Best Solo Dining Restaurants in Capri 2026
By Lena Sørensen · Published · Updated
The easiest solo seat in Capri is the terrace at Raki Cafe, a natural-wine room near La Piazzetta where eating alone reads as a choice. Editorial runners-up: Piazzetta Wine Bar, Pinseria Le Tre Farine, Ristorante Verucchio, and a two-star splurge at L'Olivo.
There is a particular pleasure in eating alone on Capri: a glass of Greco di Tufo, a plate of something simple, and the whole Bay of Naples going gold below the terrace. The island has a reputation as a couples' and yachts' destination, which scares solo diners off unnecessarily. The good news is that some of its best small rooms are built for one stool and a view. These seven are where a single diner eats well in 2026, from a wine counter off La Piazzetta to a two-Michelin-star terrace in Anacapri.
How to Eat Alone Well on Capri
Capri rewards the diner who skips the obvious. The harbour-front terraces priced for tour groups are not where you want to sit alone. The island's wine bars, pinserie, and family trattorie are, and several of them face the same sea for half the money. Eat late, after the day-trippers have caught the last hydrofoil back to Naples, and the island empties into something close to private.
The format here is the terrace and the wine counter, not the chef's table. Raki Cafe pours natural wine to single diners without ceremony, Piazzetta Wine Bar turns people-watching on Piazza Umberto I into a meal, and the pinserie and pizzerie off the square serve a confident plate for one. When you want the full Capri splurge alone, L'Olivo at the Capri Palace holds two Michelin stars and will seat a single diner who books ahead.
Seven Capri Rooms That Welcome One
Raki Cafe is the island's most natural solo room: a terrace and a short menu of Mediterranean small plates built around a natural-wine list chosen for genuine interest in the producers. A single diner can spread one glass into the early evening without anyone hurrying the table. It sits a little off the main tourist routes, which is exactly why a solo diner should seek it out.
Two small plates and a glass of skin-contact white from central Italy.
A natural-wine terrace where dining alone is a considered choice, not a last resort. Reserve a terrace seat at golden hour.
On Piazza Umberto I, the most-watched square in the Mediterranean, this is the accessible perch from which to do the watching. Wine by the glass and cicchetti make a light, civilised solo dinner, and the front-row view of La Piazzetta is the entertainment. For a single diner who wants to feel in the centre of Capri without a four-course commitment, this is the seat.
A flight of Campanian whites and a board of cicchetti.
Front-row seats on La Piazzetta with wine and small bites, the best people-watching in the Mediterranean. Try it once at aperitivo hour.
A side street off the square hides a contemporary pinseria turning out Roman-style pinsa on a three-flour dough, with sea views from a small terrace and a 9.5 rating on TheFork. A single pinsa and a glass of wine is one of the smartest-value solo dinners on an expensive island. The room is casual enough that eating alone is entirely unremarkable.
A pinsa with seasonal toppings and a glass of Falanghina.
Inventive Roman pinsa and a sea-view terrace for the price of a snack elsewhere on Capri. Worth it for a smart-value solo lunch.
Verucchio serves classic wood-fired Neapolitan pizza and local pasta with no pretense and honest prices, which makes it the island's most reliable solo room for purists. A Margherita from a proper wood oven and a half-litre of the house white is a complete, dignified dinner for one, and the bill will not flinch the way the harbour terraces do.
A wood-fired Margherita and a carafe of the house white.
Honest wood-fired Neapolitan pizza at island prices that have not lost their minds. Book it for a no-fuss solo dinner.
Aurora has anchored the streets off La Piazzetta for over a century and remains the island's celebrity dining room, but its bar and counter make it workable for one. The thin-crust pizza, the Pizza all'Acqua among them, and the Neapolitan classics are the draw. A solo diner gets a front seat to Capri's enduring theatre of who is in town this week.
The Pizza all'Acqua and a glass of Greco di Tufo.
A century-old Piazzetta institution where the bar seats a single diner in the middle of the show. Reserve ahead in high season.
Brace is the island's counterpoint to all the seafood and citrus: wood-fired cooking and aged meats served with rustic confidence. The counter facing the fire is the seat to want as a solo diner, where the grill sets the pace and a single steak or chop eats beautifully with a glass of Aglianico. It is the room for a meat-led solo night away from the terraces.
An aged cut off the fire and a glass of Aglianico.
Wood-fire and aged meats with a counter that faces the grill. Worth it for a solo diner who wants something other than fish.
When the solo splurge is the whole point, L'Olivo is the island's only two-Michelin-star table. Andrea Migliaccio's contemporary Mediterranean cooking, the blue lobster ravioli and black truffle beef among the signatures, is served in a candlelit Anacapri room that takes single diners who book ahead. A solo tasting here is one of the great quiet luxuries in southern Italy.
The tasting menu, with the blue lobster ravioli.
Andrea Migliaccio's two-star Mediterranean tasting in Anacapri, the island's solo splurge. Fly in for it once.
Booking a Solo Table on Capri
In summer, La Piazzetta rooms like Aurora and the two-star L'Olivo want two to four weeks for a good seat; the wine bars and pinserie are easier, often same-day off-peak. Da Paolino's lemon grove, the island's other famous booking, is a months-ahead affair and best for a table, not a solo seat.
The day-trippers leave on the late hydrofoils, and the island quiets after nine. State that you are dining alone and ask for a terrace or counter seat. A solo diner who books the later seating gets the best of Capri: the view, the calm, and a table by the rail.
Skip the harbour terraces and head up to the side streets off La Piazzetta, where the pinserie and trattorie face the same sea for far less. For the full island, see our Capri dining guide and the global best restaurants for solo dining.
Frequently Asked Questions
Reviewed by Lena Sørensen, Editor-at-Large, Europe, for the Restaurants for Kings editorial team. Affiliate disclosure: RFK may earn a commission on reservations booked through partner links; this never affects our scoring or rankings. Follow our guides on LinkedIn.