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Outdoor seating at Malakeh restaurant in Berlin
Photograph: Malakeh

The 24 best restaurants in Berlin

Looking for a jaw-dropping meal? Jaw-dropping is standard fare here. These are the best restaurants in Berlin right now

Written by
Anna Geary-Meyer
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We don’t want to complain, but it is almost as if there is too much choice for good food in Berlin. Separating the good from the great takes a little digging, but your taste buds will be forever grateful. After all, who wants decent when you can find delicious? The grittier elements of the German capital kept culinary connoisseurs away for a while, but the range and quality of the best restaurants in Berlin show that those days are well and truly over. Here you’ll find a dizzyingly diverse range of food from Thai to Turkish, with plenty of innovative takes on traditional German dishes in there for good measure. Berlin is a complete city on most levels (check out its attractions and nightlife for more evidence), and its restaurants are no different. 

Best restaurants in Berlin

Fancy a side of history with your main? Eins44 serves exquisite fine dining in the industrial surroundings of a former schnapps factory. Proving there’s a place for high-end eating in down-and-dirty Neukölln, the restaurant serves lunch and dinner. Lunches tend towards the classics, while in the evening, you can pick three or up to six courses from flexible menus featuring seasonal dishes such as venison with shiitake mushrooms and prawns with vermouth and yellow beetroot. 

Price: Pricey

  • Restaurants
  • price 4 of 4

Unlike many of Berlin’s fine-dining establishments, this small restaurant prides itself on its informality – despite its place at number 37 on the world’s best restaurants list. The tasting menu might include amuse-bouches of spicy cashews, prawn sashimi and marinated pork belly, moving on to main courses of wagyu beef, lobster, Australian winter truffle and tofu. Everything has a Japanese touch and comes served with blobs, smears or foams of contrasting flavours and colours. Book ahead.

Price: Blowout

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Kumpel & Keule serves something startlingly rare in the German capital: high-quality, regionally sourced German cuisine with genuinely friendly service. It’s worth skipping lunch and going all-out at their Kreuzberg restaurant, whose menu offers modern takes on German and international butchery. Why not try the dry-aged steak menu or the handmade pork sausage? Alternatively, explore the menu’s more surprising side – we’re talking things like rabbit’s kidney with parsnip puree. Finish, if you’re up to it, with a round of homemade schnapps.

Price: Pricey

Duc Ngo, also behind the city’s popular Cocolo Ramen, clearly knows what he’s doing: 893’s hybrid Japanese-Peruvian cuisine results in dishes that, while certainly boundary-pushing, are also just, well, tasty. Highlights include the veal heart skewers, the grilled octopus and the sashimi moriawase plate. Obviously, a bottle of saké for the table is a must.

Price: Pricey

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  • Restaurants
  • German
  • Mitte
  • price 3 of 4

Das Lokal comes from fine heritage: formerly Kantine, a cult pop-up of sorts that had occupied a space earmarked for demolition in David Chipperfield’s architectural office. The seasonal menu changes weekly and might feature starters of pigeon with chestnuts, mussels in broth or asparagus croquette – all have bold, local flavours in abundance. We recommend anything with offal or game in it. 

Price: Pricey

This restaurant’s tagline is ‘vocally local’ – meaning they refuse to import food from beyond the capital and its immediate surroundings. Sadly, that also means no chocolate. However, chef and sommelier Billy Wagner will win you over to the cause: he uses neglected traditional methods to create a seasonally shifting menu packed with bold, contemporary flavours. The frontage is nondescript, visible only to those in the know, and you have to ring a bell before being ushered around a long wooden table with just 28 seats. Booking is, unsurprisingly, essential.

Price: Pricey

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Offering a menu composed entirely of desserts and drinks, concept restaurant Coda earned its first (long-awaited) Michelin star in 2019. Masterminded by chef René Frank, its plates are artfully composed, use only the freshest ingredients, and place an emphasis on the experimental. Come by for the blowout six-course tasting menu that pairs desserts with drinks. Alternatively, head to the bar for a superlative cocktail.

