# 9 Best Arròs Negre Restaurants in Barcelona

> Where to eat the best arroz negro in Barcelona, the squid-ink black rice. Ranked on historic importance, specialist reputation, and per-venue critic praise, from the 1959 Poble Sec institution to beachfront Barceloneta arrocerías.

- **Canonical URL:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/best-arroz-negro
- **City:** Barcelona, Spain
- **Published:** 2026-06-20
- **Author:** Justin Mota, Guidavera founder
- **Reading time:** 12 min

## Introduction

This is the list I send friends who want the black rice, not just any paella. Arròs negre is the squid-ink version, the one that comes out the colour of espresso and leaves your lips a little dark. It's a different order from paella marinera, and not every good rice house does it justice. The places below all earned a per-venue mention for their black rice specifically, so you're not gambling. The waterfront does most of the heavy lifting here, with Barceloneta and Poblenou holding most of the spots, but the single most-cited black rice in town is hiding inland in Poble Sec at a family house that's been at it since 1959. Expect to pay roughly €20 to €30 for the rice itself, usually for a minimum of two people, and order the allioli alongside, it's part of the dish.

## Key picks at a glance

- **Most cited** — [Elche](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/elche): Poble Sec rice house since 1959, with the reference black rice of small squid and artichokes.
- **Best beachfront** — [Xiringuito Escriba](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/xiringuito-escriba): Repsol Solete on the Poblenou seafront, from the famous Escribà pastry family, with a briny squid-ink black rice.
- **Best classic Barceloneta** — [Can Ros](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/can-ros): Repsol Solete neighbourhood spot with a black rice of cuttlefish, artichokes and cockles at honest prices.
- **Most historic** — [7 Portes](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/7-portes): Serving squid-ink rice on its carta within an institution open since 1836.

## A guide to Arròs Negre in Barcelona

### What is arròs negre, exactly?

Arròs negre (arroz negro in Spanish, literally 'black rice') is a short-grain rice cooked the same way as paella, in a wide shallow pan, but blackened with cuttlefish or squid ink. The ink does two things: it turns the rice a deep brown-black and it adds a briny, mineral depth you don't get from saffron. It's usually built around sepia (cuttlefish) or chipirones (baby squid), sometimes with artichokes or cockles, and it almost always arrives with a spoonful of allioli on the side. The allioli isn't optional garnish, it's the counterpoint to the ink, cutting the richness with raw garlic and oil. As with any serious rice, the real flavour comes from the stock, not the colour.

### How is it different from regular seafood paella?

Both start from the same technique and the same short-grain rice, so the difference is the ink and the flavour direction. Paella marinera leans on saffron and a clear seafood stock, bright and golden. Arròs negre goes the other way: darker, deeper, more savoury, with the cuttlefish or squid ink woven into the stock so the whole pan tastes of it rather than just looking the part. A good version still finishes with socarrat, the caramelised crust at the bottom of the pan, and the grain should stay distinct, never gluey. If a black rice tastes only of colour and not of the sea, the kitchen took a shortcut on the stock.

### Where do you find the best black rice in Barcelona?

The strongholds are the historic rice houses and the beachfront seafood spots. Barceloneta and Poblenou, the old fishing neighbourhoods, have the highest concentration of places that take the dish seriously, with fish coming off the boats and into the pan the same day. Poble Sec has the city's most-cited black rice at a long-running Valencian-Alicantino rice house. A few of these places hold a Repsol Solete, the guide's everyday-favourite mark, which is a useful signal that the rice cookery is being judged and not just served. Wherever you go, black rice is a lunch dish first, cooked to order, so plan for a slow midday meal rather than a quick one.

> "Black rice lives or dies on the stock. Get that right and the squid ink is just colour."

## How we built this list

This list leans on the dish, not the venue's general reputation. We started from every Barcelona restaurant whose arròs negre is specifically named or praised by an editorial source, not just 'a good paella place' with no per-dish mention, and we cut anything that only showed up for paella in general. We then ordered the survivors by what matters most for this dish: historic importance, specialist reputation as a rice house, the depth of source praise for the black rice itself, and then execution. Where a place is a category-definer or carries a Repsol mark, that weighed more than a raw rating. We confirmed every dish and price against each restaurant's current menu, and left out anything we couldn't source. No restaurant pays for placement, and Guidavera has no affiliate or sponsorship relationships with any venue here.

