# 7 Best Ramen Restaurants in Barcelona

> The best ramen restaurants in Barcelona, from the queue-out-the-door original in Eixample to a tantanmen specialist in Gracia and a Poblenou ramen bar. Tonkotsu, shoyu, miso and vegan bowls, ranked.

- **Canonical URL:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/best-ramen
- **City:** Barcelona, Spain
- **Published:** 2026-06-20
- **Author:** Justin Mota, Guidavera founder
- **Reading time:** 11 min

## Introduction

This is the short, honest Barcelona ramen list we send to friends. Ramen here is a younger scene than tapas or rice, and the pool of places where the bowl is genuinely the whole point, not one line on a sprawling pan-Asian menu, is smaller than you'd think. So this list stays tight: a handful of dedicated ramen-ya and ramen bars where the broth is the reason to show up. Our top pick is the queue-out-the-door original in Eixample, and from there the map runs through the Gotic, Gracia, and two ramen bars out in Poblenou. Most bowls land under 15 euros, which makes ramen one of the better-value sit-down meals in the city.

## A guide to Ramen in Barcelona

### What makes a good bowl of ramen?

It's the broth. A real bowl lives or dies on the stock, and the good ramen-ya simmer theirs for hours: Ramen-ya Hiro and Tonkotsu both run their broths for around ten hours to pull collagen and depth out of the bones. The four broad styles you'll see on Barcelona menus are tonkotsu (a creamy, milky pork-bone broth), shoyu (lighter, soy-based), miso (deeper, fermented), and shio (salt-based and clean). Then come the toppings: chashu (braised pork belly), a soft marinated egg, bamboo shoots, nori, spring onion, and corn. The noodles matter too, and a few places like Ryu Ramen build their bowls around homemade ramen. Tantanmen is the spicy outlier, a sesame-and-chilli broth with minced pork that a couple of these kitchens treat as a signature.

### What's the difference between a ramen-ya and a pan-Asian spot with ramen?

Plenty of Japanese and pan-Asian restaurants in Barcelona list a ramen, but that doesn't make them a ramen-ya. A dedicated ramen-ya builds its identity around the bowl: the broth is the headline, the menu is short, and the sides (gyoza, karaage, edamame, a rice bowl) exist to support the soup. A pan-Asian kitchen, by contrast, runs ramen alongside woks, poke, pad thai and curries, and the ramen is one option among many. Both can be good, but if you want the real thing, look for the places where the noodles are the whole reason the kitchen exists. Counter ramen bars like Noru, with a tight rotating list of bowls, are about as pure as it gets.

### Is there vegan and vegetarian ramen in Barcelona?

Yes, and it's easier to find than it used to be. The trick with plant-based ramen is the broth: a proper vegan bowl builds its stock from kombu seaweed, dried shiitake mushrooms and vegetables rather than meat or fish, so it still has the savoury, umami-rich depth that makes ramen worth eating. Several places on this list run a dedicated vegetable or vegan bowl: Ramen-ya Hiro does a vegetal shoyu on a kombu and dried-shiitake broth, Koku Kitchen runs a full set of vegan and vegetarian ramen including a gluten-free option, and Ryu Ramen and Tonkotsu both keep a vegetable bowl on the menu. Always check the broth base when you order, since a tonkotsu base is never vegetarian.

> "A real bowl of ramen lives or dies on the broth, and the good ones simmer theirs for hours."

## How we built this list

We built this list the slow way, working through the city's dedicated ramen-ya and ramen bars and going back to the ones worth going back to. The pool is genuinely shallow once you strip out the sushi spots and pan-Asian kitchens that merely list a ramen, so the bar for inclusion is simple: ramen has to be the whole point, the broth has to carry the bowl, and the place has to be one we'd actually send a friend to. We cross-checked our own eating against the local writers, neighbours and Japan-obsessed friends we trust most on this stuff. No restaurant pays for placement, and Guidavera has no affiliate or sponsorship relationship with any venue here. If a place made this list, it earned it in the bowl.