Price: Pricey

  • Restaurants
  • Prenzlauer Berg
  • price 1 of 4

This venerable sausage stand has been under the same family management since 1930. After coming up with a secret recipe for ketchup (which wasn’t available after the Wall was built), it was the first place to offer currywurst in East Berlin and still serves the most famous – and quite possibly the best – version in the city. Expect queues. 

Price: Bargain

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Malakeh’s Syrian cuisine is as mouth-watering as its origin story is heartwarming. Owner Malakeh Jazmati has no formal kitchen training, but once found a following as Syrian TV personality Maliket al-Tabkh (‘the Queen of Cooking’). Driven out of her country by the war, she came to Berlin in 2015 and set up this restaurant with her husband Mohammed. As a poignant reminder of the home she left behind, Malakeh is decked out with pictures of Syrian artists and activists. Food-wise, expect excellent kibbeh in a yoghurt sauce, moreish fried aubergine and some of the city’s freshest tomatoes.

Price: Average

Part of the Grill Royal gourmet empire, Kin Dee has proven a worthy successor to Thai-Berliner institution Edd’s. Head chef and owner Dalad Kambhu strays into similar fusion territory, serving creative fine Thai cuisine with a focus on fresh, high-quality ingredients. With its set menu of small plates, excellent vegetarian options and a well-chosen wine list, Kin Dee has already won over the locals – and was awarded its first Michelin star in 2019. This makes Kambhu the youngest woman ever to receive the honour in Germany. How better to celebrate than with a meal you won’t be forgetting any time soon?

Price: Pricey

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Neukölln’s Barra is part of a wave of fancy-ish wine bars that have opened up in Berlin – swanky enough to feel celebratory but not prohibitively expensive. The quality of the small plates here – flavour highlights include sea bream, pumpkin, chicory and bergamot – match that of the low-intervention wines, largely from France and Germany. The chestnut soup with shiitake mushrooms is a hit, as is the chocolate mousse.

Price: Average

There are plenty of great burgers found in Berlin, but none are quite as iconic as Burgermeister’s. This joint first opened in a former public toilet outside the Schlesisches Tor U-Bahn station and, as a testament to its success, has now expanded to three locations. The menu is refreshingly simple, the cheesy fries as comforting as comfort food gets, and the mouth-watering vegan burger nothing like your token veggie option.

Price: Bargain

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If Berlin had a Chinatown, it would be Charlottenburg’s Kantstrasse. This tiny hole-in-the-wall spot knocks out Taiwanese classics such as noodle soups and gua bao (rice buns filled with duck) as well as more esoteric plates of dressed beef tongue or pigs’ ears sliced finely over rice noodles. It’s almost always full in the evening, but the turnover is fast enough that you’ll find a seat pretty quickly.

Price: Bargain

14. Shaam

The shawarma at Shaam, a popular Syrian spot on Karl-Marx-Straße, may well be the best in Berlin, and the toum is so garlicky that both parties on a date should be required, by law, to dig in. That’s not a criticism; the sauce adds the perfect zing to the shawarma’s heavenly blend of crispy (the bread) and fatty (the meat). There are plenty of lighter, herbivore-friendly options, and everything comes with crunchy fresh veg to dip. Order a few plates to share.

Price: Bargain

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  • Restaurants
  • Global
  • Mitte
  • price 4 of 4

One of the city’s best-known venues, the riverside Grill Royal is a stylish, friendly and exceptionally meaty experience. Not for vegetarians or anyone on a diet or budget, Grill is as brilliant for people-watching as its (stoutly priced) steaks and seafood. The meat is sourced from local suppliers as well as from Argentina, Ireland and Australia. The walls are adorned with rather striking soft-porn art from the owner’s collection. Reservations are essential.