## The 9 best Arròs Negre Restaurants, compared

| # | Restaurant | Neighbourhood | Price | Distinction | Signature dish |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | [Elche](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/elche) | el Poble Sec | €€ | — | Elche's black rice with small squid and artichokes |
| 2 | [Xiringuito Escriba](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/xiringuito-escriba) | el Poblenou | €€ | Repsol Solete | Black Rice or Fideuà with fish, prawn, cuttlefish and clams |
| 3 | [Can Ros](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/can-ros) | la Barceloneta | €€ | Repsol Solete | Rice with squid ink, cuttlefish, artichokes and cockles |
| 4 | [7 Portes](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/7-portes) | Sant Pere, Santa Caterina i la Ribera | €€ | — | Squid ink rice |
| 5 | [Can Fisher](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/can-fisher) | el Poblenou | €€ | Repsol Solete | Black rice with prawns, mussels, herb-gratinated aioli and Padrón peppers |
| 6 | [Maná 75](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/mana-75) | la Barceloneta | €€ | — | Squid and mussels black rice with smooth alioli |
| 7 | [Platja Ca La Nuri](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/platja-ca-la-nuri) | la Barceloneta | €€ | Repsol 1 Sol | Black paella with small scallops and saffron aioli |
| 8 | [Casa Angelita](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/casa-angelita) | Canyelles | €€ | Repsol Solete | Black rice with squid |
| 9 | [Casa Maians](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/casa-maians) | la Barceloneta | €€ | — | — |

## The 9 best Arròs Negre Restaurants in Barcelona

### 1. Elche

*The city's most-cited black rice, since 1959*

- **Neighbourhood:** el Poble Sec
- **Address:** C. Vilà i Vilà, 71, 08004 Barcelona Catalunya
- **Price:** €€
- **Website:** https://www.elcherestaurant.es
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/elche

Elche is the one I lead with, and it's not close. The Iborra family opened it in Poble Sec in 1959 and the kitchen is still anchored in Valencian-Alicantino rice cookery, which is exactly the tradition arròs negre comes from. The house black rice is built with small squid and artichokes, and it's the version most often pointed to when people argue about where the best black rice in Barcelona lives. It's not a beachfront looker and the dining room is unfussy, but the rice is the reference point: deep, savoury, the ink woven through the stock rather than smeared on top. Order it with the allioli and don't rush. Around it sits a full Alicantino rice carta plus the classic squid-and-seafood starters, so a table of two can graze before the pan lands.

**Order:**
- Elche's black rice with small squid and artichokes (€20)

### 2. Xiringuito Escriba

*Beachfront black rice with a Repsol Solete*

- **Neighbourhood:** el Poblenou
- **Address:** Avinguda del Litoral, 62, 08005 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€
- **Distinction:** Repsol Solete
- **Website:** https://www.restaurantsescriba.com/xiringuitoescriba
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/xiringuito-escriba

Xiringuito Escribà is the beachfront pick that actually earns it. It belongs to the Escribà family, Barcelona's famous pastry dynasty, run here by Joan Escribà, and that food-family seriousness shows up in the rice. It holds a Repsol Solete, and the black rice (offered as rice or fideuà, with fish, prawn, cuttlefish and clams) is the order to make: briny, with a mineral edge most beachfront versions never bother to find. The setting is pure Poblenou seafront, terrace tables and sea views, which usually means a tourist trap, but this is the rare spot where the kitchen is doing real work. Book ahead in summer, come at lunch, and start with the Andalusian-style squid while the pan cooks.

**Order:**
- Black Rice or Fideuà with fish, prawn, cuttlefish and clams (€25/pp)

### 3. Can Ros

*Old-school Barceloneta black rice with a Repsol Solete*

- **Neighbourhood:** la Barceloneta
- **Address:** Carrer d'Emília Llorca Martín, 7, 08003 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€
- **Distinction:** Repsol Solete
- **Website:** https://www.canros.cat
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/can-ros

Can Ros is the quiet Barceloneta achiever, a Repsol Solete neighbourhood house where the black rice gets singled out as the thing to order. Jordi Kevin Ballester's kitchen specialises in classic Catalan seafood and the arroces are the heart of it: the squid-ink rice comes with cuttlefish, artichokes and cockles, inky and briny with a textbook socarrat, and it's priced like a neighbourhood lunch rather than a tourist event. The room is no-frills, the service warm, and the fish comes from the daily catch nearby. If you want the classic Barceloneta version of this dish without the beachfront markup, this is where I'd send you. Two people, weekday lunch, ask for the allioli.

