With a shiny new crop of Michelin stars (retained, admittedly) cementing its status as a serious food city, Dublin’s restaurant scene has never been more exciting. Skip the tourist traps of Temple Bar and the unrelenting crowds of Grafton Street in favour of the city’s best restaurants, and you’ll be met with everything from live-fire cooking to natural wine bars, all which wouldn’t feel out of place in Copenhagen, Catania or Cadiz. But honestly, why do we need to compare the Irish capital’s food scene to any across the Channel? Dublin’s is very much its own thing, and all the better for it.
Anyway, let’s stop chuntering on; you’re here for cold, hard recommendations. So, here’s where to eat in Dublin…
Note, Fenian Street
Ideal for wine enthusiasts who appreciate thoughtful cooking without pretense…
Hiding in plain sight on the edge of Fenian Street, close to Trinity College, Note pulses with a nocturnal energy, as a mix of after-work wine enthusiasts and serious diners fill the wedge-shaped space with a gentle conviviality that’s at odds with the pint chugging down the road at Temple Bar.
The dining room pulls off that tricky balance between buzzy and intimate, with the kind of lighting that makes everyone look their best as it shimmies off the mahogany tables. While many come for the meticulously chosen wine list – featuring everything from grower champagnes to hard-to-find natural wines – the kitchen more than holds its own.
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The menu changes regularly with the seasons (in 2025, we’d be worried if it didn’t) but maintains a comforting bistro sensibility bolstered by careful technique: a starter of chicken liver parfait might come brightened with salted greengage, while a whole butterflied mackerel tartine comes dressed in that gorgeous Sicilian agrodolce tangle of pickled onions, capers, golden sultanas and pine nuts. Winner, winner, fish dinner.
Their eight classic cocktails are executed with the same precision as everything else here, and unlike many of Dublin’s top spots, they’ll welcome you on a Monday evening. The perfect excuse for welcoming a new week with a Bourbon Milk Punch, don’t you think?
Website: notedublin.com
Address: 26 Fenian St, Dublin, D02 FX09, Ireland
Liath, Blackrock Market
Ideal for witnessing culinary artistry in unexpected surroundings…
In what must be one of Dublin’s most surprising fine dining locations, chef Damien Grey’s tiny restaurant hidden within Blackrock Market (Dublin’s oldest and a half hour’s drive from the city centre) delivers tasting menus of remarkable precision and creativity.
The three-hour dining experience at Liath (Irish for ‘Grey’) unfolds like a carefully orchestrated performance, with Grey himself often serving and explaining dishes that might appear on the menu for mere days before disappearing in a puff of smoke. Or, more likely, simply evolving into something new and delicious…
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Grey’s philosophy centres around the five elements of taste, with each dish building upon the last in a carefully considered progression. It’s wonderfully, refreshingly light, and fortunately free from the curse of too much umami (‘too-mami?’) that seems to blight many a contemporary restaurant.
Things are decidedly more measured here, as you’d expect for a tasting menu priced at €180 per person. It’s a significant investment, but the intimate setting (you’ll be one of just a handful of diners) and Grey’s engaging presence make it well worth your time. The two Michelin stars above the door confirm Liath’s many diverse talents. He should’ve called the restaurant ‘50 Shades of Liath’, surely?
Website: liathrestaurant.com
Address: 19A Main St, Blackrock, Dublin, A94 C8Y1, Ireland
Fish Shop, Benburb Street
Ideal for seafood that honours the catch…
Smithfield’s Fish Shop proves that sometimes the simplest concepts yield the most satisfying results. This intimate spot elevates the humble fish supper into something extraordinary, not via unwelcome innovations involving syphoned batter or confit potato terrines, but rather with a daily-changing selection of pristine catches from Irish waters.
Grab a perch (not from the fryer, you fool!) at the snug counter for the full experience – watching the kitchen team expertly prepare everything from delicate raw dishes to their signature beer-battered fish.
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The cooking is precise yet unfussy: plump oysters arrive gleaming, smoked haddock croquettes deliver satisfying crunch against custardy centre, while the main event of perfectly golden whiting, haddock or plaice comes with hand-cut chips that would make a Parisian bistro proud. Scrap that; they would make your local chippy proud – these are the kind of chippy chips that would feel most happily at home turning a sheet of greaseproof translucent.
