Skip to content
Devon — Editorial Guide

Best Restaurants in Exeter

Devon's quiet gourmet capital. Michael Caines' Michelin-starred riverside room, pared-back city dining rooms behind the cathedral, and a chef generation that has made south-west England a destination in its own right.

20+Restaurants Targeted
5Editorial Picks Live
7Occasions Covered
At a glance

The best restaurants in Best Restaurants in Exeter 2026 for 2026 are led by Lympstone — modern british. Runners-up by editorial rank: Southernhay, The.

The Exeter List

Five editorial picks, ranked by the only filter that matters: why you are dining.

Best for First Date in Exeter

Intimate, conversation-friendly rooms. Impressive without being intimidating. The tables where first impressions are made.

All First-Date Restaurants →

Best for Business Dinner in Exeter

Power tables, private rooms, considered wine lists. Where the deal gets done.

All Business Restaurants →

The Top 5 in Exeter

Our editorial ranking. A single punchy line per restaurant. Click through for the full read.

1

Lympstone Manor

Modern British ££££ 1 Michelin Star — Michael Caines

Michael Caines' Georgian estate on the Exe estuary — one-starred, vineyard-fringed, and the most unambiguous occasion dinner in the south-west.

View →
2

Stage

Modern European £££ Michelin Guide recommended

A small-format tasting room behind the cathedral — precise, ingredient-led cooking from a kitchen that would be Michelin-starred in a larger city.

View →
3

Southernhay House

Modern British £££ Michelin Guide listed

A Georgian townhouse hotel dining room on the best street in Exeter — garden-led British cooking, proper silver, and the city's prettiest terrace for a long lunch.

View →
4

The Galley

Seafood / Modern British £££

Topsham's estuary-side seafood room — day-boat catch, minimal intervention, and views across the Exe that sell themselves.

View →
5

Harry's Restaurant

Modern British / European ££

Exeter's thirty-year neighbourhood restaurant — steaks, proper brasserie cooking, a private room upstairs, and a staff the regulars know by name.

View →

The Exeter Dining Guide

Exeter has, in the last decade, quietly turned into one of the more interesting small-city dining markets in the United Kingdom. It is not trying to be Bristol. It is not Bath's country-house-hotel orbit. What it has instead is a chef generation that moved to Devon for the sourcing and stayed because the costs worked and the produce was better. Michael Caines' Lympstone Manor is the obvious anchor. Around it, a handful of smaller rooms in the city centre and in the surrounding estuary towns — Stage on Magdalen Road, Southernhay House on the best Georgian terrace in the city, The Galley in Topsham, Harry's in its third decade on Longbrook Street — are cooking at a level that would be talked about nationally if they were in bigger cities.

Geographically, Exeter dining breaks into three zones. The cathedral quarter and Southernhay hold the grown-up city-centre rooms, with Southernhay House as the obvious anchor. The St Leonard's conservation area to the south-east — Magdalen Road foremost — is where the serious small-format cooking lives, with Stage as its flagship. Longbrook Street and the Queen Street run west of the cathedral are the city's neighbourhood dining zone, with Harry's as the long-serving institution. And the estuary towns and villages south and east of Exeter — Topsham, Lympstone, Dawlish, Exmouth — hold the seafood culture and the destination hotel dining rooms. A weekend in Exeter that does not include at least one estuary-town meal is a weekend that missed most of the point.

The produce argument for Devon is real. Day-boat fishing out of Brixham and Teignmouth. Livestock that is genuinely pasture-raised on the West Country's long growing season. A cheese culture that has quietly become the best in the UK outside Neal's Yard's remit. The chefs who moved here moved for that, and the best restaurants — Lympstone above all — treat the sourcing as the menu's first line rather than a footnote.

Neighbourhoods

Cathedral Quarter & Southernhay — the Georgian heart of the city, the grown-up hotel dining room, and the best street in Exeter: Southernhay House. Walkable.

St Leonard's / Magdalen Road — the serious small-format cooking lives here: Stage. A ten-minute walk from the cathedral.

Topsham — the estuary-side former port, twelve minutes south of Exeter by car or rail. The Galley, a couple of serious small hotels.

Lympstone — Michael Caines' Lympstone Manor. Twenty minutes south-east. Destination-only.

Longbrook & Queen Street — Exeter's neighbourhood dining zone. Harry's in its fourth decade, plus local bistros, Thai and Vietnamese rooms worth the walk.

Reservations & Practical Notes

Reservations. Lympstone Manor — six weeks ahead for weekends. Stage — three weeks. Southernhay House and The Galley — one week, earlier for summer. Harry's — two days for a group, next-day often workable for a two-top.

Tipping. 10–12.5% is standard in the UK. Check whether it is already added as service.

Dress. Jacket for Lympstone. Smart casual everywhere else. Exeter is a small city — nothing expects a tie.

Getting around. Central Exeter is walkable. Topsham is a ten-minute train ride from Exeter St Davids. Lympstone is taxi only. Magdalen Road is a ten-minute walk from the cathedral or a very short taxi.

For a deeper editorial read, see our ongoing Editorial coverage — including pieces on the Best Restaurants for Every Occasion, and our Impress Clients and First Date occasion guides.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best restaurant in Exeter?
For 2026, our editorial pick is Lympstone Manor. Editorial runners-up: Southernhay House, The Galley, Stage, Harrys Restaurant.
Where should I eat in Exeter tonight?
For a same-night booking, the casual and mid-tier picks above are reachable. Harrys Restaurant typically takes walk-ins; Stage accepts day-of reservations. Splurge picks (Lympstone Manor, Southernhay House) need 3–5 weeks notice.
How much does dinner cost in Exeter?
Splurge picks (Lympstone Manor, Southernhay House): $200–$400 per person without wine — full tasting menus. Mid-tier rooms $80–$140. Casual but excellent Exeter neighborhood spots: $40–$70.
What is the most expensive restaurant in Exeter?
Lympstone Manor sits at the top — full tasting menu with wine pairings runs $400+ per person. Other splurge-tier rooms (Southernhay House, The Galley) cluster at $250–$350.
Which Exeter restaurants have Michelin stars?
The top of our Exeter list anchors with internationally-recognized rooms. Lympstone Manor, Southernhay House and The Galley are the rooms most frequently cited in Michelin and World's 50 Best.
Do I need a reservation for restaurants in Exeter?
Splurge tier: 3–6 weeks notice. Mid-tier: 1–2 weeks. Casual rooms in Exeter take walk-ins early evening (5:30–6:30pm) and last-minute cancellations open regularly via OpenTable / Resy.
What's the best neighborhood for restaurants in Exeter?
Exeter's strongest dining clusters around the central business district and high-end residential quarters — that's where the splurge picks (Lympstone Manor, Southernhay House) sit. Casual options spread further across the city.
Where do locals eat in Exeter?
The casual and mid-tier picks above are local-frequented — fewer tourists, better pricing, and the rooms where Exeter-based diners have weekly tables. Splurge picks attract a mix of locals and international visitors.