Germany — Baden-Württemberg

Stuttgart

Germany’s most under-rated culinary city — five Michelin stars spread across vineyards, baroque palaces, and urban lofts in the shadow of Porsche and Mercedes.

5Restaurants Listed
5Michelin Stars
Baden-WürttembergRegion

Best Restaurants in Stuttgart

Five essential tables, ranked by occasion.

$$$ €60–110$$$$ Over €110

5 Stuttgart
#1 in Stuttgart
5
Contemporary German$$$$
Impress ClientsClose a Deal
Stuttgart’s most creative tasting menu — Alexander Dinter’s seasonally inspired Michelin star operates from a beautifully relaxed urban loft near the Schlossgarten.
Food 9.2Ambience 9.0Value 8.3
Speisemeisterei Stuttgart
#2 in Stuttgart
Speisemeisterei
Contemporary German / Swabian$$$$
BirthdayFirst Date
Michelin-starred in a historic Hohenheim building — Chef Frank Oehler’s innovative kitchen blends Swabian tradition with modern flair in Stuttgart’s most beautiful restaurant setting.
Food 9.0Ambience 9.4Value 8.2
Wielandshöhe Stuttgart
#3 in Stuttgart
Wielandshöhe
German Fine Dining$$$
ProposalImpress Clients
A picturesque hilltop on the Alte Weinsteige — Stuttgart’s most romantic Michelin-starred setting with cooking that values authenticity over showmanship.
Food 8.9Ambience 9.5Value 8.5
Zur Weinsteige Stuttgart
#4 in Stuttgart
Zur Weinsteige
Swabian / German$$$
Team DinnerBirthday
A Michelin star in a rustic room decorated with gold leaf — Zur Weinsteige serves Swabian cooking with the conviction of a restaurant that has been right for decades.
Food 8.8Ambience 8.9Value 8.7
Der Zauberlehrling Stuttgart
#5 in Stuttgart
Der Zauberlehrling
International / Contemporary$$$
First DateSolo Dining
A Michelin star in Stuttgart’s most idiosyncratic room — Der Zauberlehrling invites guests into a microcosm of cultures and styles that is unlike any other restaurant in the city.
Food 8.7Ambience 9.3Value 8.6

Stuttgart’s Top 5

01

5

Restaurant 5, named for its address, has held a Michelin star under Chef Alexander Dinter since 2018, building a reputation as Stuttgart’s most thoughtfully creative kitchen. The dining room — designed with a...

02

Speisemeisterei

Speisemeisterei is set within Schloss Hohenheim — the historic palace complex south of Stuttgart that houses the university agricultural faculty and some of the most beautiful baroque gardens in Baden-Württemb...

03

Wielandshöhe

Wielandshöhe sits on the historic Alte Weinsteige — the old wine road that climbs through the vineyard-covered hills south of Stuttgart city centre — in a position that overlooks the city below and the S...

04

Zur Weinsteige

Zur Weinsteige occupies a dining room that manages the combination of rustic Swabian character and Michelin-starred fine dining with the ease of a restaurant that has never found them contradictory. Gold leaf, exposed st...

05

Der Zauberlehrling

Der Zauberlehrling — ‘The Sorcerer’s Apprentice’ — is Stuttgart’s most visually and culturally distinctive fine dining room: a small Michelin-starred restaurant whose décor comb...

Dining in Stuttgart — The Essential Guide

Germany’s Culinary Secret

Stuttgart is Germany’s most underrated fine dining city. Baden-Württemberg holds more Michelin stars than any German state outside Bavaria, and Stuttgart provides the urban anchor for a concentration of talent that extends from the city’s historic Alte Weinsteige through the baroque palace of Hohenheim to the creative lofts near the Schlossgarten. The city’s wealth — driven by Porsche, Mercedes-Benz, and the Mittelstand industrial base of the surrounding region — provides the client base that serious restaurants require.

The Swabian culinary tradition — spätzle, Mäultaschen, the vineyards of Württemberg, the forest produce of the Swabian Alb — provides the raw material for a kitchen culture that has learned to take its own heritage seriously without becoming nostalgic about it.

Württemberg Wine

Stuttgart sits at the heart of the Württemberg wine region — Germany’s most productive red wine appellation and the source of Trollinger, Lemberger, and the finest Spätburgunder produced outside the Pfalz and Baden. The vineyard-covered hills immediately south of the city centre produce wines of genuine quality that the city’s best restaurants present with appropriate pride.