Head-to-Head · Florence

Enoteca Pinchiorri vs Trattoria Mario

Book Enoteca Pinchiorri for Tuscany’s only three-star tasting, Trattoria Mario for cash-only bistecca behind the Mercato Centrale at lunch.

Enoteca Pinchiorri
Santa Croce · Modern Tuscan · Three Michelin stars · Food 9 / Room 9 / Value 6
Pinchiorri full review →
vs
Trattoria Mario
San Lorenzo · Tuscan trattoria · Since 1953 · Food 8 / Room 6 / Value 10
Trattoria Mario full review →

The Verdict

Enoteca Pinchiorri is the only three-Michelin-star restaurant in all of Tuscany, and it has held that rank since 2004. Riccardo Monco cooks it inside a 15th-century palazzo on Via Ghibellina in Santa Croce, alongside founder Annie Féolde, across two tasting menus: the meat-and-seafood Espressione and the vegetarian Madre Terra. The cellar is the other headline, a Wine Spectator Grand Award holder running to hundreds of thousands of bottles. A full dinner lands north of 350 euros before wine. It scores 9 for food, 9 for the room and 6 for value. This is the formal, once-a-trip Florence dinner.

Trattoria Mario is the opposite end of the same city, and just as essential. The Colsi family opened it in 1953 in a narrow room behind the Mercato Centrale in San Lorenzo, and in seventy-three years it has barely changed: lunch only, cash only, no reservations, shared paper-topped tables. The draw is bistecca alla fiorentina, a thick Chianina T-bone grilled rare and sold by weight, plus a daily handwritten menu of pasta and ribollita. A full lunch runs about 15 to 35 euros. It scores 8 for food, 6 for the room and 10 for value.

Scores, Side by Side

ScoreEnoteca PinchiorriTrattoria Mario
Food9 / 108 / 10
Atmosphere9 / 106 / 10
Value6 / 1010 / 10

Which One for Which Occasion

OccasionEditorial Pick
A three-star celebrationEnoteca PinchiorriTuscany’s only three-star room, a 15th-century palazzo and one of the world’s great cellars. The anniversary table.
A real Florentine lunchTrattoria MarioBistecca by weight at a shared table behind the market, cash in hand. This is how the city eats at noon.
A serious wine nightEnoteca PinchiorriThe Grand Award cellar is the reason collectors plan a trip around the table.
A vegetarian fine-dining menuEnoteca PinchiorriMadre Terra is a full vegetarian tasting at three-star level, a rare thing in steak-country Tuscany.
Eating well on a budgetTrattoria MarioA bowl of pasta, a glass of house red and a shared bistecca for the price of a starter at Pinchiorri.

Price and How to Book

The split is the widest in this series. Enoteca Pinchiorri runs its tasting menus north of 350 euros and books direct or through a hotel concierge weeks ahead, jacket expected; the full picture is in the Enoteca Pinchiorri review. Trattoria Mario takes no bookings at all: queue from about 11:45 for the noon opening, bring cash, and expect a shared table, as covered in the Trattoria Mario review. Both sit in our wider Florence dining guide.

For cuisine context, weigh both against the best Italian restaurants worldwide, and for occasion fit line them up with our picks for an anniversary dinner and a first date. More match-ups sit on the compare index.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which is better, Enoteca Pinchiorri or Trattoria Mario?
Neither replaces the other. Enoteca Pinchiorri is Tuscany’s only three-Michelin-star restaurant, a formal tasting-menu palazzo with a world-famous cellar at more than 350 euros a head. Trattoria Mario is the cash-only, no-reservations bistecca institution behind the Mercato Centrale, open for lunch only at about 15 to 35 euros. Book Pinchiorri for a milestone dinner and Mario for the most honest Florentine lunch in the city.
How much do Enoteca Pinchiorri and Trattoria Mario cost?
Enoteca Pinchiorri runs its Espressione and Madre Terra tasting menus north of 350 euros a head before wine, and the cellar can take the bill far higher. Trattoria Mario is a different planet: a plate of pasta, a main and house wine land around 15 to 35 euros, cash only. Pinchiorri is a special-occasion spend; Mario is the best-value serious lunch in Florence.
Does Trattoria Mario take reservations?
No. Trattoria Mario does not take bookings, accepts cash only and opens for lunch from Monday to Saturday. Arrive by about 11:45 for the noon opening to beat the queue, and expect to share a paper-topped table. Order the bistecca alla fiorentina, sold by weight, with a pasta to start. Full details are in the Trattoria Mario review in our Florence guide.
What should I order at Enoteca Pinchiorri and Trattoria Mario?
At Enoteca Pinchiorri choose between the Espressione tasting, which spans meat and seafood, and the vegetarian Madre Terra, and let the sommelier open the cellar. At Trattoria Mario order the bistecca alla fiorentina by weight, grilled rare, with a bowl of pasta or ribollita first and a carafe of house red. Both are Florence at full strength, just at opposite ends of the city’s table.