**Order:**
- Rice with squid ink, cuttlefish, artichokes and cockles (€22.50)

### 4. 7 Portes

*Squid-ink rice inside an 1836 institution*

- **Neighbourhood:** Sant Pere, Santa Caterina i la Ribera
- **Address:** Passeig d'Isabel II, 14, 08003 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€
- **Website:** https://7portes.com/en
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/7-portes

Seven Portes has been open since 1836, which makes it one of the oldest restaurants in the city and the clearest living link to 19th-century Barcelona dining. Squid-ink rice has long been part of its rice repertoire, and the arroz negro sits on the carta alongside the famous Paella Parellada and a lobster arroz caldoso. It's not the most inventive black rice in town, younger kitchens push harder on stock and socarrat, but the rice is confidently cooked and the dining rooms (marble, mirrors, a piano some evenings) make it feel like a proper occasion. You're coming as much for the room and the lineage as the dish. Book ahead and ask for one of the historic back rooms.

**Order:**
- Squid ink rice (€24)

### 5. Can Fisher

*The most specific black-rice composition on the beachfront*

- **Neighbourhood:** el Poblenou
- **Address:** Av. del Litoral, 64, Sant Martí, 08005 Barcelona, Spain
- **Price:** €€
- **Distinction:** Repsol Solete
- **Website:** https://www.canfisher.com
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/can-fisher

Can Fisher on the Poblenou seafront holds a Repsol Solete and builds an author-driven, seasonal menu where the black rice gets the most detailed treatment of anyone here. It comes with prawns, mussels, a herb-gratinated aioli and Padrón peppers, which is a step beyond the standard ink-and-cuttlefish formula and the reason it keeps getting flagged. The dining room is clean and modern, the terrace generous, and the whole thing feels a world away from the tourist chaos further along the beach. It runs a touch more upmarket than the classic Barceloneta houses, so come when you want the dish dressed up a little rather than served plain.

**Order:**
- Black rice with prawns, mussels, herb-gratinated aioli and Padrón peppers (€26.50)

### 6. Maná 75

*Barceloneta rice specialist with black rice among the most-ordered*

- **Neighbourhood:** la Barceloneta
- **Address:** Passeig de Joan de Borbó, 101, 08039 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€
- **Website:** https://mana75.es
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/mana-75

Maná 75 sits on the Passeig de Joan de Borbó waterfront in Barceloneta and is built around one idea: rice, lots of ways, cooked to order. Fifteen-plus rice and paella varieties rotate through the menu, and the squid-and-mussels black rice with smooth allioli is one of the most-ordered things in the house. It's a reliable, well-priced version of the dish in a spot that takes its arroces seriously, with round tables made for sharing and a generous terrace. If you're a group and want a black rice without trekking inland or paying beachfront-premium money, this is an easy yes. Two-person minimum on the rice, as almost everywhere.

**Order:**
- Squid and mussels black rice with smooth alioli (€23.50)

### 7. Platja Ca La Nuri

*Beachfront black rice with saffron aioli, Repsol Solete*

- **Neighbourhood:** la Barceloneta
- **Address:** Passeig Marítim de la Barceloneta, 55, 08003 Barcelona (La Barceloneta)
- **Price:** €€
- **Distinction:** Repsol 1 Sol
- **Website:** https://www.restaurantcalanuri.com
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/platja-ca-la-nuri

Platja Ca la Nuri is the beach restaurant on the Somorrostro stretch from the Ca la Nuri family, a Repsol Solete spot whose black rice keeps getting named for one detail: the saffron aioli that comes with it. Chef Ignacio Herranz Gardner's kitchen is all Mediterranean simplicity, impeccably fresh seafood and beach-classic technique, and the black paella with small scallops and that saffron allioli is the order to make. It's right on the sand with the highest review volume of any beachfront spot on this list, which tells you it's busy, so book for a summer lunch and accept that you're paying a little for the location. The dish itself holds up.

