The San Sebastian Dining Guide 2026: Best Restaurants, Pintxos and Basque Food Culture

San Sebastian has more Michelin stars per capita than any city on earth — sixteen across a population of 180,000, three of them three-star kitchens, all within twenty minutes of the Parte Vieja. The pintxo bars on calle 31 de Agosto serve the most-defended bar food in Europe. Below is the 2026 field guide: how Basque eating actually works, where to walk, where to book, and the twelve restaurants worth a Saturday in Donostia.

How San Sebastian Eats

San Sebastian eats late. The Parte Vieja pintxo bars peak between 20:30 and 22:00. The Michelin restaurants run 13:30 and 21:00 seatings; the lunch tasting menu is the better-value entry to every starred kitchen in the city. Sunday lunch is the family meal; many starred kitchens close Sunday evenings and all day Monday and Tuesday — check before booking.

Pintxo grammar. A pintxo is bar food, served on a small slice of bread or on a skewer, eaten standing. Two pintxos and one drink at each bar, then move on. The traditional crawl runs three to five bars over ninety minutes. Pay at each bar before leaving (Basque honour system — tell the bartender what you ate, they tally). Order a Txakoli (the local dry white) from the long pour, or a small caña of beer. Wine glasses do not travel between bars.

Reservation conventions. Three-star kitchens (Arzak, Akelarre, Martín Berasategui) open bookings 60–120 days out. Mugaritz opens its full annual diary on January 1st and fills three months' worth of evenings within forty-eight hours. The two-stars (Amelia, the in-town option) and the one-stars (Kokotxa, Mirador de Ulia) are more forgiving — three to four weeks is typically enough.

Tipping. Spain includes service in the bill. At a pintxo bar, no tip — round up to the nearest euro at most. At a Michelin restaurant, leave 5% in cash on the plate for the front-of-house team. Larger amounts are unusual and may be politely returned.

Dress code. Smart casual at every restaurant in San Sebastian. No room requires a tie. The Arzak family house above the original tavern reads casual; the Akelarre clifftop dining room reads slightly more formal because of the view; Berasategui in Lasarte-Oria is the most relaxed of the three three-stars. Trainers are fine at every pintxo bar.

Best Neighbourhoods for Dinner

Parte Vieja (Old Town) — The Pintxo Capital

The medieval Old Town wedged between Monte Urgull and the Urumea river. Calle 31 de Agosto is the spine — three reference bars along it: La Cuchara de San Telmo (slow-cooked plates), Borda Berri (kebab de costilla and risotto), and Atari behind Santa María (tortilla and foie). Bar Néstor on calle Pescadería serves a single tortilla at 13:00 and 20:00; the line forms an hour ahead. Kokotxa (one Michelin star) sits on calle del Campanario inside the same quarter.

Centro Romántico — The Belle Époque Centre

Between the Old Town and the beach. Avenida de la Libertad and Plaza de Zaragoza anchor the quarter. Amelia by Paulo Airaudo (two Michelin stars) sits on the plaza; Bodega Donostiarra and Tedone are the pintxo options. The walk from the Centro across the Kursaal bridge to the Old Town is the cleanest pre-dinner stroll in the city.

Gros — The Surf-Side Quarter

East of the river. The beach side facing Zurriola. Younger crowd, surf shops, the more experimental bar scene. Bergara on calle General Arteche is the pintxo bar of record (the txalupa with mushroom and cheese). Mirador de Ulia (one Michelin star) sits on the hill above Gros at Paseo de Ulia 193.

Alto de Miracruz — The Arzak Suburb

Ten minutes east of the centre by taxi. The reason to come: Arzak — Juan Mari and Elena Arzak's three-star kitchen above the original 1897 tavern on Avenida Alcalde José Elosegi. No other dining reason to make the trip.

Lasarte-Oria — The Berasategui Village

Fifteen minutes south of San Sebastian by taxi. The Martín Berasategui flagship is here — three Michelin stars since 2001. The village otherwise is residential; the restaurant arranges return taxis after service.

