Italy — European Dining Guide

Best Restaurants in Portofino

The pastel-painted Ligurian fishing village that has been the Italian Riviera's most photographed harbour since the 1950s — Belmond's Splendido cluster, Carlo Cracco's outpost, and a Da Vittorio sister run by the three-star Cerea family.

25+Restaurants Targeted
5Editorial Picks Live
7Occasions Covered

The Portofino List

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

Best for First Date in Portofino

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

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Best for Business Dinner in Portofino

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

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The Top Five in Portofino

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

1

DaV Mare

Modern Ligurian Seafood $$$$ Cerea family (Da Vittorio Bergamo, ★★★)

The Cerea family's harbour-front Portofino room — the three-Michelin-star Da Vittorio Bergamo running a Ligurian fish trattoria directly on the Piazzetta.

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2

La Terrazza

Mediterranean Italian $$$$ Belmond Splendido cliff-top flagship

The Splendido's cliff-top terrace — Portofino's most photographed dining setting, with the entire harbour spread out 150 metres below.

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3

Cracco Portofino

Modern Italian $$$$ Carlo Cracco (★★ Milan) — Michelin Guide listed

Carlo Cracco's Piazzetta outpost — the two-Michelin-star Milan chef cooking modern Italian directly on the Portofino harbour.

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4

Da Puny

Classic Ligurian $$$ Portofino institution since 1958

The Piazzetta institution — Portofino's celebrity-favourite Ligurian fish restaurant, in continuous family ownership since 1958.

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5

Da i Gemelli

Ligurian Seafood $$$ Portofino harbour-front institution

The Calata Marconi family seafood institution — the canonical Portofino lunch when Da Puny is booked out and the budget-aware harbour-front pick.

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The Portofino Dining Guide

Portofino sits on a pine-and-olive-clad headland on the eastern flank of the Ligurian Gulf, halfway between Genoa and the Tuscan border, and is — by any reasonable measure — the most photographed fishing harbour in continental Europe. The village holds about 380 year-round residents, the Piazzetta of pastel-painted four-storey houses around the harbour-mouth, and the cluster of Belmond hotels (the cliff-top Splendido, opened in 1901, and the harbour-front Splendido Mare) that make Portofino the Italian Riviera's most institutionally luxurious destination.

The dining is correspondingly serious. The Cerea family — proprietors of the three-Michelin-star Da Vittorio in Bergamo — run DaV Mare at the Splendido Mare; Carlo Cracco (two Michelin stars in Milan) runs Cracco Portofino directly on the Piazzetta; the Belmond Splendido cliff-top hotel runs La Terrazza and the Splendido Grill across two terraces; and Ristorante Puny — a celebrity-favourite institution since 1958 — runs the canonical Ligurian fish lunch directly on the harbour. The village is small enough that all five rooms are within a 10-minute walk.

Neighbourhoods

The Piazzetta — the harbour-front square at the heart of the village — holds the Belmond Splendido Mare, Cracco Portofino, Da Puny and Da i Gemelli. The cliff-top Splendido Hotel sits 150 metres above the harbour on the Castello Brown promontory, accessed by a switch-back road or a 10-minute steep walk. The Punta del Capo lighthouse on the southern tip of the headland holds the canonical sunset walk. The peninsula is functionally car-free above the harbour-front; most hotels arrange porter service.

Reservations & Practical Notes

DaV Mare, La Terrazza and Cracco Portofino must be booked four to six weeks ahead in summer (June–September); two to three weeks shoulder. Da Puny takes phone-only reservations and books two to three days ahead; the famous mid-October closing is around the village's most reliable late-season window. Dress is Riviera-elegant — linen rather than tailored, sandals are acceptable everywhere except La Terrazza which enforces smart-elegant. Tipping is not expected in Italy; a 5–10 per cent round-up is polite for exceptional service.

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