Venice Restaurants

Dining options in Venice range from the ultra-high end, where jackets and ties are a must, to the very casual. Once staunchly traditional, many restaurants have renovated their menus along with their dining rooms, creating dishes that blend classic Venetian elements with ingredients less common to the lagoon environs.

Mid-range restaurants are often more willing to make the break, offering innovative options while keeping traditional dishes available as mainstays. Restaurants are often quite small with limited seating, so make sure to reserve ahead. It's not uncommon for restaurants to have two seatings per evening, one at 7 and one at 9.

There's no getting around the fact that Venice has more than its share of overpriced, mediocre eateries that prey on tourists. Avoid places with cajoling waiters standing outside, and beware of restaurants that don't display their prices. At the other end of the spectrum, showy menu turistico (tourist menu) boards make offerings clear in a dozen languages, but for the same €15–€20 you'd spend at such places you could do better at a bacaro making a meal of cicchetti (savory snacks).

Budget-conscious travelers might want to take their main meal at lunch, when restaurant prices tend to be lower. Also keep an eye out for cafés and trattorias that offer meals prepared for operai (workers); they’ll have daily specials designed for those who have to eat and run, which anyone is welcome to partake in. Bacari offer lighter fare, usually eaten at the bar (prices are higher if you sit at a table) and wine lists that offer myriad choices by the glass.

Although pizzerias are not hard to find, Venice is not much of a pizza town—standards aren't what they are elsewhere in Italy, and local laws impede the use of wood-burning ovens. Seek out recommended pizzerias, or opt for a bacaro snack instead of a soggy slice of pizza al volo, which is too commonly precooked and reheated. Tramezzini, the triangular white-bread sandwiches served in bars all over Italy, however, are almost an art form in Venice. The bread is white but doesn’t at all resemble the "Wonder" of your youth; many bars here still make their own mayonnaise, and few skimp on the fillings.

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  • 1. Algiubagiò

    $$$ | Cannaregio

    Established in 1950, this restaurant along the quiet, northern outlier of Fondamente Nove has grandstand views of the San Michele island and various menus showcasing seasonal fish, meat, and pasta dishes. The friendly staff also serve ice cream, drinks, and sandwiches, making its modern bar, chic dining rooms, and lagoon-side platform restful environs to pause any time of day.   

    Cannaregio 5039, Venice, Veneto, 30121, Italy
    041-5236084

    Known For

    • Airy respite for lunch or a snack
    • Romantic spot for dinner
    • Lovely waterfront seating with views of the Dolomites

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Tues., Reservations essential
  • 2. Dalla Marisa

    $$ | Cannaregio

    This is the most famous restaurant in Venice for the city's working class; if you can get a table for lunch, you'll eat, without any choice, what Marisa prepares for her local clientele—generally, enormous portions of excellent pasta followed by a hearty roast meat course (frequently game, more infrequently fish), for an inexpensive fixed price. Dinner is a bit more expensive, and you may have some choice, but not much; for the authentic “Marisa experience,” go for lunch. In good weather, you'll have a better chance getting in, because tables are set up along the fondamenta. Reservations aren't really taken, and locals and steady customers are given preference for seating. Don't be put off by the occasionally gruff service—it's part of the scene.

    Fondamenta di San Giobbe 652B, Venice, Veneto, 30171, Italy
    041-720211

    Known For

    • Venetian classics like baccalà mantecato
    • Limited menu choices and cramped inside
    • Genuine local atmosphere and gruff service

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No dinner Sun.–Tues., Reservations essential
  • 3. La Palanca

    $$

    It's all about the views at this classic, informal wine bar–restaurant, where tables perched on the water’s edge are often filled with chatty patrons, particularly at lunchtime. The homemade pasta and fish dishes are highly recommended, and although they don't really serve dinner, a filling selection of cicheti is offered in the evening.