## The 7 best Ramen Restaurants, compared

| # | Restaurant | Neighbourhood | Price | Distinction | Signature dish |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | [Ramen-ya Hiro](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/ramen-ya-hiro) | la Dreta de l'Eixample | € | — | — |
| 2 | [Koku Kitchen](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/koku-kitchen) | el Barri Gòtic | € | — | — |
| 3 | [Shoronpo](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/fan-shoronpo) | la Vila de Gràcia | € | — | — |
| 4 | [Kanada-Ya](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/kanada-ya) | l'Antiga Esquerra de l'Eixample | €€ | Repsol Solete | — |
| 5 | [Ryu Ramen](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/ryu-ramen) | El Poblenou | € | — | Tonkotsu |
| 6 | [Noru Bar](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/noru-bar) | El Poblenou | € | — | — |
| 7 | [Tonkotsu](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/tonkotsu) | la Dreta de l'Eixample | € | — | Tonkotsu ramen |

## The 7 best Ramen Restaurants in Barcelona

### 1. Ramen-ya Hiro

*The queue-out-the-door ramen-ya everyone names first*

- **Neighbourhood:** la Dreta de l'Eixample
- **Address:** Carrer de Girona, 164, Local 2, 08037 Barcelona, Spain
- **Price:** €
- **Website:** https://www.ramenyahiro.com
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/ramen-ya-hiro

If you ask people in Barcelona where to eat ramen, this is the name that comes up first, and for good reason. Ramen-ya Hiro is a proper ramen-ya in Eixample built entirely around the bowl: the kitchen simmers its broth for around ten hours, and it shows in the depth. The menu is short and confident, three classic broths (shoyu, miso, and a seafood marisco) plus a vegetal shoyu on a kombu and dried-shiitake stock for the plant-based crowd. The shoyu and miso bowls come loaded with chashu, spring onion and seaweed, and there's a cold tsukemen with a soy-and-yuzu dipping broth when the weather turns. Sides are simple and right: homemade gyoza, edamame, a chashu rice bowl. The room is small and walk-ins can mean a wait, so expect to queue, especially at lunch. It moves fast and it's worth it.

### 2. Koku Kitchen

*The accessible city-centre standard-bearer*

- **Neighbourhood:** el Barri Gòtic
- **Address:** Carrer del Comerç, 29, 08003 Barcelona, Spain
- **Price:** €
- **Website:** https://kokukitchen.com
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/koku-kitchen

Koku Kitchen is the easy, central go-to, the place to send someone who wants a solid bowl without trekking across town. The ramen list is the longest here by far and the most inclusive: classic shoyu and miso pork bowls, a spicier one, a tsukemen, and a genuinely deep bench of plant-based options including vegan curry, vegan spicy, a classic vegan bowl, and a gluten-free ramen. That makes it one of the better picks if your table has a mix of diets. The kitchen leans creative, so alongside the ramen you'll find wagyu gyoza, bao buns, Korean fried chicken and a few cocktails, but the bowls hold their own. Most ramen sits around 14 to 15 euros. There are a few branches around the centre, which helps when one has a wait.

### 3. Shoronpo

*The tantanmen and soup-dumpling specialist locals name first*

- **Neighbourhood:** la Vila de Gràcia
- **Address:** Carrer del Dr. Rizal, 20, 08006 Barcelona, Spain
- **Price:** €
- **Website:** https://shoronpobcn.myrestoo.net/en/reservar
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/fan-shoronpo

Shoronpo is the Gracia spot that the people who really care about this stuff tend to mention before anywhere else. It's a two-trick kitchen and both tricks are great: shoronpo, the Japanese name for xiaolongbao soup dumplings, folded and steamed to order with fillings that run from pork to foie gras to jamon iberico, and ramen, where the signature is a tantanmen on a thick sesame-and-chilli broth with minced pork. That tantanmen is the reason to come if you like a bit of heat and a broth with real body. The room is tiny and it gets busy, so plan around a wait. Order both the dumplings and a bowl if you can, since splitting them is the whole point of the place.

### 4. Kanada-Ya

*Classic tonkotsu, the classicist's reference*

- **Neighbourhood:** l'Antiga Esquerra de l'Eixample
- **Address:** Carrer de Valencia, 240, 08007 Barcelona, Spain
- **Price:** €€
- **Distinction:** Repsol Solete
- **Website:** https://kanadaya-m.eu.restosuite.ai
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/kanada-ya

Kanada-Ya is the tonkotsu reference point, an Eixample operation with a serious focus on creamy pork-bone broth. The headline is exactly that: an 18-hour tonkotsu with hand-made noodles, chashu, nori, spring onion and mushrooms, the kind of milky, collagen-rich bowl that made the style famous. Beyond the classic, the kitchen pushes a few interesting riffs, a chicken paitan, a truffle ramen finished with truffle paste and white truffle oil, a spicy yuzu bowl, and a cold tomato-based gazpacho ramen in the warmer months. The lunch set, a ramen plus two sides and a drink, is one of the better midday deals on this list. It's a touch pricier than the neighbourhood spots, but the broth justifies it.

