{"id":31289,"date":"2023-05-18T15:55:47","date_gmt":"2023-05-18T15:55:47","guid":{"rendered":"\/?p=31289"},"modified":"2025-10-21T21:02:21","modified_gmt":"2025-10-21T21:02:21","slug":"michelin-starred-restaurants-in-italy","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/devourtours.com\/blog\/michelin-starred-restaurants-in-italy\/","title":{"rendered":"Our Top 9 Picks for Michelin-Starred Restaurants in Italy"},"content":{"rendered":"
If you’re keeping score, there are 381 restaurants in Italy that have earned one, two, or three stars from the esteemed tire company, Michelin. That makes Italy the country with the third most Michelin stars on the planet (after France and Japan). Which is really saying something, considering Italian cuisine is also known as “cucina povera<\/em>,” or poor cuisine, thanks to the fact that it’s a very simple fare, using minimal ingredients, and was born in the home. You need not elevate Italian cuisine to make it great. The ingredients speak for themselves. And yet, there are dozens of high-end, elevated Italian eateries from the tip to the top of the boot. If you have your sights (and taste buds) set on a Michelin-worthy meal while in Italy, here are the best of the best.<\/p> With nearly 400 Michelin starred restaurants in Italy, adventurous eaters are spoiled for choice. Photo credit: Urban Gyllström<\/p> Set along the coast in Abruzzo<\/a> where old fishing piers—called trabocchi<\/em>— have been slowly turned into seafood restaurants, Al Metrò has an equally unique foundation: a former pastry shop of the brothers’ family who run the place. Antonio Fossaceca works the front of the room while his brother, Nicola, is in the kitchen.<\/p> As you’d expect from their seaside location, the menu leans heavily on seafood. Al Metrò is staunchly and proudly Abruzzo to the core, as they emphasize here the fact that they mostly use ingredients from the region. The restaurant offers five and ten-course tasting menus.<\/p> Located in the small town of Vitorchiano just outside of the gothic-strew town of Viterbo in northern Lazio, Casa Iozzià is the venue for Sicilian-born chef Lorenzo Iozzià’s elevated south-meets-central-Italian fare. No surprise that seafood dominates Iozzià’s ever-changing menu, plus other ingredients common on the Sicilian table, such as blood oranges, almonds, and bread crumbs. Diners who nab one of the few tables in the dining room have a choice of a six, eight, or 10-course tasting menu.<\/p> An ideal contrast from the city in which it exists, Aria is a tranquil oasis of fine food and wine in the heart of bustling, raucous Naples. Chef Paolo Barrale, originally from Sicily, takes inspiration from his home region and Campania to create elegant five and seven-course tasting menus that change with the season. Seafood dominates but Barrale’s take on lamb—paired with artichoke and wild garlic—is a sensation when it’s on the menu.<\/p> Insider’s Tip:<\/strong> Headed to Napoli? Check out our top four picks for Michelin restaurants in Naples<\/a>!<\/p> You’d be forgiven if you thought Gourmetstube Einhorn<\/a> was in Austria or Germany or even the German-speaking swath of Switzerland. It is, in fact, in Italy – in the province of Bolzano in South Tyrol, to be exact.<\/p> This spectacular two-star stunner is helmed by Chef Peter Girtler, offering up variations on the tasting menu. Diners can choose between four to six courses. If the ingredients here seem extra fresh it’s because they likely came from the restaurant’s farm, just a few miles away. Expect South Tyrol cuisine at its best here, as the Germanic Alps meets Italy to create an exquisite taste on the plate.<\/p> Located in the heart of Rome’s Centro Storico<\/em>, Il Pagliaccio serves up elevated and elegant Italian fare that has influences from all over the planet. Chef Anthony Genovese grew up in France to parents who were from Calabria, so there’s a bit of Gallic verve to his cooking.<\/p> The restaurant offers a four-course tasting menu at lunch and an eight-course and 10-course tasting meal at dinner. In addition to his Italian and French background influencing what comes out of the kitchen, Genovese has used his travels around the world, especially in Asia, to inspire some of his creations. Expect this refined food to look very Italian but have a foreign accent.<\/p> With culinary influences from around the word, the cooking at Il Pagliaccio is incredibly inventive. Photo credit: Ben Koorengevel<\/p> Looking for an unforgettable dinner in Florence? Then Santa Elisabetta, one of the best Michelin-starred restaurants in Italy, is a good bet.<\/p> There are only a few tables at Santa Elisabetta, so if you nab one you can count yourself as very fortunate. Housed in Torre della Pagliazza, a 12-century structure that one time served as a women’s prison, the refined restaurant is the domain of Rocco De Santis. The chef’s experimental Mediterranean cuisine and minimalist style earned him a Michelin star in 2020. A second star came a year later.<\/p> <\/p>
<\/p>One Star Michelin Restaurants in Italy<\/h2>
Al Metrò (San Salvo, Abruzzo)<\/h3>

Casa Iozzià (Vitorchiano, Lazio)<\/h3>
Aria (Naples)<\/h3>

Two Star Michelin Restaurants in Italy<\/h2>
Gourmetstube Einhorn (Bolzano, South Tyrol)<\/h3>
Il Pagliaccio (Rome)<\/h3>
<\/p>Santa Elisabetta (Florence)<\/h3>
Three Star Michelin Restaurants in Italy<\/h2>
La Pergola (Rome)<\/h3>