    Isola della Giudecca 448, Giudecca, Veneto, 30133, Italy
    041-5287719

    Known For

    • Sea bass ravioli, grilled seafood, and baccalà
    • Good, affordable wine list
    • Superlative views

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun.
  • 4. Ristorante Favorita

    $$$

    For an appealing selection of old-school Venetian recipes, this elegant restaurant on a peaceful side street—family-run since around 1950—more than delivers. Dishes are heavy on the seafood, and you can’t go wrong with classics like spaghetti allo scoglio (with seafood) or sarde e gamberi in saor (sweet-and-sour shrimp and sardines), served up by the friendly staff.

    Via Francesco Duodo 33, Lido, Veneto, 30126, Italy
    5261626

    Known For

    • Grilled local fish
    • Good choice of wines
    • Pretty outdoor setting

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Mon. No lunch Tues.–Thurs.
  • 5. Adagio Caffè e Wine Bar

    $ | San Polo

    Even if this café/wine bar wasn't at one of the city's busiest intersections, on the corner between the Frari and the Scuola of San Rocco, it would be worth the trip. It's small but with an amazing variety of drinks, cicheti, and pastries, plus an energetic and welcoming atmosphere. There's room for only a very few seats inside, but you'll want to be at a table outside anyway, watching tourists, students, commuters, and locals stream past.

    San Polo 3028, Venice, Veneto, Italy
    320-3881122

    Known For

    • Central location
    • Outdoor dining
    • Bustling energy
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  • 6. CoVino

    $$$$ | Castello

    A charming new concept in Venetian eateries, diminutive CoVino offers a fixed-price, three-course menu, from which you'll choose among several traditionally inspired antipasti, secondi, and desserts with innovative—and satisfying—twists. At this Slow Food presidio, you can watch the cook construct your sliced tuna dressed with Bronte pistachios and eggplant; Bra sausage "imported" from the Piedmont alla Valpolicella with tiny green beans; or perhaps even fresh gazpacho. The wine selection is passionately created; if you're looking to be more adventurous on this front, ask enthusiastic owner Andrea for his take. Cash only, for now anyway.

    Castello 3829a-3829, Venice, Veneto, 30122, Italy
    041-2412705

    Known For

    • Locally sourced ingredients
    • Wine selection
    • Light lunch option for €30

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Tues. and Wed. No lunch Thurs., Reservations essential
  • 7. Harry's Bar

    $$$$ | San Marco

    If you'd like to attend happy hour with the ghosts of Ernest Hemingway, Aristotle Onassis, and Orson Welles, head to Harry's Bar. Despite astronomical prices, undistinguished 1930s-1950s decor, and some rather brash foreign clientele, Harry's is nevertheless a Venetian institution, and is still patronized by those Venetians who want to see and be seen. Many still remember proprietor Arrigo Cipriani's courageous stand— in contrast to the acquiescence and even profiteering of many Venetian hoteliers and bar owners— during the Nazi occupaton; Jewish patrons were still welcome at Harry's. Although you'll have to use your imagination to conjure up images of the bar's former glory, Harry's still boasts Venice's driest martinis, and makes a Bellini according the original recipe (invented at Harry's). The food, while outrageously expensive and conventional, is nevertheless quite good.

    San Marco 3123, Venice, Veneto, 30124, Italy
    041-5285777
  • 8. Imagina Cafè

    $ | Dorsoduro

    This friendly café and art gallery, located between Campo Santa Margherita and Campo San Barnaba, is a great place to stop for a spritz, or even for a light lunch or dinner. The highlights are the freshly made salads, but their panini and tramezzini (sandwiches) are also among the best in the area. The staff prepare a freshly made pasta and a soup every day—this is one of the very few cafés where the pasta is recommended. The well-stocked bar has a good assortment of wines, and the talented bartenders can even whip up a decent American martini. There's also seating outside, where you can watch the locals making their way between the two major campi (squares).

