# 15 Best Seafood Restaurants in Barcelona

> The 15 best seafood restaurants in Barcelona, ordered by Michelin and Repsol distinctions first, then by historic importance to the city's seafood culture. From a Michelin-starred fish laboratory to two Barceloneta institutions over a century old.

- **Canonical URL:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/best-seafood
- **City:** Barcelona, Spain
- **Published:** 2026-06-06
- **Author:** Justin Mota, Guidavera founder
- **Reading time:** 14 min

## Introduction

This is the Barcelona seafood list we send to friends. Barcelona's a Mediterranean port that also imports Galician shellfish daily by lorry, and the city's seafood scene reflects that double identity. Marisquerías built around Atlantic crustacean culture sit alongside Barceloneta houses that have been frying small fish for over a century, and a new generation of chef-driven seafood projects has emerged in the last decade with serious institutional recognition. Our top pick has two Repsol Soles, a Michelin Selected listing, and an ice tray of the day's catch on the counter. The second pick earned its first Michelin star in the 2026 guide for treating fish like charcuterie. The oldest restaurant on this list opened in 1903 and is still run by the founding family. The newest opened in 2017. You can spend €30 at a Barceloneta seafood bar and €250 a head at the upper tier, and every restaurant here is doing something specific with fish that no one else in the city is doing in quite the same way.

## Key picks at a glance

- **Best overall** — [Estimar](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/estimar): Two Repsol Soles and a Michelin Selected listing for the pure-marisco temple in El Born, opened in 2017 by ex-elBulli chef Rafa Zafra with Pescadors de Roses behind the supply chain..
- **Editor's pick** — [Fishology](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/fishology): Awarded its first Michelin star in the 2026 guide. Chef Riccardo Radice treats fish like charcuterie (salting, maturing, smoking, ancestral preservation) across two tasting menus named for ocean depths..
- **Best historic** — [Can Sole](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/can-sole): Founded in 1903 in the old fishermen's quarter and still run by the fourth generation of the founding family. The dining room is little changed from the early twentieth century..
- **Best for Galician shellfish** — [RíasKru](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/riaskru): The Iglesias family's Galician marisquería on Carrer de Lleida in Poble Sec, holding one Repsol Sol. A 3,500-litre live tank at the entrance, daily Galician shellfish, and the raw-bar Espai Kru sharing the same kitchen..
- **Best no-menu booking** — [El Passadís del Pep](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/passadis-del-pep): Founded 14 November 1979 by Joan Manubens at Pla de Palau, 2. No sign on the street, no printed menu inside. Waiters announce the day's catch and the meal builds from there. One Repsol Solete..

## A guide to Seafood in Barcelona

### What makes a great seafood restaurant in Barcelona?

Three things to look for. First, the day's catch is visible: an ice tray on the bar, a glass-fronted cabinet, a live tank, or the cocinero pointing at a whole fish before it goes to the grill. A seafood restaurant that hides the product is hiding from the question. Second, the format matches the city's two seafood traditions. A Catalan-Mediterranean kitchen working with local hake, sardines, anchovies, prawns and rockfish. Or a Galician marisquería with daily lorries from Galician ports bringing percebes, centollo, langoustine and oysters. Third, the prep is restrained. The best Barcelona seafood is grilled, plancha-cooked, boiled briefly, dressed simply, or eaten raw. Heavy sauces are usually a sign that the underlying fish isn't the headline ingredient.

### Catalan-Mediterranean seafood versus Galician marisquería: what's the difference?

Two traditions sit side by side in Barcelona and they overlap on the better menus. The Catalan-Mediterranean side runs on fish caught off the Catalan coast: hake, monkfish, John Dory, gilthead bream, sardines, anchovies, baby squid, octopus, the Mediterranean prawn (gamba) and the spider crab (txangurro). Rices and suquets (Catalan fish stews) sit at the centre. The Galician marisquería tradition runs on the Atlantic: percebes (gooseneck barnacles), centollo (spider crab), nécora, navajas (razor clams), pulpo a la gallega, Cantabrian lobster, and oysters from Galicia and France. Many restaurants here draw from both, and a Galician marisquería in Barcelona will typically receive shellfish by overnight lorry from Galician ports several times a week.