**Order:**
- Black paella with small scallops and saffron aioli (€24.00)

### 8. Casa Angelita

*Nou Barris neighbourhood arrocería with fishmonger sourcing*

- **Neighbourhood:** Canyelles
- **Address:** Carrer de Lorena, 20, 08042 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€
- **Distinction:** Repsol Solete
- **Website:** https://www.grupoangelita.com/en/casa-angelita
- **Booking:** https://www.grupoangelita.com/en/casa-angelita/book/
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/casa-angelita

Casa Angelita is the outlier that proves the dish doesn't only live on the waterfront. It's a neighbourhood arrocería up in Canyelles, a Repsol Solete spot built on the family's own fishmonger sourcing, which is why the seafood tastes the way it does. The black rice with squid is the in-category order, and it sits among rice dishes for two that run from arroz caldoso de bogavante to octopus rice with paprika. Come for the sailor's tapas first, the floured baby squid and grilled chipirones, then the rice. It's well off the tourist map, prices are fair, and the freshness is the whole point. Worth the trip uphill if you want a black rice locals actually eat.

**Order:**
- Black rice with squid (€19.50)

### 9. Casa Maians

*Barceloneta market kitchen with a daily-changing black rice*

- **Neighbourhood:** la Barceloneta
- **Address:** Carrer de Sant Carles, 28, Barceloneta, 08003 Barcelona, Spain
- **Price:** €€
- **Website:** https://casamaians.com
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/casa-maians

Casa Maians is the Barceloneta market-cooking spot where the rice follows whatever the lonja landed that morning. Roger Soteras runs a cuina de mercat kitchen with a fish blackboard that changes daily, and the black squid-ink rice with octopus is one of the standing reasons people come. Because it's market-driven, exact compositions move with the catch, so check the board rather than expecting a fixed recipe. It's small, it's lunch-focused, and it has the kind of quiet local following that's a better signal than any sign out front. Go midday, look at the blackboard, and let the day's catch decide whether you're having the octopus black rice or something with cuttlefish.

## Honourable mentions

- **[Martínez](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/martinez)** (el Poble Sec) — Repsol Solete spot in Poble Sec whose black rice with baby cuttlefish, confit artichoke and romesco is one of the most composed versions on this page, at €30.
- **[Els Pescadors](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/els-pescadors)** (el Poblenou) — Repsol Sol seafood institution in a quiet Poblenou square, chef Xavi Llanta, where rice cookery is the whole point; a strong call if you want the city's most credentialed rice kitchen.
- **[Barraca](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/barraca)** (la Barceloneta) — Beachfront modern arrocería in Barceloneta with a sea-view terrace and a black rice with baby squid and saffron aioli among its favourites; the setting is the draw.
- **[PÖTSTOT](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/potstot)** (El Raval) — Small modern arrocería in El Raval that puts arròs negre on its rice menu, a low-key inland option away from the waterfront crowds.

## The Arròs Negre scene in Barcelona

Arròs negre coverage in Barcelona is genuinely thinner than paella, which is part of why this list is honest about its length: only a handful of restaurants get a per-venue mention for the black rice specifically. The dish concentrates in the old fishing neighbourhoods, Barceloneta and Poblenou, where seafood arrives daily, plus a couple of inland rice specialists. Most of these kitchens serve black rice alongside a wider rice carta and a full seafood menu, and several hold a Repsol Solete for their rice cookery. Prices for the black rice itself run roughly €20 to €30, usually for a two-person minimum.

## Know before you go

### 1. Order the allioli alongside

Arròs negre is built to be eaten with allioli. Most kitchens bring it automatically, but if it doesn't appear, ask. Stirring a little into the rice cuts the richness of the squid ink and is how locals eat the dish.

### 2. Go at lunch, expect a two-person minimum

Like all Spanish rice, arròs negre is a lunch dish cooked to order, usually for two people minimum. Plan a slow midday meal rather than a quick dinner, and order the rice early since it takes 25 to 40 minutes in the pan.

### 3. Inland is cheaper than the beach

Beachfront spots charge for the sea view. If you want the same dish for less, the inland and neighbourhood houses run cheaper: Casa Angelita in Canyelles at €19.50 and Elche in Poble Sec at €20 undercut most of the waterfront.

### 4. Listen for the socarrat

A faint crackle when the pan lands means a proper caramelised crust at the bottom. Ask the server to scrape and serve it. If the black rice tastes only of colour and not of the sea, the kitchen cut a corner on the stock.

