About Haus Hiltl
In 1898, a small group of German immigrants opened a vegetarian café on Sihlstrasse under the name "Vegetarierheim und Abstinenz-Café" — home of vegetarians and abstainers. The city did not exactly embrace the concept. By 1903 the restaurant was failing and close to bankruptcy. Ambrosius Hiltl, a tailor with a dairy-averse digestive condition that had led him to vegetarianism for his health, took over, brought his fiancée Martha into the business, and against almost every prediction, made it work. Four generations later the restaurant is still on the same block, still run by the same family, and still the gently radical institution it has always been. The Guinness World Records lists it as the oldest vegetarian restaurant on earth.
What it actually is, in 2026, is a masterpiece of Swiss pragmatism dressed as a counter-cultural statement. Two floors of warm wood and brass and marble-topped tables; a ground-floor buffet that runs the length of the room; an à la carte kitchen; an ice-cream parlour; a lounge bar; a cookery school upstairs; and — upstairs again — the original Hiltl Club, which has reinvented itself as one of Zurich's best-kept secrets for late-night dancing. The whole operation is coherent in a way that most restaurants of this scale are not, because every part of it descends from the same hundred-and-twenty-eight-year-old conviction: that vegetarian food, handled properly, is not a limitation — it's an inheritance.
The buffet is the gravitational centre. Well over a hundred dishes, rotated daily: salads of every persuasion, Indian curries (a family inheritance from Margrith Hiltl's studies in Delhi in the 1950s), Middle Eastern mezze, hot Swiss seasonal mains, cold stews, fresh bread, pickles, fermented things, and a dessert station of justifiable renown. You pay by weight, which is the cleverest pricing mechanism in Zurich — everyone self-regulates and the average bill is shockingly reasonable for a city centre experience this substantial.
À la carte, the kitchen cooks with the same seriousness. The Zurich veal substitute — made in-house with soya and root vegetables — has converted a surprising number of skeptics over the decades. The Indian thali is the best non-South-Asian take on the format in Switzerland. Wines are well chosen; desserts are remarkable. The whole place moves briskly between ten in the morning and midnight, and solo diners at the bar feel no less welcomed than groups of twelve at the back.
Why It's Perfect for Solo Dining
Hiltl is one of the rare Zurich restaurants where dining alone feels like an active choice rather than a compromise. The buffet eliminates the slight awkwardness of ordering for one — you choose what you want, weigh it, and sit where you like. The long counter seats at the back of the ground floor face out onto the room and the kitchen, and are set up for the solo lunch hour with newspapers and fast wifi. The upstairs dining room is quieter and better suited to a book or a laptop. The value is remarkable, the menu is endless, and nobody ever looks twice at a single diner in a room built for everyone who turns up.
Why It's Perfect for a Team Dinner
For teams that span cuisines, diets, and preferences, Hiltl is the rare restaurant that makes the dietary-accommodation problem disappear entirely. The buffet handles vegans and gluten-free diners and that colleague who just does not eat aubergine with equal grace. Group bookings of ten to sixty are welcomed; private rooms upstairs are available; and the pricing keeps the bill sane even for substantial parties. If the alternative is eight different Zurich restaurants and a WhatsApp poll, Hiltl is the solution that works on the first try.
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