### When and how should I book seafood in Barcelona?

Book ahead for the upper tier. Estimar, Amar Barcelona, RíasKru, Eldelmar, Xerta and Fishology are weeks-not-days bookings, particularly for Friday and Saturday. The Barceloneta houses (Can Solé, Can Ros) take same-week reservations comfortably except on Sundays in summer. The Galician marisquerías (Botafumeiro, Carballeira) are large enough rooms that walk-ins work midweek. El Passadís del Pep and Cal Pep both take phone bookings only and run no-menu formats: the daily product dictates the meal, and the bill is calibrated to the day's market. Pricing across the list runs from about €40 a head at the Galician marisquerías up to €250 at the Michelin-starred and 2-Soles top end.

> "The best seafood in Barcelona shares one thing: the product on the ice was on the boat that morning, and the kitchen mostly gets out of its way."

## How we built this list

We built this list by working through every Barcelona restaurant on Guidavera whose primary identity is fish and shellfish, about 130 venues in total. We ordered them by the signals that actually matter for seafood: Michelin and Repsol distinctions first, then specialist credibility (a pure marisquería or fish-counter restaurant outranks a Mediterranean restaurant that happens to do seafood well), then historic importance to Barcelona's seafood culture, and finally current execution. We verified every venue open as of June 2026, cross-checked founding years and chef succession directly against each restaurant's own site, and excluded venues that fit better on adjacent lists (sushi, paella, tapas). The full research file with the per-venue accolades inventory and the claims we verified before publishing lives at docs/best-seafood-research.md in our public repository. No restaurant pays for placement, and Guidavera has no affiliate or sponsorship relationship with any venue featured here.

## The 15 best Seafood Restaurants, compared

| # | Restaurant | Neighbourhood | Price | Distinction | Signature dish |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | [Estimar](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/estimar) | Sant Pere, Santa Caterina i la Ribera | €€€ | Michelin Selected · Repsol 2 Soles | Roses red prawn 'The Mediterranean Queen', boiled in seawater or steamed in seaweed |
| 2 | [Fishology](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/fishology) | la Nova Esquerra de l'Eixample | €€€€ | Michelin 1-Star · Repsol Recomendado | Benthos Tasting Menu (8 surroundings, sunlit ocean zone 0–200m) |
| 3 | [Amar Barcelona](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/amar-barcelona) | la Dreta de l'Eixample | €€€€ | Michelin Selected · Repsol 1 Sol | Tasting Menu 'Amar Lentamente' |
| 4 | [RíasKru](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/riaskru) | el Poble Sec | €€€ | Michelin Selected · Repsol 1 Sol | Menú Mariscada seafood tasting (+€50 wine pairing) |
| 5 | [Eldelmar - Hermanos Torres](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/eldelmar-hermanos-torres) | la Vila Olímpica del Poblenou | €€€ | Michelin Selected · Repsol 1 Sol | Imperial Gold caviar (30g) |
| 6 | [Besta](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/besta) | l'Antiga Esquerra de l'Eixample | €€€ | Michelin Selected · Repsol 1 Sol | Festival Menu (12 passes) |
| 7 | [Els Pescadors](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/els-pescadors) | el Poblenou | €€€ | Repsol 1 Sol | Sautéed Red Shrimps from La Barceloneta |
| 8 | [Xerta](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/xerta) | la Dreta de l'Eixample | €€€€ | Michelin Selected · Repsol 1 Sol | Menú de Producte (premium tasting) |
| 9 | [La Taverna del Clínic](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/la-taverna-del-clinic) | l'Antiga Esquerra de l'Eixample | €€€ | Michelin Selected · Repsol 1 Sol | Gran Menu Taverna (8 courses, cheese tasting, 2 desserts) |
| 10 | [Can Sole](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/can-sole) | la Barceloneta | €€€ | — | Sole grilled or à la meunière |
| 11 | [Can Ros](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/can-ros) | la Barceloneta | €€ | Repsol Solete | Seafood paella (per portion, minimum two portions) |
| 12 | [Botafumeiro](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/botafumeiro) | la Vila de Gràcia | €€€ | — | Galician shellfish natural or à la plancha (percebes, centollo, nécora, langoustine) |
| 13 | [Carballeira](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/carballeira) | Sant Pere, Santa Caterina i la Ribera | €€€ | — | Percebes de la Costa da Morte |
| 14 | [El Passadís del Pep](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/passadis-del-pep) | Sant Pere, Santa Caterina i la Ribera | €€€ | Repsol Solete | Daily market seafood tasting (no fixed menu, average per person without drinks) |
| 15 | [Cal Pep](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/cal-pep) | Sant Pere, Santa Caterina i la Ribera | €€€ | — | Roasted octopus |