Pulling you back into the room and reminding you that you’re in a restaurant, the thoughtfully assembled wine list leans toward crisp whites and sherries, though their selection of skin-contact wines offers some intriguing pairings for an increasingly tuned-in Dublin crowd.
Website: fish-shop.ie
Address: 76 Benburb St, Smithfield, Dublin, D07 X3PN, Ireland
Spitalfields, The Coombe
Ideal for pub dining that transcends the genre…
Under the watchful gaze of Dublin’s Four Courts, Spitalfields isn’t claiming to reimagine, reinvent or refine what pub food can be. Instead, they’re simply intent on making it the best it can be. Dare we say, they’ve succeeded in their mission…
The kitchen’s crown jewel is their sharing pie – a magnificent creation of burnished, latticed pastry concealing a rich filling of chicken, leeks, and wild mushrooms, given depth (but somehow also lightened) by madeira and prunes. While the pie justifiably steals headlines, the rest of the menu shows equal finesse: plump hand-dived scallops, a perfectly golden and unfussy pork schnitzel, and a côte de boeuf that hits the white paper tablecloth with an authoritative thunk. One suspects The Devonshire might have spent a few RND trips in the dining room here….
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Come Thursday lunchtime, Spitalfields’ Dublin Coddle – that classic combination of sausage, bacon, and potato that’s had London all in a befuddled fluster recently – draws locals who understand that sometimes tradition needs no improvement. And with that statement still reverberating still catching in the back of our throats, it’s time for another gold-standard Guinness.
Website: spitalfields.ie
Address: 25 The Coombe, Merchants Quay, Dublin 8, D08 YV07, Ireland
Allta, Three Locks Square
Ideal for watching Dublin’s culinary evolution in real time…
Allta has finally found its permanent home in a spacious dockside building, after years of successful pop-ups and festival appearances around the city. The space cleverly divides into two distinct personalities: by day, it’s a bright, airy lunch and coffee spot, but as evening falls, it transforms into something altogether more atmospheric. The industrial-chic cocktail bar pulses with energy from live DJs, while the separate dining room centres around an open kitchen where counter seats offer the best views of the action.
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From the former’s ‘bar food’ menu, Cromane Bay oysters, dressed with lime mignonette and hot sauce, are plump and pristine, whilst the Allta cheeseburger is a decadent number that deploys dry-aged Jersey beef in a truly chunky patty. The restaurant proper’s menu shows off Allta’s more serious side, with chef Niall Davidson’s experience brings with it a big, bruising, protein-led affair that culminates in a whole suckling pig for four to share. Yours for £150.
Whichever way you play it, don’t miss out on the superb cocktails here. Each drink tells its own story of Ireland – from the ‘Skellig Michael’, which celebrates native Irish apples with gin and Stillgarden glas (Ireland’s first green herbal liqueur), to ‘Sherkin’, which pays homage to Ireland’s ancient maritime trade routes with toasted rice vodka and yuzu. Save room, too, for their nostalgic take on soft-serve ice cream for dessert – it’s comfort food elevated to new heights.
Website: allta.ie
Address: 1 Three Locks Square, Grand Canal Dock, Dublin, D02 A5W7, Ireland
Row Wines, Coppinger Row
Ideal for nights when the wine matters as much as the food…
The latest venture from Dublin’s restaurant powerhouse the Bereen brothers demonstrates their continued ability to read the city’s pulse. An evening here flows effortlessly from early evening snacks to full dinner service, accompanied by an all-natural wine list that makes conventional vintages feel positively old hat.
The menu spans around 10 small plates that showcase Irish ingredients through a global, crowd pleasing lens – their Kilkee crab rosti with pepper veloute, and the glazed pork tostadas, both epitomise the style perfectly.
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The space, inspired by Tokyko’s listening bars, boasts a serious sound system spinning choice vinyl, bringing an enveloping, intimate quality to proceedings. The single dessert option – currently a lemon posset with hibiscus poached plum – reliably climaxes in pure pleasure.
Website: bereenbrothers.com
Address: Row , Coppinger Row Unit , City Assembly House, Dublin 2, Ireland
Chapter One By Mickael Viljanen, Parnell Square
Ideal for experiencing Irish fine dining at its absolute peak…
In a stately Georgian dining room on Parnell Square, chef Mickael Viljanen has created something truly special at Chapter One, a restaurant that many insiders and chefs believe to be Ireland’s finest.
Since taking the helm in 2021, the Swedish-born, Finnish-raised chef has propelled the restaurant to two Michelin stars by combining Nordic precision with sublime Irish ingredients. It’s a match made in heaven.