Getaria — The Elkano Coast Town

Twenty-five minutes west of San Sebastian by the coast road. A fishing village of two thousand. Elkano (one Michelin star) sits on calle Herrerieta and serves the most defended whole grilled rodaballo on the Spanish coast. Pair the lunch with the Txakoli vineyards on the hill behind the village.

The 2026 Top Picks

#1
Chef: Juan Mari Arzak / Elena Arzak
Where: Avenida Alcalde José Elosegi 273, Alto de Miracruz
Price: Tasting €295; pairing €120
Cuisine: New Basque, three Michelin stars
Proof point: Three Michelin stars since 1989; nueva cocina vasca movement founder 1976
Three Michelin stars since 1989 — the founding kitchen of modern Basque cooking, run as a family business since 1897.

Juan Mari Arzak and his daughter Elena run twelve to fourteen courses across ninety minutes to three hours. The huevo flor and the pichón rosado are the signature orders. Book sixty days out.

Chef: Pedro Subijana
Where: Padre Orcolaga 56, Monte Igueldo
Price: Tastings €290–€340; pairing €175
Cuisine: Modern Basque, three Michelin stars
Proof point: Three Michelin stars since 2007; Pedro Subijana opened 1975
Three Michelin stars and a cliffside dining room ninety metres above the Atlantic — book a sunset window seat.

Pedro Subijana runs three tasting menus (Aranori, Bekarki, Subijana). The egg yolk inside an "egg" of frozen olive oil is the kitchen's second-star signature.

Chef: Martín Berasategui
Where: Loidi Kalea 4, Lasarte-Oria
Price: Tasting €295; pairing €165
Cuisine: Modern Basque, three Michelin stars
Proof point: Three Michelin stars since 2001; Berasategui group holds twelve Michelin stars worldwide
Twelve Michelin stars across the chef's global group — book his home flagship 120 days out.

The mille-feuille of smoked eel, foie gras, green apple and spring onion (1995) anchors a tasting that has held three stars for twenty-five years.

Chef: Andoni Luis Aduriz
Where: Aldura Aldea 20, Errenteria
Price: Tasting €275; pairing €130
Cuisine: Avant-garde Basque, two Michelin stars
Proof point: Two Michelin stars since 2006; The World's 50 Best top-ten 2007–2018
Two Michelin stars from the most experimental kitchen in Spain — book on January 1st for the year ahead.

Andoni Luis Aduriz runs a thirty-course tasting across four hours with edible cards and audio components. The kitchen closes December–March for prototyping.

Chef: Paulo Airaudo
Where: Plaza Zaragoza 6, Centro
Price: Tasting €220; pairing €110
Cuisine: Modern Argentine-Basque, two Michelin stars
Proof point: Two Michelin stars since 2021
Two Michelin stars in central Donostia — the most under-priced two-star tasting in Spain.

Paulo Airaudo runs a sixteen-seat oval table plus an eight-seat counter. Italian, Argentine and Basque techniques against Cantabrian sourcing.

#6
Chef: Aitor Arregi
Where: Herrerieta 2, Getaria
Price: À la carte €110–€150 per person
Cuisine: Basque seafood / grill, one Michelin star
Proof point: One Michelin star since 2014; #16 in The World's 50 Best 2021
Aitor Arregi grills the most defended whole rodaballo on the Spanish coast — book lunch.

A 1964 family grill house. The rodaballo is brought to table whole before cooking, returned for twenty-two minutes over wood charcoal.

#7
Chef: Daniel López
Where: Calle del Campanario 11, Parte Vieja
Price: Tastings €95–€135
Cuisine: Modern Basque, one Michelin star
Proof point: One Michelin star since 2008
The cleanest one-star room in the Old Town — book before a late pintxo crawl.

Daniel López opened in 2003. The kokotxas de merluza is the signature. Two seatings, 20:30 and 22:30 — the late slot is the cleanest dinner.

