The Pisa List
Five editorial picks, ranked by the only filter that matters: why you are dining.
Osteria dei Cavalieri
The Piazza dei Cavalieri's beloved osteria — the city's most confident traditional kitchen, since 1986.
Numero 11
Lungarno Galileo Galilei's elegant modernist dining room — Pisa's most architecturally sophisticated booking.
Re di Puglia
The San Rossore park steakhouse — Pisa's most-defended bistecca, in a converted 19th-century farm.
La Mescita
Via Cavalca's wine-and-small-plates room — Pisa's most considered casual dinner.
Osteria dei Mille
The university-quarter trattoria — Pisa students' most-defended weeknight dinner.
Best for First Date in Pisa
Intimate, conversation-friendly rooms. Impressive without being intimidating. The tables where first impressions are made.
Osteria dei Cavalieri
The Piazza dei Cavalieri's beloved osteria — the city's most confident traditional kitchen, since 1986.
Numero 11
Lungarno Galileo Galilei's elegant modernist dining room — Pisa's most architecturally sophisticated booking.
Best for Business Dinner in Pisa
Power tables, private rooms, considered wine lists. Where the deal gets done.
Osteria dei Cavalieri
The Piazza dei Cavalieri's beloved osteria — the city's most confident traditional kitchen, since 1986.
Numero 11
Lungarno Galileo Galilei's elegant modernist dining room — Pisa's most architecturally sophisticated booking.
The Top Five in Pisa
Ranked against a single question: if you had one night in Pisa, where would you go?
Osteria dei Cavalieri
The Piazza dei Cavalieri's beloved osteria — the city's most confident traditional kitchen, since 1986.
Numero 11
Lungarno Galileo Galilei's elegant modernist dining room — Pisa's most architecturally sophisticated booking.
Re di Puglia
The San Rossore park steakhouse — Pisa's most-defended bistecca, in a converted 19th-century farm.
La Mescita
Via Cavalca's wine-and-small-plates room — Pisa's most considered casual dinner.
Osteria dei Mille
The university-quarter trattoria — Pisa students' most-defended weeknight dinner.
The Pisa Dining Guide
Pisa sits in the dining shadow of Florence, an hour east on the autostrada — a fact that has paradoxically protected the city's eating culture from the worst tourist trends. The Campo dei Miracoli draws four million visitors a year to the Leaning Tower; almost none of them eat in the Old Town's serious restaurants. The result is a working Italian university city with a confident bistronomic scene, the most concentrated osteria run in central Tuscany along Via San Frediano, and a chef-driven movement that has emerged steadily over the past decade.
The Tuscan coastal pantry is unambiguously Mediterranean — cacciucco-style fish stew, Pisan red mullet from the Tirreno, Marina di Pisa anchovy, Maremmana beef, San Rossore wild boar, Pecorino di Pienza, fagioli zolfini and a precocious olive-oil culture from the Monti Pisani. The wine programmes lean into the Bolgheri D.O.C. (Sassicaia and Ornellaia are local champions), Chianti Classico depth, and a serious Vermentino row from the coast. The university's strong scientific and literary tradition has kept the dining standard unusually disciplined.
Neighbourhoods
Reservations & Practical Notes
Osteria dei Cavalieri and Re di Puglia book one to two weeks ahead. Numero 11 takes same-week reservations. The Marina di Pisa rooms book three weeks ahead in summer. Dress is Italian-formal at the destination kitchens (jacket appreciated), smart casual elsewhere. Lunch sits 12:30–14:30, dinner 19:30–22:30; many kitchens close on Sunday and Monday lunch. Tipping is 5–10%. English is universal in the centre; German and French commonly spoken.
For a deeper editorial read, see our ongoing Editorial coverage — including pieces on the Best Restaurants