    Dorsoduro 3126, Venice, Veneto, 30123, Italy
    39-041-2410625

    Known For

    • Tasty sandwiches and salads
    • Good wines and cocktails
    • Pleasant outdoor seating
  • 9. Muro Pizzeria con Cucina

    $$$ | Santa Croce

    Don't let the name pizzeria con cucina fool you: Muro offers its mostly youthful clientele a varied menu and uses high-quality ingredients, taking its cue from its more refined sister restaurant, Muro Rialto. Select from excellent Venetian fare and pizza in classic and innovative forms—try the arrotolata amoretesoro (a rolled pizza) with bresaola (thinly sliced air-cured beef), scamorza (a delicately flavored melting cheese made from cow's milk), and radicchio. Chef Francesco adds dimension to the menu with classic Italian selections, along with the piatti unici, a single course fancifully combining elements of first and second courses. A wide selection of beer is on tap.

    Santa Croce 2048, Venice, Veneto, 30124, Italy
    041-5241628

    Known For

    • Piatti unici (one-dish meals)
    • Rolled pizza
    • Beer on tap

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Reservations essential
  • 10. Ostaria al Vecio Pozzo

    $$ | Santa Croce

    This friendly neighborhood restaurant named for the old well nearby offers a wide selection of favorite Italian dishes. The pizza is made with locally milled flour that is left to mature for two days, and the pasta is handmade every day. Recipes use seasonal ingredients; this could be your only chance to try a pizza with pumpkin cream or with truffles in the fall. There are lots of meat and vegetarian dishes, and very little fish.

    Santa Croce 656, Venice, Veneto, 30135, Italy
    041-5242760

    Known For

    • Seasonal pizza toppings like truffle and pumpkin
    • Outdoor dining
    • Local favorite

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun.
  • 11. Osteria Al Fontego

    $$ | Dorsoduro

    This small eatery hides a historic secret: indoors are the visible underground remains of three medieval brick vats that were used for dying cloth, discovered during renovation work years ago. A menu for the whole family varies from cicheti (appetizers) to pasta to dessert. It's a fine place for a coffee or spritz under the umbrellas outside.

    Dorsoduro 3426, Venice, Veneto, 30123, Italy
    39-041-5710877

    Known For

    • Historic past
    • Fine setting for a coffee or spritz
    • Umbrella-covered outdoor seating
  • 12. Osteria al Squero

    $$ | Dorsoduro

    It wasn't long after this lovely little wine bar (not, as its name implies, a restaurant) appeared across from Squero San Trovaso that it became a neighborhood—and citywide—favorite. The Venetian owner has created a personal vision of what a good bar should offer: a variety of sumptuous cicheti, panini, and cheeses to be accompanied by just the right regional wines (ask for his recommendation). You can linger along the fondamenta outdoors, and there are places to perch and even sit inside, in front of a sunny picture window that brings the outside view in.

    Dorsoduro 943/944, Venice, Veneto, 30123, Italy
    335-6007513

    Known For

    • Tasty cicheti
    • Good veggie options
    • Pretty canal views

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun.
  • 13. Osteria Antico Giardinetto

    $$$$ | Santa Croce

    The name refers to the intimate garden where co-owner Larisa will welcome you warmly, once you've wound your way from the Rialto or San Stae down the narrow calle to this romantic locale. (There's an indoor dining room as well, but the garden is covered and heated in winter.) Larisa's husband, Virgilio, mans the kitchen, where he prepares such dishes as sea bass in salt crust and a grilled fish platter. Be sure to try the homemade gnocchi or pasta—perhaps the tagliolini (thin spaghetti) with scallops and artichokes. You'll also find some fine meat options here. Desserts, like the chocolate mousse or crème caramel, are homemade as well. The wine list features some excellent regional selections.

