11 Best Restaurants in Bilbao and the Basque Country, Spain

Bihotz

$ | Casco Viejo Fodor's choice

Rest your legs at this third-wave coffeehouse that uses a sleek La Marzocco machine and is furnished with cushy armchairs and floor lamps. There are also small-production vermouths and local craft beers to try alongside soups, sandwiches, and other snacks.

Gaucho

$ Fodor's choice

This legendary tavern (est. 1968), which remains surprisingly calm even during San Fermín, serves some of the city's best tapas. Choose between classics like garlicky mushroom brochettes and jamón-filled croquetas, or spring for more modern creations such as seared goose liver toasts or almond-encrusted morcilla. It opens at 9 am. 

La Mañueta

$ Fodor's choice

In 2022, Spain's oldest churrería—perhaps Pamplona's top culinary attraction—rang in 150 years. In this hole-in-the-wall resembling a medieval foundry, hypnotic whorls of dough fry to crackly perfection in vats of Navarran extra-virgin olive oil set over beechwood flame. La Mañueta keeps bizarre hours: 7–11 am on Sundays in October, 8–11:30 am on the two Saturdays prior to San Fermín, and 6–11 am during San Fermín week.

Calle Mañueta 8, Pamplona, Navarre, Spain
94-822--7627
Known For
  • churros with over a century of history
  • limited hours
  • San Fermín rite of passage
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Aug.–Sept., Nov.–June

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Pentxo

$ | Casco Viejo Fodor's choice

Consistently delicious, shockingly affordable, and unapologetically old-school, Pentxo is the sort of restaurant Bilbaínos like to keep to themselves. Whether you pop in for a pintxo at the bar (the flash-fried antxoas rellenas, or stuffed anchovies, are a must) or come for breakfast or a €16 prix-fixe lunch (opt for whatever seafood main is listed), you'll leave wishing you could be a regular.

Bar La Torre de Anda

$

A little-known culinary gem on the ground floor of the 15th-century Torre de Anda, this down-home wine and cheese bar with three high-top tables is always stocked with smoky Idiazabal, limited-production Rioja Alavesa wines, and tart gildas.

Calle Hedegile 110, Vitoria, Basque Country, Spain
68-889--8988
Known For
  • passionate and knowledgeable owner
  • perfect spot for an aperitivo or midday snack
  • in the heart of the old town

Bergara

$$ | Gros

Winner of many a miniature cuisine award (don't miss the prawn-filled txalupa tartlet), this Gros neighborhood standby offers outside-the-box takes on traditional tapas and pintxos. It also serves more substantial dishes for sit-down meals.

Café Iruña

$

Pamplona's gentry have been flocking to this ornate, French-style café since 1888, but in 1926 Ernest Hemingway made it part of world literary lore in The Sun Also Rises. You can have a drink with a bronze version of the author in his favorite perch at the far end of the bar, or enjoy views of the plaza from a table on the terrace. Service is spotty; grab a beverage and a tapa here, but skip the food.

Goiz Argi

$ | Parte Vieja

The specialty of this tiny bar—and the reason locals flock here in droves—is the garlicky seared-shrimp brochette.

Calle de Fermín Calbetón 4, San Sebastián, Basque Country, 20003, Spain
94-342--5204
Known For
  • juicy shrimp skewers
  • good value
  • cheerful bartenders

Gorriti Taberna

$ | Parte Vieja

Next to the open-air Brecha Market, this traditional little pintxo bar is a well-priced neighborhood standby with a genial old-school staff.

La Ribera

$$ | Casco Viejo

Make a beeline to this gastro bar on the ground floor of the eponymous mercado to satisfy your Basque food cravings after you've ogled all the shimmering fresh fish, plump jamones ibéricos (Iberian hams), and sweet-smelling fruit. The menú del día (price varies) is usually a good deal, and the highbrow pintxos are consistently tasty.

San Marcial

$$ | Centro

Nearly a secret, this quintessential Basque spot has big wooden tables and a monumental bar filled with cazuelitas (small earthenware dishes) and tapas of all kinds. It is in the center of town but tucked away downstairs.

Calle San Marcial 50, San Sebastián, Basque Country, 20003, Spain
94-343--1720
Known For
  • oversize ham-and-cheese croquettes called gavillas
  • unfussy Basque pintxos and sandwiches
  • "hidden" location in the old town off the tourist track
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Tues., Credit cards accepted