Best Anniversary Restaurants in Positano 2026
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The anniversary pick in Positano for 2026 is La Sponda at Le Sirenuse, a Michelin-starred terrace lit by hundreds of candles, €150 to €250. Editorial runners-up: Zass, Casa Mele, Terrazza Brunella and Chez Black.
“We light four hundred candles every night,” the maitre d’ at La Sponda says, and that is the whole pitch for a Positano anniversary. The town stacks its restaurants up the cliff, so a milestone here is a question of which terrace and how far the budget climbs. Six tables carry the occasion, from a starred room at Le Sirenuse to a beach landmark the Russo family has run since 1949.
Six Positano Tables for an Anniversary
Neapolitan chef Gennaro Russo holds the Michelin star at La Sponda inside Le Sirenuse, the candlelit terrace on Via Cristoforo Colombo above the bay. The linguine with sea urchin and lemon oil has anchored the menu for over a decade; dinner runs €150 to €250 a head. Book weeks ahead and dress smart-elegant. The most romantic anniversary dinner on the Amalfi Coast, full stop.
Belgian chef Alois Vanlangenaeker has cooked at Zass inside Il San Pietro di Positano for over twenty years, holding a 2026 Michelin star. The lobster tartare with coastal herbs is his most photographed plate, and the dessert trolley is a rarity at this level. Dinner lands €150 to €230 a head. The seclusion makes it the anniversary for a couple who want the world to disappear.
Positano-born chef Raffaele Mandara opened Casa Mele in June 2014 around an open kitchen and a chef’s table on Via Guglielmo Marconi. The seven-course Casa Mele Experience runs about €100 a head, with a five-course option and pairings, in a room seating roughly thirty. Book the chef’s table to watch the courses come together. The anniversary for couples who want the cooking up close.
Terrazza Brunella sits on a clifftop terrace at Viale Pasitea 338, run by the Brunella family. The paccheri con scampi e pomodorini, with langoustines and Vesuvian cherry tomatoes, is the kitchen’s most coherent plate; dinner runs €55 to €90 a head. Book a rail table before sunset. The mid-priced anniversary with a full-frame view of the bay.
The Russo family has run Chez Black on the Spiaggia Grande since 1949, the beachfront landmark everyone in Positano can point to. The spaghetti ai ricci di mare, with sea urchin, is the order, alongside seafood paccheri and octopus carpaccio, on Via del Brigantino by the sand. Book a front table at dusk. The anniversary that puts you at the centre of the town’s evening parade.
The Cinque family runs Don Giovanni on Via dei Mulini, a central terrace with sea views and an honest Neapolitan kitchen. Ravioli Caprese and fresh sea bass come without the cliff-edge surcharge, about €45 to €70 a head. Ask for a terrace table at sunset. The value anniversary in a town that rarely offers one, and the family welcome carries it.
How to Book, and What It Costs
La Sponda and Zass are the hardest tables on the coast, so book three to four weeks out and dress smart-elegant. Casa Mele’s chef’s table goes early. Chez Black, Don Giovanni and Terrazza Brunella fill on summer evenings, so reserve a week ahead and ask for sunset. Note that Il San Pietro, home to Zass, closes late October to late March.
Positano runs dear by the water. Don Giovanni is the value anniversary at €45 to €70; Terrazza Brunella lands €55 to €90; Casa Mele’s tasting is about €100. The starred terraces are the splurge, €150 to €230 at Zass and €150 to €250 at La Sponda. For a daytime beach anniversary instead, Da Adolfo and Da Ferdinando run boat-access lunches on the quieter coves.
Frequently Asked Questions
La Sponda at Le Sirenuse is the editorial pick: a Michelin-starred terrace lit by hundreds of candles every night, where chef Gennaro Russo’s sea-urchin linguine runs within a 150 to 250 euro dinner. For a more secluded starred room, Zass at Il San Pietro hides below the town with chef Alois Vanlangenaeker and over twenty years of consistency.
Positano is expensive by the water. Don Giovanni is the value anniversary at 45 to 70 euro a head, and Terrazza Brunella runs 55 to 90 euro. Casa Mele’s seven-course tasting is about 100 euro. The Michelin terraces are the splurge: roughly 150 to 230 euro at Zass and 150 to 250 euro at La Sponda, before wine.
La Sponda is the most romantic, a candlelit terrace at Le Sirenuse with hundreds of flames and a Michelin star. Zass at Il San Pietro trades the crowd for total seclusion below the town. For a sea view at a gentler price, Terrazza Brunella’s clifftop rail and Chez Black on the Spiaggia Grande both deliver the Amalfi sunset.
Book La Sponda and Zass three to four weeks out; they are among the hardest tables on the Amalfi Coast and require smart-elegant dress. Casa Mele’s chef’s table goes early too. Chez Black, Don Giovanni and Terrazza Brunella fill on summer evenings, so reserve about a week ahead and request a sunset table by name.
Many are seasonal. Il San Pietro, home to Zass, closes from late October to late March, and several cliffside and beach rooms shut for winter. La Sponda at Le Sirenuse, Chez Black, Don Giovanni and Terrazza Brunella largely run the spring-to-autumn season. If you visit in winter, call ahead, because hours contract sharply and some kitchens close entirely.