and Quisi expect a jacket. Riccio runs slightly more relaxed (linen blazer with chinos is the right answer). Da Paolino and Aurora accept smart casual. White is the standard Capri-evening colour and the island's shoe convention favours sandals or soft-leather loafers — the cobblestones are unforgiving on stiff dress shoes.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I get to Capri for a same-day deal dinner?
Two reliable routes: helicopter from Naples Capodichino (NAP) in 12 minutes or from Salerno-Costa d'Amalfi (QSR) in 18 minutes — €1,500-€3,500 per leg via Capri Helicopters or Sammartino Aviation. The pad is at Damecuta in Anacapri, ten minutes' taxi to Capri town. The alternative is the ferry: SNAV high-speed jet from Naples Beverello takes 45 minutes; the slower hydrofoil 50-90 minutes. The last ferry off Capri leaves at 19:35 in season and 17:00 in winter, which dictates the dinner-and-return timing.
How far in advance should I book a Capri deal dinner in peak season?
For July-August Friday-Saturday terrace seating at L'Olivo, Le Monzù, Mammà or Riccio, plan on six-to-eight weeks lead. Mid-week and shoulder months (May-June, September-October) drop to three-to-four weeks at the same rooms. Da Paolino, Aurora and Quisi run lighter leads (two-to-three weeks in season). The terrace bookings are the variable — confirm the table position at the time of reservation, since the south-facing or Faraglioni-side tables are dramatically more sought-after.
Which Capri restaurants offer private dining for business groups?
L'Olivo's indoor dining room handles a sixteen-seat group with a chef-built menu. Le Monzù's south-facing terrace seats eighteen at a single long table. Mammà's covered terrace handles twenty-two; the back private room seats fourteen with a custom menu. Quisi has a private salon at the Quisisana for twelve. Da Paolino places private groups of twenty at a long rear table under the lemon canopy. Aurora's back room seats fourteen. Riccio works for a fourteen-seat table on the rear deck above the swim platform.
What is the dress code at Capri fine-dining restaurants?
Capri-evening-formal in the season — a blazer with dress shirt for men (tie optional), tailored separates or a dress for women. L'Olivo, Le Monzù, Mammà and Quisi expect a jacket. Riccio runs slightly more relaxed (linen blazer with chinos). Da Paolino and Aurora accept smart casual. White is the standard Capri evening colour and the island's shoe convention favours sandals or soft-leather loafers — the cobblestones are unforgiving on stiff dress shoes.
When does Capri's dining season run?
Easter through late October with peak from late June to early September. Outside that window most restaurants on this list close entirely: L'Olivo, Le Monzù, Mammà, Riccio, Da Paolino and Aurora all go dark from November through March. Only the Quisisana and the Capri Palace run shoulder-season service into November. For a winter deal dinner, Capri is not the island — Naples (Il Comandante, Caruso Roof Garden) or the Amalfi Coast (Le Sirenuse in Positano runs year-round) are the alternatives.

Close a Deal elsewhere

Peer cities our editors rank for close a deal dining in 2026.

Editorial only. No paid placements on this list. Affiliate disclosure: when reservation links are present, they may earn RFK a referral fee at no cost to the diner. Read our methodology.