William Restaurant
$$$$"Dining at Reid's Palace is a declaration — one Michelin star, cliff-top sea views, and 130 years of unhurried grandeur."
The best restaurants in Madeira for 2026 are led by Il Gallo d'Oro. Runners-up by editorial rank: William Restaurant, Ákua by Chef Júlio Pereira, Armazém do Sal, Kampo by Chef Júlio Pereira.
Portugal — Atlantic Islands
All Restaurants — Madeira
$ under $40 · $$ $40–$80 · $$$ $80–$150 · $$$$ $150+ per person
"The Atlantic's most decorated table — two Michelin stars and a Green Star above the cliffs at The Cliff Bay."
"Dining at Reid's Palace is a declaration — one Michelin star, cliff-top sea views, and 130 years of unhurried grandeur."
"The Funchal waterfront's best argument: Chef Júlio Pereira turns Atlantic catches into Michelin-noted plates worth eating alone."
"A salt warehouse transformed into Funchal's most atmospheric dining room — stone walls, live music, and black scabbardfish that earns its legend."
"Dry-aged Madeiran beef, an open kitchen, and a counter worth claiming — Kampo is the island's most compelling gathering place."
$ = under €40 | $$ = €40–75 | $$$ = €75–130 | $$$$ = €130+
When the setting must match the moment
#2 in Madeira — Proposal
William Restaurant
Dining at Belmond Reid's Palace carries the weight of 130 years of romance. The cliff-top terrace at dusk, a Michelin star in the kitchen, and the Atlantic horizon stretching to infinity — William does not merely set a scene, it writes the story for you. Chef Luís Pestana's contemporary Madeiran tasting menu gives you something meaningful to talk about between the questions that matter.
Full profile →#4 in Madeira — Proposal runner-up
Armazém do Sal
The former salt warehouse on Funchal's Rua da Alfândega delivers something different: theatrical intimacy. Exposed stone walls, candlelight, the occasional live fado — and a terrace overlooking the harbour that turns dinner into ceremony. If you want atmosphere over prestige, Armazém do Sal delivers the more emotionally charged room.
Full profile →Impress, close, and be remembered
#1 in Madeira — Impress Clients
Il Gallo d'Oro
Two Michelin stars and a Green Star at The Cliff Bay hotel — this is Madeira's power table. Chef Benoît Sinthon's Terroir Experience tasting menu signals taste, intent, and seriousness. When you want a client to understand that you operate at a different level, the rooster's gilded room delivers that message before the amuse-bouche arrives.
Full profile →#5 in Madeira — Team Dinner
Kampo
Chef Júlio Pereira's open-kitchen concept on Rua do Sabão is built for groups who want to eat well without ceremony. Counter seating around the kitchen creates natural conversation. Sharing the dry-aged beef and seasonal dishes from the ever-changing menu produces the kind of collective experience that teams remember. It earns loyalty without requiring formality.
Full profile →Volcanic soil, Atlantic currents, and an island that eats with conviction
Madeira's dining scene has no business being this sophisticated for an island of 260,000 people. Yet here is a territory with two Michelin stars, a Green Star for sustainability, and a culinary identity as volcanic and layered as the basalt cliffs it sits on. The explanation lies in the island's position — Atlantic crossroads for centuries, home to a bourgeoisie that traded wine with England and brought back European sensibilities, and a kitchen garden climate that produces ingredients most mainland restaurants would queue for.
Funchal is the culinary epicentre. The old town, the harbour zone, and the clifftop hotel strip along Estrada Monumental each offer a distinct dining character. Eat across all three and you understand the island.
The hotel strip along Estrada Monumental concentrates the island's two headline restaurants — Il Gallo d'Oro at The Cliff Bay and William at Belmond Reid's Palace — in a kilometre-long stretch of colonial-era grandeur above the sea. These are destination restaurants that justify the journey to Madeira alone.
Funchal's Zona Velha (Old Town) is where the island eats on its own terms. Rua de Santa Maria, Rua dos Murças, and Rua do Sabão are lined with restaurants that serve serious food in spaces that have not been polished for tourist consumption. Ákua and Kampo both operate here — less theatrical, more honest, and consistently excellent.
The harbour district, running along Rua da Alfândega, offers the island's most atmospheric rooms. Armazém do Sal's former warehouse speaks of Madeira's trading history and delivers food that does justice to its setting. The harbour terrace in the evening, with the fishing boats and the fort lit in gold, is one of the genuinely beautiful dining environments in southern Europe.
Black scabbardfish (espada preta) is Madeira's signature. Caught by line at depths of up to 1,400 metres and served with banana and prawn mousse in the traditional preparation, it sounds unlikely and tastes definitive. Every serious restaurant on the island has a version. Judge a kitchen by this dish.
Espetada — chunks of beef skewered on a laurel branch and grilled over wood — is the other essential. Typically found at hillside restaurants in the north and east of the island, it represents the agricultural Madeira rather than the hotel-strip Madeira. A day trip to a quinta in the hills for espetada and poncha (the local aguardente cocktail) is not optional.
Madeiran wine is underestimated globally but taken seriously locally. The fortified wines — Sercial, Verdelho, Bual, Malmsey — age for decades and pair with almost everything on the island's menus. The dry Sercial with fish. The rich Malmsey with dessert. Every sommelier on the island will educate you if you ask.
Il Gallo d'Oro and William both require advance reservations, particularly from October through April when the island fills with northern Europeans escaping winter. Book four to six weeks ahead for a guaranteed date. Both hotels have concierge teams who can assist with reservations for guests; for non-guests, book directly via the hotel websites or phone.
Ákua, Armazém do Sal, and Kampo accept walk-ins more readily but weekend evenings in high season can see queues. A same-day call to secure a table is always worth making. The restaurants' opening hours tend toward the later end of Portuguese dining culture — dinner before 19:30 is considered early and menus may not be fully operational until 20:00.
Tipping in Madeira follows Portuguese norms — service charges are rarely included in restaurant bills, and 10% is considered generous, 5–8% standard. At Michelin-starred establishments, a 10–15% tip reflects the calibre of service and is genuinely appreciated. Cash tips are preferred. The bill (a conta, se faz favor) will not arrive until requested — signalling your readiness to leave is part of the local dining rhythm that allows for long, unhurried meals.