The Valencia List
Five editorial picks, ranked by the only filter that matters: why you are dining.
Ricard Camarena
Ricard Camarena's two-star flagship inside a restored Art Déco factory — Valencia's most original kitchen.
El Poblet
Quique Dacosta's Valencia outpost — Luis Valls's two stars in a first-floor salon overlooking the Mercado Central.
Riff
Bernd Knöller's twenty-year-old Michelin star — precise, restrained, German-Mediterranean cooking in a quiet Ruzafa side street.
Sucede
Inside a restored 11th-century Roman wall — Miguel Ángel Mayor's star cooks over archaeology.
Canalla Bistro
Ricard Camarena's casual Ruzafa bistro — global sharing plates at a neighbourhood price.
Best for First Date in Valencia
Intimate, conversation-friendly rooms. Impressive without being intimidating. The tables where first impressions are made.
El Poblet
Quique Dacosta's Valencia outpost — Luis Valls's two stars in a first-floor salon overlooking the Mercado Central.
Riff
Bernd Knöller's twenty-year-old Michelin star — precise, restrained, German-Mediterranean cooking in a quiet Ruzafa side street.
Sucede
Inside a restored 11th-century Roman wall — Miguel Ángel Mayor's star cooks over archaeology.
Best for Business Dinner in Valencia
Power tables, private rooms, considered wine lists. Where the deal gets done.
Expanding business dining coverage this month.
The Top 5 in Valencia
Our editorial ranking. A single punchy line per restaurant. Click through for the full read.
Ricard Camarena
Ricard Camarena's two-star flagship inside a restored Art Déco factory — Valencia's most original kitchen.
El Poblet
Quique Dacosta's Valencia outpost — Luis Valls's two stars in a first-floor salon overlooking the Mercado Central.
Riff
Bernd Knöller's twenty-year-old Michelin star — precise, restrained, German-Mediterranean cooking in a quiet Ruzafa side street.
Sucede
Inside a restored 11th-century Roman wall — Miguel Ángel Mayor's star cooks over archaeology.
Canalla Bistro
Ricard Camarena's casual Ruzafa bistro — global sharing plates at a neighbourhood price.
The Valencia Dining Guide
Valencia is Spain's third city and the birthplace of paella — the rice-and-saffron dish that has been misrepresented internationally for a century but remains, in its authentic Valencian form, one of the great dishes of the western Mediterranean. The city's modern dining scene has been transformed in the past fifteen years by Ricard Camarena and Quique Dacosta, two chefs who have each earned multiple Michelin stars and whose casual outposts (Canalla Bistro, Llisa Negra) have reshaped the city's middle market. The rice fields of the Albufera lagoon, fifteen minutes south, remain the source — and lunch in a rice shack on the water is one of Spain's essential meals.
Beyond the starred kitchens, Valencia rewards visitors who wander: neighbourhood bistros that have been in the same family for three generations, chef-driven rooms opened in the past five years that have quietly outperformed their more publicised peers, and seasonal menus that shift with the local produce calendar in ways rigid tasting circuits cannot. We have ranked the first five restaurants here; additional editorial coverage is added monthly.
The city's dining geography is structured across several distinct districts. El Carmen and Ciutat Vella for historic restaurants and tapas, Ruzafa for the chef-driven modern scene, Eixample for the two-star destinations, the Albufera lagoon (15 min south) for rice shacks and paella at source. Each has its own character — the spine of the guide below follows these divisions.
Neighbourhoods
Reservations & Practical Notes
Service is included (servicio incluido). Small change rounding is standard at tapas bars; 5–10% at fine dining for exceptional service. At starred rooms, €10–20 left with the sommelier is customary.
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.