Head-to-Head · Barcelona
Bar Calders vs Lomo Alto
A Barcelona choice between a 20-euro Sant Antoni vermouth terrace and a dry-aged Eixample steakhouse. Book Calders to graze, Lomo Alto to feast.
The Verdict
This is a Barcelona choice between a neighbourhood vermouth bar and a serious steakhouse. Bar Calders sits at Carrer del Parlament 25 in Sant Antoni, a vermut-and-tapas room with a coveted terrace on Passatge Pere Calders, where a long afternoon of small plates and house vermouth from Reus costs around 20 euros a head. Lomo Alto, on Carrer d'Arago in the Eixample, is the whole-animal, dry-aged steakhouse founded by chef Carles Tejedor, built on Rubia Gallega beef aged in glass cabinets, where dinner climbs into three figures. One is a casual ritual; the other is a meat occasion.
The split is grazing versus feasting. Calders is where you go for olives, anchovies, a tortilla and a second vermouth as the terrace fills on a weekend. Lomo Alto is a two-floor temple to aged beef, with the casual Lomo Bajo downstairs for burgers and the upstairs room dedicated to chuleta cut to order. See both in the Barcelona dining guide.
Scores, Side by Side
| Score | Bar Calders | Lomo Alto |
|---|---|---|
| Food | 7 / 10 | 8 / 10 |
| Atmosphere | 8 / 10 | 7 / 10 |
| Value | 9 / 10 | 6 / 10 |
Which One for Which Occasion
| Occasion | Editorial Pick |
|---|---|
| A casual afternoon vermut | Bar CaldersThe terrace on Passatge Pere Calders is the better spot for a long, low-key Sant Antoni afternoon. |
| A serious steak dinner | Lomo AltoDry-aged Rubia Gallega cut to order is the whole point, and Calders does not pretend to compete on beef. |
| A celebration that needs a bigger table | Lomo AltoThe Eixample dining room reads as the occasion; the bar is a counter-and-terrace affair. |
| Value and local colour | Bar CaldersAround 20 euros buys a full graze, which is hard to beat anywhere central. |
| A meat-lover's pilgrimage | Lomo AltoFew rooms in the city take aged beef as seriously, from the glass ageing cabinets to the cut selection. |
Price Comparison
The gap is real. Bar Calders averages around 20 euros a head for vermouth and a spread of tapas, one of the best-value sit-downs in central Barcelona. Lomo Alto runs far higher once you order the chuleta by weight, with a full dinner landing well into three figures per person, though Lomo Bajo downstairs is the cheaper way in. Weigh them against the best Spanish restaurants worldwide and the top steakhouses worldwide.
How to Book
Bar Calders does not take much booking. The terrace is first-come on weekends and fills fast, so arrive early or aim for a weekday afternoon. Read the Bar Calders review in full before you go.
Lomo Alto books like a restaurant, direct and through the usual platforms, and the upstairs room holds better midweek. Read the Lomo Alto review first. For occasion fit, weigh both against the best Barcelona tables for a first date and a team dinner. For more match-ups see Bar Calders vs Hofmann and Bar Calders vs Gaig, and browse the compare index.