Chef: Rubén Trincado
Where: Paseo de Ulia 193, Monte Ulia (Gros side)
Price: Tasting €145; pairing €70
Cuisine: Modern Basque with view, one Michelin star
Proof point: One Michelin star since 2014
One Michelin star with the best view in Donostia — book the terrace for an early-evening tasting.

Rubén Trincado runs a converted hilltop villa on the Gros side overlooking the bay. The terrace at sunset is the best photograph in the city.

Chef:
Where: Calle Fermín Calbetón 12, Parte Vieja
Price: Pintxos €4–€8 each
Cuisine: Pintxo bar / Basque tavern
Proof point: Anchor of the calle 31 de Agosto pintxo route; San Sebastian Gastronomika 2019 featured bar
The kebab de costilla and the carrillera at Borda Berri — the most defended single bar in the Parte Vieja.

Slow-cooked plates ordered hot from the bar, plus a glass of Txakoli from the long pour. The first stop on any serious pintxo route.

Chef:
Where: Calle 31 de Agosto 28, Parte Vieja
Price: Pintxos €4–€10 each
Cuisine: Pintxo bar / Basque tavern
Proof point: Operating since 1998; one of the original modern-pintxo bars
Carrillera de ternera and risotto de hongos — the deepest hot-pintxo menu in the Old Town.

Hot pintxos cooked to order, no display counter, slate menu on the wall. The contrast to the cold-pintxo bars and the strongest single stop on the route.

Chef:
Where: Calle Pescadería 11, Parte Vieja
Price: Tortilla €4 a slice; chuletón €60–€80 per kilo
Cuisine: Pintxo bar / classical Basque
Proof point: Operating since 1980; tortilla featured in The New York Times and Bon Appétit
One tortilla service at 13:00 and 20:00 sharp — the most defensible Spanish tortilla in the country.

Bar Néstor cooks two tortillas a day, eight slices each, served at 13:00 and 20:00. Be in line by 12:45 or 19:45. The chuletón is the other order.

Chef: Pablo Loureiro
Where: Fermín Calbetón 20, Parte Vieja
Price: À la carte €55–€85; pintxo bar €5–€10
Cuisine: Modern Basque, AA-equivalent
Proof point: Repi recognition from Repsol Guide 2024; pintxo bar downstairs operates separately
Pablo Loureiro runs the cleanest sit-down menu in the Parte Vieja — book the upstairs dining room.

Two-floor format: pintxo bar at street level, full dining room upstairs. The grilled red mullet and the txangurro are the kitchen's signatures.

By Occasion

Best for First Date

Kokotxa for the cleanest under-€150 one-star in the Old Town. Mirador de Ulia for the view-driven first-date dinner. Amelia by Paulo Airaudo for the two-star tasting that reads serious without overwhelming.

Best for Birthday

Arzak, Akelarre or Martín Berasategui for a milestone. Amelia for a less formal two-star tasting. See the full 2026 list at Best Birthday Restaurants in San Sebastian 2026.

Best for Anniversary

Akelarre — the clifftop dining room ninety metres above the Atlantic is the most romantic setting in the Basque country. Book a window table at 20:30 and stay in the attached Akelarre Relais & Châteaux hotel.

Best for Close a Deal

Martín Berasategui in Lasarte-Oria — the most discreet of the three three-stars, with private dining rooms for groups of six to twelve. The private salon adjacent to the main dining room takes formal business dinners.

Best for Solo Dining

Borda Berri or La Cuchara de San Telmo on a Tuesday — pintxo bars handle solo diners cleanly. Amelia's eight-seat counter works for a single. Elkano in Getaria for the half-portion rodaballo lunch.

Best for Group Dinner (8–16)

Berasategui's private salon. Arzak's upstairs private dining room. The Akelarre hotel restaurant can hold sixteen at a single round table on request. Casa Urola's upstairs room takes ten cleanly.

Best for Lunch Strategy

Every three-star kitchen runs the same tasting menu at lunch and dinner. Lunch is the more relaxed, daylight-driven version — and Elkano's lunch in Getaria is the right way to see the coast. Book Mugaritz lunch only if you want to drive back through afternoon traffic.

