Zermatt is a car-free village of 5,800 residents that swells to 25,000 during the February high season. The dining geography splits in two — the town itself (Bahnhofstrasse and the Hofmattstrasse on either side of the Mattervispa river) handles dinner, and the mountain restaurants reached by chairlift, gondola or ski-from-above handle lunch. Both layers run on Swiss prices: expect to spend 30 per cent more than equivalent rooms in Verbier and 60 per cent more than in St. Moritz on a comparable lunch.
The Top 10, Ranked
1. After Seven
After Seven sits in the basement of Heinz Julen's design hotel and runs a single 18-seat dining room with black walls and an open kitchen. Neubauer — trained at Restaurant Bareiss and Steirereck — cooks a seven-course tasting that draws on Valaisian produce: the Hérens beef tartare, the Alpine arctic char with sea-buckthorn, the dried-meat consommé. Wine pairings emphasise Valais whites (Petite Arvine, Heida, Humagne Blanche). Tuesday–Saturday dinner only.
2. Chez Vrony
Chez Vrony has run as a working farm restaurant since 1900; the Cotting-Julen family still run it. The Walliser Teller (dried Hérens beef, Bagnes cheese, gherkins, rye bread), the Alpine macaroni (Älplermagronen), and the locally-raised lamb with herbs from the slope are the orders. The terrace seats 200; the booking system is online and the calendar drops 60 days ahead.
3. Ristorante Capri
Capri opened in the Mont Cervin Palace's original 1851 wing and earned a Michelin star in 2016 (lost it during the 2020 closure, regained in 2024). Frequente's menu — the tagliolini with white Alba truffle in season, the langoustine carpaccio with Sicilian almond, the suckling pig in Sangiovese — runs as the most consistent fine-dining Italian in the German-speaking Alps. Reservations on the Mont Cervin website.
4. Restaurant Alexandre
Restaurant Alexandre sits inside the Riffelalp Resort & Spa (the highest five-star hotel in Europe) at 2,222 metres above sea level. The kitchen — under Hans-Werner Brunner — cooks modern Swiss with French-Italian influence: the Hérens-beef wellington, the Bagnes cheese soufflé, the lake-Lucerne perch with riesling butter. The hotel runs a private cable car for dinner guests.
5. The Omnia
The Omnia opened in 2006 inside a private cliff-top funicular accessed via a tunnel from Bahnhofstrasse. The dining room — full-width glass facing south to the Matterhorn — runs a modern European menu emphasising Valais ingredients (saffron from Mund, dried meat from Visperterminen, Heida wine from the highest vineyards in Europe). The bar is the best aperitif room in Zermatt.
6. Zum See
Zum See has run since the 1970s as a chalet restaurant inside a small wooded hamlet (the "see" — lake — is a small pond above the chalets). The menu reads more refined than the typical mountain restaurant: the venison with elderberry, the trout with brown butter, the fondue de Comte for two are the orders. Reservations essential — the room seats 80 in the chalet plus 60 on the terrace.
7. Adlerhitta
Adlerhitta is owned by the same Julen family that runs Hotel Julen and Schäferstube and sits at the top of the Sunnegga funicular. The Walliser dried meat platter (Trockenfleisch), the lamb cutlet on rosemary, and the fendant-laced fondue are the menu staples. The terrace catches the morning and afternoon sun. Reservations through the Sunnegga website.
8. Whymper-Stube
Whymper-Stube runs the classic Swiss fondue and raclette repertoire from the basement of the Hotel Monte Rosa. The fondue moitié-moitié (half Gruyère, half Vacherin), the raclette du Valais AOP, and the fondue Chinoise are the orders. The wine list emphasises Valais reds (Cornalin, Humagne Rouge, Syrah du Valais). Reservations on the Monte Rosa website.
9. Le Gitan
Le Gitan has run since 1979 on the main street and remains family-owned. The menu reads as Provence-by-way-of-Valais: the bouillabaisse, the rack of lamb with herbs, the tarte Tatin. The wine list is one of the deepest in Zermatt — 600 bins, with serious depth in Burgundy. Reservations on the restaurant's website; walk-in seats at the bar are typical until 19:30.
10. Myoko
Myoko sits two floors above After Seven inside the Backstage Hotel and runs an omakase counter plus a teppanyaki room. Fish flies in twice weekly from Tsukiji and Toyosu. The 12-piece omakase, the wagyu teppanyaki, and the Wagyu shabu-shabu are the orders. Reservations through the Backstage Hotel.
How to Plan a Zermatt Dining Day
The right Zermatt dining day uses both layers: a serious lunch on the mountain, a serious dinner in town. Book Chez Vrony at 13:00 for the sunlit Findeln terrace, ski to it via the Findeln piste from the Sunnegga side, ski down to town for the chairlift back to your hotel for a sauna and a nap. Then book After Seven or Capri at 19:30 for dinner. The two-layer pattern is what makes Zermatt the strongest ski-resort dining destination in the Alps after Courchevel 1850.
Reservation discipline matters more in Zermatt than in any other Alpine resort. The peak weeks — week 7 and week 8 in February (school holidays), week 14 in April (Easter), the New Year week — sell out the top tier of mountain and town rooms ten weeks ahead. The Zermatt Tourism office runs a centralised reservation portal that covers Chez Vrony, Adlerhitta, Findlerhof and Zum See on a single calendar. After Seven, Capri and the Omnia book direct.
Service is included in the bill — no tip is expected. A 10 per cent cash addition at the top tier is exceptionally generous and remembered. The Valais hospitality industry runs on wages of CHF 30–45 per hour at the fine-dining tier; the Swiss approach to tipping is genuinely "service compris" rather than the American sleight of hand. The mountain restaurants take cards but bring cash for the smaller chalets — connectivity above 2,500m is unreliable and several rooms still run cash-only at peak times.
Zermatt Dining FAQ
See also: Zermatt city guide · St. Moritz dining guide · Verbier guide · Courchevel guide.