## Glossary

- **Arròs negre** — Catalan for 'black rice', a paella-method short-grain rice blackened with cuttlefish or squid ink. Known as arroz negro in Spanish. Typically made with sepia or baby squid and served with allioli.
- **Tinta de sepia** — Cuttlefish ink, the ingredient that gives arròs negre its dark colour and briny, mineral depth. Squid ink (tinta de calamar) is sometimes used instead or alongside it.
- **Sepia** — Cuttlefish, the most common seafood base for arròs negre, often cut into pieces and cooked into the rice. Chipirones or calamarsets (baby squid) are a frequent alternative or addition.
- **Allioli** — A traditional Catalan emulsion of garlic, olive oil and salt, served as the standard accompaniment to arròs negre. Its raw-garlic sharpness cuts the richness of the squid ink.
- **Socarrat** — The thin caramelised crust of rice at the bottom of the pan, the key quality marker in any paella-method rice, arròs negre included. A good one should produce a faint crackle when the pan arrives.

## Frequently asked questions

### What is arròs negre?

Arròs negre, or arroz negro, is a Catalan and Valencian black rice cooked like paella in a wide shallow pan and blackened with cuttlefish or squid ink. It's usually made with sepia or baby squid, finished with a caramelised socarrat, and served with allioli on the side.

### Where is the best arroz negro in Barcelona?

Elche in Poble Sec, open since 1959, has the city's most-cited arroz negro, made with small squid and artichokes at €20. The beachfront Xiringuito Escribà and Barceloneta's Can Ros, both Repsol Solete spots, are the other top picks for the black rice specifically.

### How much does arroz negro cost in Barcelona?

Arroz negro in Barcelona typically runs €20 to €30 for the rice itself, usually for a two-person minimum. Examples on this list include Casa Angelita at €19.50, Elche at €20, Can Ros at €22.50, Maná 75 at €23.50, and Can Fisher at €26.50.

### What's the difference between arroz negro and paella?

Both use the same short-grain rice and paella technique. Paella marinera is golden, built on saffron and a clear seafood stock, while arroz negro is blackened with cuttlefish or squid ink, giving a darker, brinier, more savoury rice. Arroz negro is almost always served with allioli.

### Why is arroz negro served with allioli?

The allioli, a Catalan garlic-and-oil emulsion, is served alongside arroz negro as a counterpoint to the richness of the squid ink. Stirring or spooning it into the rice cuts the briny depth with raw garlic and oil, and it's considered part of the dish rather than an optional extra.

### Do I need a reservation for arroz negro in Barcelona?

Reservations are recommended, especially for weekend lunch and at beachfront spots like Xiringuito Escribà and Platja Ca la Nuri in summer. Because the rice is cooked to order and takes 25 to 40 minutes, some kitchens ask you to order it when you book. Neighbourhood houses like Can Ros are easier midweek.

### Is arroz negro better at lunch or dinner?

Arroz negro, like all Spanish rice dishes, is traditionally a lunchtime order. Many of Barcelona's best rice houses serve it cooked to order at midday, when the seafood is freshest from the morning catch. For the most authentic experience, book a lunch table and plan a long, relaxed meal.

### Can I get arroz negro for one person in Barcelona?

Most arroz negro is cooked in a shared pan with a two-person minimum, so solo diners should plan ahead. 7 Portes is known for serving individual portions of its rice, making it one of the easier options if you're eating alone and want the squid-ink rice.

### Where can I find arroz negro on the beach in Barcelona?

For beachfront arroz negro, Xiringuito Escribà and Can Fisher on the Poblenou seafront and Platja Ca la Nuri on the Somorrostro stretch all serve well-regarded versions, all three holding a Repsol Solete. Maná 75 on the Barceloneta waterfront is another option.

### Is arroz negro the same as squid ink paella?

Effectively yes. Arroz negre is the squid-ink (or cuttlefish-ink) black rice cooked using the paella method in the same wide pan. Some menus list it as paella negra or rice with squid ink rather than arroz negro, but it's the same dish: short-grain rice blackened with ink and served with allioli.

## About the author

**Justin Mota** — Guidavera founder

Justin Mota is the founder of Guidavera. He has lived in Spain for over 10 years and runs a native AI agency alongside building this platform. Food has always been the way Justin connects with friends, and Guidavera started as the list he kept sending to everyone visiting Barcelona. He built it for himself and his friends first, and now hopes it can transform the way people discover great food experiences everywhere.

More: https://guidavera.com/about

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