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While the €215 evening tasting menu is an elaborate (and premium) affair, the three-course lunch (€90) offers a more accessible way to experience creations like his signature Mossfield Gouda steamed soufflé with macadamia, truffle and Vin Jaune. Service moves with balletic grace through the elegant space, and the dedicated Irish coffee trolley provides a fittingly theatrical finale to what’s certain to be a memorable meal.
Website: chapteronerestaurant.com
Address: 18-19 Parnell Square N, Rotunda, Dublin 1, D01 T3V8, Ireland
Uno Mas, Aungier Street
Ideal for channeling Spanish energy with Irish produce…
Grand Canal (nope, never gonna use official name) be damned; the counter seats at Uno Mas offer Dublin’s best dinner theatre experience – watching the kitchen team navigate an always full-on service while turning out plate after plate of Spanish-influenced perfection never fails to be impressive.
The menu builds from ‘para picar’ nibbles through to more substantial plates. It’s actual ‘starters’ and ‘mains’ here, rather than tapas, but the delivery demonstrates a keen understanding of both Spanish tradition and Irish ingredients nonetheless.
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The tortilla is pitch perfect, the croquetas the right side of runny, and the daily specials showcase whatever’s best from land or sea. But it’s when Uno Mas takes the brakes off and goes a little off-piste that things really get interesting; a recent porchetta tonnato garnished with beer pickled onions and crispy pig’s ears was one of the most straight-up satisfying, sinful platefuls we’ve had in a long time. And if the burnt basque cheesecake with local rhubarb is on, ignore the suspicion that the dish has been ruined by ubiquity. This one is a gold standard version.
A serious sherry collection and vermouth-forward cocktail list complete the Iberian experience, though the warm hospitality is distinctly Dublin.
Website: unomas.ie
Address: 6 Aungier St, Dublin, D02 WN47, Ireland
BIGFAN, Aungier Street
Ideal for sating the desire for dumplings in style…
Behind a modest shopfront on Aungier Street, BIGFAN delivers on its straightforward premise: carefully crafted Sichuan, Taiwanese and Korean dishes in a bright, brash but strangely intimate setting. The team exercises a degree of restraint with the menu – a focused selection of dumplings, bao, and xiaochi (small eats) that showcases kitchen’s dexterity rather than overwhelming with choice.
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It’s a place where dinner often starts with “we’ll have one of everything” and ends with “should we order those dumplings again?” The space buzzes with chatter and the gentle thud of dumpling baskets hitting tables, while the aroma of star anise and ginger drifts from the open kitchen.
Come with friends, order widely, and don’t skip the ‘Couples Beef’ xiao chi dumplings – packed with honeycomb tripe and tongue, it hums with depth and intrigue, and has you resenting the more MOR dumpling choices you’ve made up to this point. This is food worth getting possessive over – the kind where you’ll find yourself strategically positioning the last dumpling just out of your dining companion’s reach.
Website: bigfan.ie
Address: 16 Aungier St, Dublin, D02 X044, Ireland
Amy Austin, Drury Street Car Park
Ideal for discovering how good car park dining can be…
Trust Dublin to turn a car park entrance into one of its coolest dining destinations. Amy Austin’s industrial-chic setting provides the backdrop for seriously accomplished cooking. Forgive the fish bowl nature of the frontage; the massive pane of glass, exposed concrete and pipework of the space is softened by clever lighting and the warmth emanating from the open kitchen.
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Small plates show global influences executed with precision. The scallop crudo and Moroccan-spiced lamb are standouts, and with nothing on the menu priced much over €20, it’s one of Dublin’s cheaper ‘destination’ restaurants. The wine-on-tap program makes decent vintages more accessible, carrying through that sense of inclusivity to its natural conclusion. The whole enterprise proves that sometimes the best restaurants pop up in the least likely locations.
Website: amyaustin.ie
Address: Unit 1 Drury St, Carpark, Dublin 2, D02 PH26, Ireland
The Bottom Line
These restaurants showcase Dublin’s culinary confidence in full flow. You’ll find them scattered throughout the city’s neighbourhoods – many just a short stroll from Dublin’s free walking tours – the grounds of St. Stephen’s Green, and the weekend bustle of food markets.
Whether you’re seeking technical perfection or soulful cooking, Dublin’s food scene continues to surprise and delight at every turn.