16 Best Restaurants in Catalonia, Valencia, and the Costa Blanca, Spain

El Celler de Can Roca

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Holder of three Michelin stars since 2009, El Celler de Can Roca, helmed by the Roca brothers—Joan, Josep, and Jordi—is a life-changing culinary experience. Its two tasting menus, ranging from 14 to 22 courses and priced in the €250 range, feature wildly inventive dishes and daring presentations.

Can Sunyer 48, Girona, 17007, Spain
972-222157
Known For
  • considered one of the best restaurants in the world
  • expansive wine list
  • reservations required many months or even a year ahead
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon., Easter and Christmas holidays, and most of Aug., Reservations essential and available via the website only

El Motel

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Just 1½ km (1 mile) north of town, this restaurant—housed within a rather nondescript hotel—has been hailed as the birthplace of modern Catalan cuisine and is a beacon for gourmands. The hyper-local menu changes with the seasons and features such dishes as eggplant with anchovies from Cadaqués, stewed chicken with morels plucked from the Collserola mountains, and a vanilla tart topped with strawberries from nearby Vilafant.

La Seu

$$$ Fodor's choice

Under co-owners Fede and Diana Cervera and chef Xicu Ramón, this distinguished restaurant in the center of town continues to reinvent and deconstruct traditional Valencian cuisine. The setting is an architectural tour de force: a 16th-century town house transformed into a sunlit modern space with an open kitchen and a three-story-high wall sculpted to resemble a billowing white curtain. The midweek menus, available for lunch or dinner, include a selection of creative tapas—minicourses, really, that might include a soup or a salad—and one rice dish or other main course, giving you a good idea of the chef's repertoire at an unbeatable price.

Calle Loreto 59, Dénia, 03700, Spain
966-424478
Known For
  • creative tapas
  • unbeatable midweek menu prices
  • inventive take on Valencian cuisine
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed early Jan.–early Feb. Closed Mon., Credit cards accepted

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Restaurant Pont Vell

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Book in advance for a table on the romantic riverfront terrace and you’ll be rewarded with exceptional views of Besalú’s medieval bridge. The prix-fixe menu changes monthly and offers a wide array of traditional Catalan dishes of superb quality, with seasonal ingredients sourced from the nearby Banyols market.

Can Segura

$$

Half a block in from the town's beach, this restaurant serves house-cooked seafood and upland specialties. The pimientos de piquillos rellenos de brandada (sweet red peppers stuffed with codfish mousse) are first-rate, as are the rice dishes.

El Buen Comer

$$

On the edge of the old town, this relaxed bi-level restaurant serves enticing dishes in plentiful portions. Downstairs, indulge in tapas and simpler dishes, or head to the fancier dining space upstairs for specialties like roast suckling pig, lamb chops, and sea bass baked in rock salt.

La Cuina de Can Simon

$$$$

Elegantly rustic, this restaurant beside Tossa de Mar's medieval walls serves classical Catalan cuisine from the sea, including lobster rice, and the mountains, such as a traditional mixed-meat stew. A tapas tasting menu (€98) lets you sample a bit of everything.

Carrer del Portal 24, Tossa de Mar, 17320, Spain
972-341269
Known For
  • top-notch service
  • seasonal menu
  • welcoming tapa and cava upon entrance
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon.

La Sucursal

$$$$ | El Carmen

This thoroughly modern but comfortable restaurant in the Institut Valencià d'Art Modern is likely to put a serious dent in your budget, but it's unlikely you'll sample better venison carpaccio anywhere else, or partake of any finer an arroz caldoso de bogavante (soupy rice with lobster). The dinner menu is prix-fixe (€70). A great choice for lunch is the informal downstairs eatery, on the museum terrace, where the €12.50 prix-fixe lunch gets you a three-course feast.

La Taberna del Gourmet

$$$

This wine bar and restaurant in the heart of the casco antiguo (old town) earns high marks from locals and international visitors alike. There's a wide selection of montaditos (sandwiches), paella, and fresh seafood tapas—oysters, mussels, razor clams—complemented by a well-chosen list of Spanish wines. 

Les Coques

$$$

If you have time for only one meal in the city, take it at this elegant little restaurant in the heart of historic Tarragona. The menu is bursting with both mountain and Mediterranean fare, and the prix-fixe lunch is a bargain at €19. Start off with the canelons d'auberginia amb ànec (eggplant and duck cannelloni); seafood fans should try the tronc de lluç al forn amb patates (oven-baked hake with potatoes).

Carrer Sant Llorenç 15, Tarragona, 43003, Spain
977-228300
Known For
  • mountain fare
  • good-value prix-fixe lunch
  • good wine list
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon., No dinner Sun.–Thurs.

Maribel Arroceria

$$

So tasty is the paella here that even Valencianos regularly travel out of the city to Maribel Arroceria, off the main drag in El Palmar. Sit surrounded by the rice fields of Albufera Nature Park, either in the contemporary, air-conditioned dining room or outside at pavement tables overlooking the canal. Off the à la carte menu, diners can sample all i pebre anguilas (smoked eels simmered with garlic, paprika, and pepper), the rich and ever popular paella de magret de pato y foie con setas (with duck, foie gras, and wild mushrooms), and, if there’s room, dig into a brownie or cheesecake for dessert.

Mimolet

$$$

Contemporary architecture and cuisine in the old part of Girona make for interesting dining at this sleek, streamlined restaurant. Grilled eel and pepper rice and fideuà with shrimp in a seafood emulsion are typical dishes, and there's a frequently changing five- and 10-course tasting menu.

Pou Rodó 12, Girona, 17004, Spain
972-297973
Known For
  • good wine list
  • local oysters on the half-shell
  • tasting menu of seasonal dishes
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon.

Nou Manolín

$$$$

An Alicante institution, this inviting exposed-brick and wood-lined restaurant is very popular with locals, who come for the excellent-value tapas, market produce, and freshly caught fish, a tribute to the city’s enduring relationship with the sea. 

Oustau de Altea

$$ | Casco Antiguo

In one of the prettiest corners of Altea's old town, this eatery was formerly a cloister and a school. Today the dining room and terrace combine contemporary design gracefully juxtaposed with a rustic setting, and the restaurant is known for serving polished international cuisine with French flair. 

Calle Mayor 5, Altea, 03590, Spain
965-842078
Known For
  • French-style cuisine
  • dishes named after classic films
  • prix-fixe menu (€45) includes bottle of wine
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues. and Feb.–mid-Mar., Reservations essential

Patio de la Fuente

$$$

In an intimate little space with wicker chairs and pale mauve walls, this restaurant in the old town serves a bargain Mediterranean three-course prix fixe dinner, wine included; you can also order à la carte. In summer, dine on the comfortable patio out back. 

Villa Mas

$$$$

Set in a Moderniste villa with a lovely turn-of-the-20th-century zinc bar, this restaurant serves typical Catalan and seasonal Mediterranean dishes like arròs a la cassola (deep-dish rice) with shrimp brought fresh off the boats in Palamos, just up the coast. The terrace is a popular spot just across the road from the beach.