    Santa Croce 2253, Venice, Veneto, 30135, Italy
    041-5240325

    Known For

    • Romantic garden setting
    • Homemade gnocchi
    • Regional wines

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Jan. 4–31
  • 14. Osteria l'Orto dei Mori

    $$$ | Cannaregio

    This small, popular neighborhood osteria—located canal-side, just under the nose of the campo's famous corner statue—specializes in creative versions of classic Italian (but not necessarily Venetian) dishes; don't skip dessert, as the tiramisu wins raves. Dine in the artsy and atmospheric interior or outside in the intimate, echoing square for a truly memorable experience.

    Cannaregio 3386, Venice, Veneto, 30121, Italy
    041-5243677

    Known For

    • Traditional Italian dishes with modern accents
    • Choice local wine selection
    • Buzzing atmosphere with locals and tourists alike

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Tues. and Wed., Reservations essential
  • 15. Pasticceria Bar Targa

    $ | San Polo

    You can see straight into the kitchen that churns out delectable pastries at Targa every morning. Beside the ever-present croissants are Venice's best kipferl (here pronounced kee-fer); their version of the Austrian cookie is reimagined as a flaky croissant filled with marzipan and dusted with powdered sugar. During Carnival, Targa turns out thousands of Venetian frittelle and shards of crisp galani, and they claim to be the only shop that makes mammaluchi, an extraordinary deep-fried cylinder of moist dough loaded with raisins and rolled in sugar. Targa always has a wide choice of cookies and assorted savory little pizzas to munch while sipping your spritz.

    San Polo 1050, Venice, Veneto, 30125, Italy
    39-041-5236048

    Known For

    • Cookies and pastries
    • Frittelle (fritters or fried doughnuts) during Carnevale
    • Pizzas

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Mon.
  • 16. Taverna San Trovaso

    $ | Dorsoduro

    A wide choice of Venetian dishes served in robust portions, economical fixed-price menus, pizzas, and house wine by the glass or pitcher keep this two-floor, no-nonsense, reliable tavern abuzz with young locals and budget-conscious visitors. It's always packed, and table turnover is fast, so it's not for lingering. Not far from the Gallerie dell'Accademia, this is a good place to slip into while sightseeing in Dorsoduro.

    Dorsoduro 1016, Venice, Veneto, 30123, Italy
    39-041-5203703

    Known For

    • Quick service
    • Solid northern Italian food
    • Proximity to Gallerie dell'Accademia
  • 17. Tiziano

    $ | Cannaregio

    A fine variety of excellent tramezzini (sandwiches made of untoasted white bread triangles) lines the display cases at this tavola calda (roughly the Italian equivalent of a cafeteria) on the main thoroughfare from the Rialto to Santi Apostoli; inexpensive salad plates and daily pasta specials are also served. This is a great place for a light meal or snack before a performance at the nearby Teatro Malibran. Whether you choose to sit or stand, it's a handy—and popular—spot for a quick meal or a snack at very modest prices. Service is efficient, if occasionally grumpy.

    Cannaregio 5747, Venice, Veneto, 30121, Italy
    041-5235544

    Known For

    • Quick meals or snacks, especially tramezzini
    • Modest prices
    • Efficient (if occasionally grumpy) service
  • 18. WEnice

    $$ | San Polo

    Ideal for those whose perfect meal is "lots of appetizers," this little place in the fish market is a one-stop shop for tasting many Venetian recipes. It's set up primarily for takeout, but there are a few tables with high stools. Their claim to fame is the hot and crunchy mixed fried fish, but there are also more substantial dishes such as baked tuna and fish lasagna, and a good selection for vegetarians, such as pumpkin in saor (marinated). They close at 3 pm, so plan ahead if you want to get something for dinner. If you're staying in an apartment, consider ordering for delivery at no extra charge.

    San Polo 319, Venice, Veneto, 30125, Italy
    348-3465373

    Known For

    • Fritto misto (fried mixed seafood and vegetables)
    • Bite-size classics
    • Closes at 3 pm

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