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Cyprus — European Dining Guide

Best Restaurants in Limassol

The Mediterranean's quietest luxury dining city — where Russian money, French tradition and Cypriot meze share the same marina, and the seafront is paved in granite.

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

The best restaurants in this city for 2026 are led by La Maison Fleurie. Runners-up by editorial rank: Pyxida Fish Tavern, Zero Sei Trattoria, Le Bordeaux Wine Bar, Epsilon Resto Bar.

The Limassol List

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

Best for First Date in Limassol

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

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Best for Business Dinner in Limassol

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

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The Top Five in Limassol

Ranked against a single question: if you had one night in Limassol, where would you go?

1

La Maison Fleurie

Classical French $$$$ Limassol Institution since 1986

Limassol's most beloved French dining room — running on the same family recipe book since 1986, and the address every old-money local proposes at.

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2

Pyxida Fish Tavern

Cypriot Seafood $$$ Limassol Marina Anchor

The marina-side fish tavern that turns the catch of the day into a Cypriot seafood meze worth flying in for.

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3

Zero Sei

Roman Italian $$$ Local Favourite — Roman Trattoria

The Roman trattoria Limassol's Italian residents go to when they want to be reminded what a real cacio e pepe tastes like.

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4

Le Bordeaux

French Wine Bar $$$ 300+ Wine List

A renovated Cypriot townhouse in the Old Town with three hundred wines, a French kitchen, and a counter built for a serious solo dinner.

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5

Epsilon Resto Bar

Modern Mediterranean $$$ Marina Sunset Room

The marina sunset table — Modern Mediterranean cooking with the best westward water view in central Limassol.

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The Limassol Dining Guide

Limassol is the Mediterranean's stealth luxury dining destination — a city that has, in twenty years, gone from a working seaport to a coastal capital with a five-star hotel cluster, a granite-paved marina district, and a quietly serious restaurant scene built for the international residents who keep apartments here. The dining audience is unusual — Russian, Lebanese, Israeli, British and Cypriot in roughly equal measure — and the kitchens have learned to speak all five languages on the plate.

Cuisine here splits two ways. The local restaurants — meze tavernas, fish-grills along the old port — are inexpensive and wildly generous. The international restaurants — French, Italian, Asian, contemporary — sit inside the marina developments and the seafront hotels, charge Mediterranean-luxury prices, and are reservation-only on weekends. Limassol does not yet have a Michelin guide of its own, but the dining standard at the top end matches comparable rooms in Athens or Beirut. La Maison Fleurie has anchored French fine dining since 1986; Pyxida runs the marina seafood scene; Zero Sei brings serious Roman trattoria; the wine programmes are increasingly serious.

Neighbourhoods

Limassol Marina (granite-paved waterfront, the highest concentration of fine dining); the Old Port (working harbour, traditional fish-grills and tavernas); Germasogeia and the Tourist Area (international restaurants attached to the seafront hotels); the Old Town (Saripolou Square for late-night tavernas, Heroes Square for casual); Mouttagiaka and Pyrgos (the wealthy residential coastal strip east, where the destination tables sit).

Reservations & Practical Notes

The marina restaurants want one to two weeks of lead time for weekend dinner, less for weekday lunch. Smart casual is the dress register across most of the international scene; the marina rooms tend toward shirts and trousers. Tipping is not strictly required — a service charge of 10% is standard on the bill — but ten-percent more is generous and welcomed at the top end. The high season runs April to October; many local rooms close Tuesday in winter. The marina is walking-distance from the Carob Mill museum quarter; otherwise budget €8–15 for a taxi from the central hotel cluster.

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 Limassol?
For 2026, our editorial pick is La Maison Fleurie. Editorial runners-up: Pyxida Fish Tavern, Zero Sei Trattoria, Le Bordeaux Wine Bar, Epsilon Resto Bar.
Where should I eat in Limassol tonight?
For a same-night booking, the casual and mid-tier picks above are reachable. Epsilon Resto Bar typically takes walk-ins; Le Bordeaux Wine Bar accepts day-of reservations. The splurge picks (La Maison Fleurie, Pyxida Fish Tavern) need 3–5 weeks notice.
How much does dinner cost in Limassol?
At the splurge picks (La Maison Fleurie, Pyxida Fish Tavern), expect $200–$400 per person without wine — full tasting menus. Mid-tier rooms run $80–$140. Casual but excellent neighborhood spots in Limassol sit at $40–$70.
What is the most expensive restaurant in Limassol?
La Maison Fleurie sits at the top of the Limassol dining list — full tasting menu with wine pairings runs $400+ per person. Other splurge-tier rooms (Pyxida Fish Tavern, Zero Sei Trattoria) cluster at $250–$350.
Which Limassol restaurants have Michelin stars?
The top of our Limassol list is anchored by Michelin-starred and globally-recognized rooms. La Maison Fleurie, Pyxida Fish Tavern and Zero Sei Trattoria are the rooms most frequently cited in international guides.
Do I need a reservation for restaurants in Limassol?
For the splurge and mid-tier picks: yes, always. Splurge tier needs 3–6 weeks notice; mid-tier 1–2 weeks. Casual rooms in Limassol take walk-ins early evening (5:30–6:30pm) and last-minute cancellations open up regularly through the booking apps.
What's the best neighborhood for restaurants in Limassol?
Limassol's strongest dining clusters around the central business district and the high-end residential quarters — that's where the splurge picks (La Maison Fleurie, Pyxida Fish Tavern) sit. Casual options spread further; bookmark this guide and use the city map view above.
Where do locals eat in Limassol?
The casual and mid-tier picks above are local-frequented — fewer tourists, better pricing, and the rooms where Limassol-based diners have weekly tables. The splurge picks attract a mix of locals (anniversary, business) and international visitors.