The Rovinj List
Five editorial picks, ranked by the only filter that matters: why you are dining.
Agli Amici Rovinj
Croatia's only two-star room — the culinary argument for driving three hours north of Split.
Monte
Chef Đekić's stonewalled courtyard beneath St. Euphemia — the proposal table of the Adriatic.
Cap Aureo
The fifth-floor Grand Park room where the Adriatic view meets Maltese precision — Chef Jeffrey Vella's vegetable-first tasting menu, an Old Town panorama through floor-to-ceiling glass, and Rovinj's most considered fine-dining proposition.
Wine Vault
Monte Mulini's 1,000-bottle cellar restaurant — the wine-driven power dinner of Istria.
La Puntulina
The rocks beneath the Old Town — seafood with the Adriatic literally at your feet.
Best for First Date in Rovinj
Intimate, conversation-friendly rooms. Impressive without being intimidating. The tables where first impressions are made.
Best for Business Dinner in Rovinj
Power tables, private rooms, considered wine lists. Where the deal gets done.
Agli Amici Rovinj
Croatia's only two-star room — the culinary argument for driving three hours north of Split.
Cap Aureo
The fifth-floor Grand Park room where the Adriatic view meets Maltese precision — Chef Jeffrey Vella's vegetable-first tasting menu, an Old Town panorama through floor-to-ceiling glass, and Rovinj's most considered fine-dining proposition.
The Top Five in Rovinj
Ranked against a single question: if you had one night in Rovinj, where would you go?
Agli Amici Rovinj
Croatia's only two-star room — the culinary argument for driving three hours north of Split.
Monte
Chef Đekić's stonewalled courtyard beneath St. Euphemia — the proposal table of the Adriatic.
Cap Aureo
The fifth-floor Grand Park room where Adriatic view meets Maltese precision.
Wine Vault
Monte Mulini's 1,000-bottle cellar restaurant — the wine-driven power dinner of Istria.
La Puntulina
The rocks beneath the Old Town — seafood with the Adriatic literally at your feet.
The Rovinj Dining Guide
Rovinj is the Croatian coastal town that fine dining forgot to miss. In the space of eight years it has gone from a handful of konobas and a Venetian bell tower to a town carrying one of the most concentrated fine-dining scenes per square kilometre in southern Europe — one two-starred room, two one-starred rooms, and a deep cast of seafood restaurants that any Italian coastal town would take seriously.
The pantry is Istrian: white truffle from Motovun in autumn, tuna from the Adriatic, oysters from the Lim channel, Boškarin ox from the Istrian interior, Malvasia from the karst hills, olive oil that competes with Tuscany's and sometimes beats it. Chefs lean into northern-Adriatic idiom — light seafood pasta, crudo, risotto al nero — with the occasional modernist accent. Dinner is late. Wine lists are taken seriously.
Neighbourhoods
Reservations & Practical Notes
Book Agli Amici and Monte two to three months out for peak season (June–September); one month in shoulder season. Cap Aureo opens three weeks out. The konobas of the Old Town take same-week calls. Dress is Mediterranean — a linen shirt and clean shoes works anywhere. Tipping runs 10%. Most kitchens speak Italian as well as Croatian, and the English is uniformly good.
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.