Price: Blowout

  • Restaurants
  • Lebanese
  • Beyond the centre
  • price 1 of 4

People flock from all over the city to sample Azzam’s hummus, made fresh throughout the day. The grilled minced lamb is perfectly seasoned, and the falafel is a crunchy, sesame-speckled delight. You get a lot for your money, too: each dish comes with raw veg, bitter olives, garlicky mayo or tahini sauce, and a basket of stacked pita bread which doubles as cutlery.

Price: Bargain

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OK, there are several worthwhile Grillhähnchen (rotisserie chicken) joints scattered throughout Berlin, but there is something weirdly electrifying about a trip to Risa, which has expanded from its original location in Neukölln to an array of new outlets throughout the city, including one shop in Prenzlauer Berg and another on Charlottenburg’s ritzy Ku’damm. Maybe it’s the fluorescent lighting, or perhaps the decadent range of ways to consume their killer fried chicken (tenders! burgers! wings!). Whatever it is, don’t forget to order a side of moreish sour pickles.

Price: Bargain

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A trip to Rogacki, a German-Polish deli-cum-food market, is like stepping back in time. The draw here is the fish: specialities include bratherings (brined and fried herring) and rollmops (pickled herrings rolled around gherkin). Alongside the excellent, high-quality produce, you’ll find gourmet ‘islands’, at which you can pull up a stool and order fischbrötchen or oysters and wine for much less than at KaDaWe. It’s excellent for people-watching, too.

Price: Bargain

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Neapolitan-style pizza restaurants in Berlin aren't rare, but we’re not complaining. Berlin’s pizza renaissance has upped the quality of the pies by huge margins, and Standard in Prenzlauer Berg is a crowd-pleasing favourite. You can’t go wrong with the Margherita, with its fior di latte mozzarella and San Marzano tomatoes, or the more out-there house white pizza featuring smoked cheese, semi-dried tomatoes, aubergine and olive pesto.

Price: Average

Operating outside the usual Berlin luxury hotel system, Austrian chef Sebastian Frank gained a Michelin star in 2011 at this canal-side restaurant. Enjoy a tasting menu of typical German ingredients transformed through novel techniques and combinations of flavours. The onion, pigeon and kohlrabi, and the sturgeon, rib and celery, are charred, elegant and perfectly plated. The Austrian wine list is also excellent. Booking advised.

Price: Blowout

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Sure, there’s nothing wrong with a quick Thai curry from your cheap and cheerful go-to just around the corner, but it’s worth a ride on the S-Bahn for something special. Everything at Khao Taan, a new venture opened by former lawyer Gaan, feels earnest and fresh, with an emphasis on family-style eating. Everyone at the table shares a fixed set of dishes, meant to guide guests through the flavours, textures and (communal) dining norms of Thai culture. The fish curry is particularly good.

Price: Average

In a fabulous tale of modern romance, Samina Raza and Ben Zviel met in Berghain, fell in love, and went on to open Mrs Robinson’s, one of the city’s most daring and creative kitchens. Working with a broad palette of flavours from chef Ben's home Israel and Asia, not to mention the greater Brandenburg region, this restaurant in northern Prenzlauer Berg is bound to make a splash on the Berlin food scene. The cocktails are gorgeous, too.

Price: Average

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For a taste of old-world decadence that never goes out of style, visit this Nollendorfplatz institution. It’s set in a neo-Renaissance villa built in the 1870s by a wealthy industrialist; red leather banquettes, parquet flooring and the crack of wooden chairs all contribute to the historic Viennese café experience. You could come for a bracing breakfast of herb omelette with feta cheese and spinach or, in the afternoon, a classic apple strudel and a Wiener Melange (a creamy Austrian coffee), all served with a flourish by the charming uniformed waiters.

Price: Average

Germany isn’t exactly known for its bagels, but this Friedrichshain bagel shop-cum-café-cum-bookstore does a fantastic job bringing NY-style bagels and Jewish-American bakery sweets to Berlin. It’s hard to go wrong with anything on the menu here, and the espresso by Bonanza Coffee is the perfect complement. Settle in for an hour or two if the weather’s bad, or pick up some forgotten holiday reading material at the Shakespeare and Sons bookstore.

Price: Bargain

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