### 5. Ryu Ramen

*Poblenou ramen-ya built on homemade ramen*

- **Neighbourhood:** El Poblenou
- **Address:** Carrer de Sancho de Ávila, 178, 08018 Barcelona, Spain
- **Price:** €
- **Website:** https://ryu-ramen-barcelona.es/
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/ryu-ramen

Ryu Ramen is the dependable Poblenou neighbourhood ramen-ya, the kind of place locals fold into their week rather than make a pilgrimage to. The menu centres on homemade ramen and runs a wider range of broths than most: a creamy paitan, a tonkotsu, a lighter chintan, and a vegetarian bowl, so there's a bowl for most moods. The starters are the usual ramen-ya supporting cast done well, gyoza, karaage, takoyaki, a chashu bao, and there are rice and curry plates if you're with someone who's not in a noodle mood. Bowls land around 13 to 14 euros, which keeps it firmly in everyday-dinner territory. There's a second branch over in Gracia if Poblenou is out of your way.

**Order:**
- Tonkotsu (€13.25)
- Paitan (€14.20)
- Ramen Vegetariano (€12.90)
- Gyoza (6 pieces) (€8.15)

### 6. Noru Bar

*Cult Poblenou ramen bar with a tight rotating list*

- **Neighbourhood:** El Poblenou
- **Address:** Carrer de Pere IV, 152, 08005 Barcelona, Spain
- **Price:** €
- **Website:** https://noru.bar
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/noru-bar

Noru is the small, cult ramen bar in Poblenou, the kind of place with a short list and a point of view. The menu is built around a tight rotating selection of bowls, reported to include a laksa curry, a kimchi ramen, a tan tan men and a miso, plus a few side dishes, and because it's small and rotating, you go for whatever's on that day rather than a fixed greatest-hits. That looseness is the appeal: it feels like a bar that cooks what it wants rather than a chain working a formula. It's a counter-and-a-few-tables setup, so it's best for a quick, focused bowl rather than a long sit-down. Check the day before you go, since it keeps tighter hours than the bigger spots.

### 7. Tonkotsu

*An early tonkotsu pioneer in Eixample*

- **Neighbourhood:** la Dreta de l'Eixample
- **Address:** Carrer de València, 290, 08007 Barcelona, Spain
- **Price:** €
- **Website:** https://www.tonkotsu.es
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/tonkotsu

Tonkotsu opened on Carrer de Valencia in 2015 as one of the early movers on tonkotsu-style ramen in Barcelona, and the broth is still the thing it does best: a pork-bone stock simmered for a minimum of ten hours to get that creamy, whitish texture the style is named for. Fair warning, this one casts a wider net than the dedicated ramen-ya above. The menu runs well beyond ramen into woks, pad thai, curries, baos and poke, so it's more of an Asian street-food kitchen with a strong ramen core than a pure ramen-ya. But the ramen is the reason it earns a spot: the tonkotsu bowl, a soy and a miso, a couple of spicier tan tan men and curry bowls, and a vegetable broth for the plant-based table. Communal wooden tables and a big streetside window make it an easy, casual stop.

**Order:**
- Tonkotsu ramen (€13.50)
- Tan tan men ramen (€15.50)
- Miso ramen (€13.50)
- Vegetable ramen (€14.50)

## The Ramen scene in Barcelona

Barcelona's ramen scene is younger and tighter than its tapas or rice traditions, clustered around a small group of dedicated ramen-ya and ramen bars rather than spread across the city. Eixample holds the most-cited names, with Gracia, the Gotic and Poblenou adding neighbourhood specialists and counter bars. The styles run the full range, from creamy tonkotsu and lighter shoyu to spicy tantanmen and plant-based bowls, and most kitchens keep prices low enough that a full bowl with a side stays one of the best-value sit-down meals in town. Several of the best spots are walk-in led, so queues are part of the deal.

