Best Restaurants in Uppsala
Five essential tables, ranked by occasion.
$$ 250–500 SEK$$$ 500–900 SEK$$$$ Over 900 SEK
Uppsala’s Top 5
Dryck & Mat
Dryck & Mat — ‘Drink & Food’ — has been described by visitors as the favourite restaurant in Uppsala and one of the top five restaurants in all of Sweden. Chef Niklas Engemar and his colleagues ha...
Villa Anna
Villa Anna occupies a beautiful location near Uppsala Cathedral — the twin-spired medieval church that is the spiritual and architectural centrepiece of the city — and has been recognised by the Swedish White...
Hambergs Fisk
Hambergs Fisk is both a restaurant, a fish shop, and a catering firm — the kind of multi-function seafood institution that only a city with a genuine fish culture can sustain. The family’s operation has been ...
Miss Voon
Miss Voon is Uppsala’s most cosmopolitan fine dining address — a restaurant that takes international cooking as its reference rather than the specifically Scandinavian tradition that defines Dryck & Mat and V...
Fikket
Fikket is the restaurant that Uppsala’s university community — students, academics, and the creative class that accumulates around Scandinavia’s oldest university — has collectively adopted as its...
Dining in Uppsala — The Essential Guide
Sweden’s University City at Table
Uppsala has been the intellectual capital of Sweden since 1477 — when Gustav Vasa re-founded the university that has shaped the country’s academic, cultural, and political life for five centuries. The dining scene reflects this heritage: a restaurant culture built by and for people with high standards and genuine curiosity, where the White Guide recognition of Dryck & Mat as one of Sweden’s five best restaurants represents the apex of an ambition that runs through the whole city’s food culture.
The 40-minute train from Stockholm has made Uppsala increasingly accessible as a dining destination for Stockholm residents who have learned about Dryck & Mat and are willing to make the journey. The combination of the cathedral, the castle, and the riverside makes the city worth visiting independently of the restaurants.
Swedish Wine Culture
Sweden has no wine production of significance, but Swedish wine culture — shaped by the state monopoly system and a highly educated consuming population — is among the most sophisticated in the world. The sommelier at Dryck & Mat operates in this culture at its most refined level: the wine pairings described by visitors as exceeding Michelin restaurant standards reflect decades of accumulated expertise in a country where wine knowledge is taken seriously as an intellectual discipline.
Practical Guide to Dining in Uppsala
Reservations in Uppsala follow standard etiquette. The fine-dining picks above book 2-4 weeks ahead for weekend evenings; mid-tier neighbourhood restaurants accept 1-2 weeks; casual options often allow walk-ins if you arrive at 7pm or earlier. The peak season for Uppsala dining mirrors the city's broader tourism rhythm — weekends and high-season holidays are tighter than mid-week and off-peak. Booking through the restaurant directly is faster than third-party platforms for the venues that maintain their own reservations.
Tipping in Uppsala follows the local custom: 10-15% on the pre-tax total is standard, with 18-20% reserved for genuinely exceptional service. Many fine-dining venues now include a service charge automatically — check the bill before adding more. Card payment is universally accepted at the venues above; cash is welcomed but rarely required.
Best Time to Visit Uppsala for Dining
Uppsala's dining scene operates year-round, but the best windows depend on your goals. Spring (March-May) and autumn (September-October) typically offer the best balance of weather, ingredient seasonality, and reservation availability. Summer brings tourist density at the harbour-side and central restaurants; the locals' favourite venues stay calmer in their own neighbourhoods. Winter is quieter but the heartier seasonal cooking — long-cooked meats, root vegetables, fortified wines — comes into its own.
The major calendar events to plan around: locally-relevant food festivals, a city restaurant week if Uppsala runs one, and the international tourist holidays. The serious dining venues maintain their service quality across all seasons; the mid-tier options can dip during peak tourist periods when the staff is stretched thin.
What Makes Uppsala Different
Every dining city has a structural reason for its restaurant culture, and Uppsala is no exception. The combination of local ingredient sourcing, the city's broader cultural orientation, the international cuisine integration, and the regulatory environment around food and beverage all shape what shows up on the plate. The restaurants we've ranked above are the ones that handle these structural elements with the most care — kitchens that know where their suppliers are, sommeliers who understand the regional wine context, and dining rooms calibrated to the city's actual pace rather than imported templates.
For visitors planning a single dining-driven trip to Uppsala, our recommendation is to balance the splurge tier with the mid-tier neighbourhood discoveries that show what the city actually eats day-to-day. The casual options work for arrival nights, late-evening drinks, or the moments when the conversation matters more than the cuisine.