Practical Dining FAQ

What is the best restaurant in San Sebastian in 2026?
Editorially, Arzak — Juan Mari and Elena Arzak's three-Michelin-star kitchen above the original 1897 tavern, three stars since 1989, the founding restaurant of the nueva cocina vasca movement. The contemporary three-star with the view is Akelarre under Pedro Subijana on Monte Igueldo. The three-star outside the city is Martín Berasategui in Lasarte-Oria — the chef holds twelve Michelin stars across his global restaurant group.
How far in advance should I book a San Sebastian three-star restaurant?
Martín Berasategui opens 120 days out. Akelarre opens 90 days out via the attached Relais & Châteaux hotel website. Arzak opens 60 days out. Mugaritz opens its annual diary on January 1st for the April–December season and fills three months' worth of evenings within forty-eight hours. The Saturday-evening prime slots fill within two to four hours of each window opening.
What is a pintxo and how do I order it?
A pintxo (Basque for "spike") is a small bar dish served on a slice of bread or a skewer, eaten standing. Order two pintxos and one drink (a Txakoli from the long pour, or a small caña of beer), then move to the next bar. The Basque honour system means you tell the bartender what you ate as you pay. The traditional crawl runs three to five bars over ninety minutes; €40–€60 per person covers the full circuit. Hot pintxos cooked to order are higher quality than the cold display-counter pintxos.
Which pintxo bars are worth the time in the Parte Vieja?
The reference route is Borda Berri (calle Fermín Calbetón) for the kebab de costilla; La Cuchara de San Telmo for the carrillera; Bar Néstor for the tortilla at 13:00 or 20:00 sharp; Atari behind the Santa María church for the tortilla and the foie pintxo. Skip the bars on the main tourist alley that have a display counter of identical room-temperature pintxos — the serious bars cook to order off a chalkboard menu.
Should I book Mugaritz or Arzak for my one big meal in San Sebastian?
Arzak for a classical Michelin three-star experience with conversation-easy pacing and a family-run room. Mugaritz for a thirty-course experimental tasting that reads as performance art. Arzak is the safer recommendation for first-time visitors; Mugaritz is the recommendation when the diner has eaten at El Bulli or Noma and wants the next-generation Spanish experimental kitchen. Both run at €275–€295 plus wine pairing.
What is Txakoli and how should I drink it?
Txakoli is a young, slightly sparkling, dry white wine produced in the Basque country (the Getaria region has the highest-quality D.O.). It is served from a height — the bartender raises the bottle a metre above the glass to aerate the wine into a foam. Drink it cold and fresh; do not age it. The serving glass is a wide tumbler holding about 100ml, refilled three or four times across a meal. Best paired with anchovies, txangurro, or grilled fish.
Is Elkano in Getaria worth the trip from San Sebastian?
Yes — for a serious seafood lunch. Aitor Arregi runs a 1964 family grill house that earned a Michelin star in 2014 and ranked #16 in The World's 50 Best in 2021 for the whole grilled rodaballo. The drive along the coast road takes twenty-five minutes and passes the Getaria Txakoli vineyards. Book lunch rather than dinner — the harbour-facing light is part of the meal.
How do I tip in San Sebastian?
Service is included in the bill by Spanish convention. At a pintxo bar, no tip is expected — round up to the nearest euro at most. At a Michelin restaurant, 5% in cash on the plate for the front-of-house team is the right amount; larger tips are unusual and may be politely returned. Tipping through the card terminal is not standard practice. At a sit-down lunch in a casual restaurant, €1–€2 per person is the right round-up.
Is Spanish or Basque spoken at San Sebastian restaurants?
Both. Castilian Spanish is universal; Euskara (Basque) is the regional language and signs are bilingual. English is widely spoken in the Michelin restaurants and most Parte Vieja pintxo bars. Menus are available in English on request at every starred kitchen. Learning a few Basque thank-yous (eskerrik asko) is appreciated but not expected.

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