## Glossary

- **Ramen-ya** — A restaurant whose identity is built around ramen. The broth is the headline, the menu is short, and the sides exist to support the bowl, as opposed to a pan-Asian kitchen where ramen is one option among many.
- **Tonkotsu** — A ramen style built on a creamy, milky broth made by simmering pork bones for many hours to extract collagen and fat. Originally from Fukuoka in southern Japan.
- **Shoyu** — A lighter, soy-based ramen broth, clear and savoury rather than creamy. One of the most common classic ramen styles.
- **Miso** — A ramen broth deepened with fermented soybean paste, giving a richer, rounder flavour than shoyu or shio.
- **Tantanmen** — A Japanese adaptation of Chinese dan dan noodles: a spicy ramen on a thick sesame-and-chilli broth, usually topped with minced pork.
- **Tsukemen** — A dipping-style ramen where cold or room-temperature noodles are served separately from a concentrated dipping broth, common in warmer months.
- **Chashu** — Braised or stewed pork belly, sliced and laid over the bowl as the classic ramen topping.
- **Paitan** — A cloudy, creamy broth, most often chicken-based (tori paitan), made by boiling bones hard enough to emulsify the fat into the stock.

## Frequently asked questions

### What's the best ramen in Barcelona?

Ramen-ya Hiro in Eixample is the ramen-ya most people in Barcelona name first. It's a dedicated ramen kitchen built around a broth simmered for around ten hours, with a short menu of shoyu, miso, seafood and vegetal bowls. The room is small, so expect a queue at lunch.

### How much does a bowl of ramen cost in Barcelona?

Most ramen in Barcelona costs between 12 and 16 euros a bowl. Neighbourhood ramen-ya like Ramen-ya Hiro and Ryu Ramen sit at the lower end, around 13 euros, while Koku Kitchen and Tonkotsu run roughly 14 to 16. Kanada-Ya is slightly pricier but offers a good-value lunch set.

### What is tonkotsu ramen?

Tonkotsu is a ramen style built on a creamy, milky broth made by simmering pork bones for many hours to draw out collagen and fat. In Barcelona, Kanada-Ya runs an 18-hour tonkotsu and the restaurant called Tonkotsu simmers its pork-bone broth for at least ten hours.

### Where can I find vegan or vegetarian ramen in Barcelona?

Several Barcelona ramen spots run plant-based bowls. Koku Kitchen has the deepest vegan and vegetarian selection, including a gluten-free ramen. Ramen-ya Hiro does a vegetal shoyu on a kombu and dried-shiitake broth, and Ryu Ramen and Tonkotsu both keep a vegetable bowl. Always confirm the broth base when ordering.

### What's the difference between shoyu, miso and tonkotsu ramen?

Shoyu is a lighter, soy-based broth; miso is deeper and fermented; tonkotsu is a creamy, pork-bone broth simmered for hours. Shio, a clean salt-based broth, is a fourth style. Most Barcelona ramen-ya offer at least shoyu, miso and tonkotsu, so you can compare them across visits.

### Do I need a reservation for ramen in Barcelona?

Reservation policies vary across Barcelona's ramen spots, and the small rooms like Ramen-ya Hiro and Shoronpo can mean a queue at lunch. Lines tend to move quickly. Noru Bar takes walk-ins only, while larger spots like Koku Kitchen and Tonkotsu have more tables, so they are usually easier to get into.

### What is tantanmen?

Tantanmen is a Japanese take on Chinese dan dan noodles: a spicy ramen built on a thick sesame-and-chilli broth, usually topped with minced pork. In Barcelona, Shoronpo in Gracia treats its tantanmen as a signature, and Tonkotsu also runs a tan tan men bowl.

### Where is the best ramen-ya in Poblenou?

Poblenou has two dedicated ramen spots worth the trip. Ryu Ramen is a neighbourhood ramen-ya built on homemade ramen, with paitan, tonkotsu, chintan and vegetarian bowls. Noru is a small cult ramen bar with a tight rotating list that can include laksa curry, kimchi, tan tan men and miso.

### Which Barcelona ramen spots make ramen in-house?

Ryu Ramen in Poblenou centres its menu on homemade ramen. Most dedicated ramen-ya in the city focus first on the broth, which is simmered for hours, a mark of a kitchen taking the bowl seriously rather than buying everything in.

## 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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This guide is the canonical machine-readable version of https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/best-ramen. Every claim is verifiable against the linked restaurant profiles. Source: Guidavera (https://guidavera.com).