## The 15 best Seafood Restaurants in Barcelona

### 1. Estimar

*Two Repsol Soles and the pure-marisco temple by ex-elBulli chef Rafa Zafra*

- **Neighbourhood:** Sant Pere, Santa Caterina i la Ribera
- **Address:** Carrer de Sant Antoni dels Sombrerers, 3, 08003 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€€
- **Distinction:** Michelin Selected · Repsol 2 Soles
- **Website:** https://www.restaurante-estimar.com
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/estimar

Estimar holds two Repsol Soles and a Michelin Selected listing, the deepest credential set of any seafood-first restaurant in Barcelona. Chef Rafa Zafra opened it in 2017 on Carrer de Sant Antoni dels Sombrerers in El Born, with business partner Ricardo Acquista and his wife Anna Gotanegra, the fifth generation of Pescadors de Roses, the Catalan fishing family whose boats supply the restaurant. The format is a small dining room with an open kitchen and ice trays of the day's catch on the counter: langoustine, oysters, razor clams, octopus, whole fish chosen by weight. The kitchen is intentionally minimal. Zafra trained at Arzak and elBulli but Estimar is the opposite of molecular: grill, plancha, plain dressings, the product allowed to speak. Book well ahead, particularly for weekend dinners.

**Order:**
- Roses red prawn 'The Mediterranean Queen', boiled in seawater or steamed in seaweed (€38/100g)
- Grilled XL opened langoustine from Isla Cristina (€28/100g)
- Wild sea-bass, longline-caught (€11/100g)
- Special oysters from Marennes-Oléron (€6.50/u)
- Langoustine carpaccio with caramelised onions, tribute to El Bulli (€31)

> "Two Soles: outstanding cuisine, a culinary experience worth seeking out" — Repsol Guide, 2026

### 2. Fishology

*Michelin-starred fish charcuterie laboratory by Riccardo Radice*

- **Neighbourhood:** la Nova Esquerra de l'Eixample
- **Address:** Carrer Diputacio, 73 baix 1, 08015 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€€€
- **Distinction:** Michelin 1-Star · Repsol Recomendado
- **Website:** https://www.fishology.es/en
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/fishology

Fishology earned its first Michelin star in the 2026 guide, awarded for chef Riccardo Radice's treatment of fish as charcuterie: salting, maturing, smoking and otherwise preserving seafood through ancestral techniques applied to the modern tasting-menu format. Radice, born near Milan, trained at Disfrutar, Angle, Spectrum and Nerua before opening Fishology with Giulia Gabriele on Carrer del Comte d'Urgell in la Nova Esquerra de l'Eixample. The format is two tasting menus named for ocean depths: Benthos (where light still penetrates) and Abyssal (where it doesn't), each running across a sequence of small courses built around fish in some preserved or transformed state. The kitchen also holds Repsol Recomendado. The restaurant is small enough that booking one to two weeks ahead is the baseline.

**Order:**
- Benthos Tasting Menu (8 surroundings, sunlit ocean zone 0–200m) (€115)
- Abyssal Tasting Menu (extended, deep-ocean zone) (€140)

> "One star: high quality cooking, worth a stop" — Michelin Guide, 2026

### 3. Amar Barcelona

*Rafa Zafra inside Hotel El Palace's 1919 dining hall, one Repsol Sol*

- **Neighbourhood:** la Dreta de l'Eixample
- **Address:** Gran Via de les Corts Catalanes, 668, 08010 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€€€
- **Distinction:** Michelin Selected · Repsol 1 Sol
- **Website:** https://amarbarcelona.com/en/home
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/amar-barcelona

Amar Barcelona is the formal sibling of Estimar: same creative director (Rafa Zafra) but a different room, a different price point and a different format. The restaurant occupies the 1919 dining hall inside Hotel El Palace on Gran Via in la Dreta de l'Eixample, with head chef Gonzalo Hernández running the day-to-day kitchen. The format centres on premium raw ingredients shown at the table before cooking: oysters, whole fish by weight, large crustacea from the day's catch, a deep wine list including Spain's best whites and a serious cava section. The kitchen holds one Repsol Sol and an OAD Top Restaurants in Europe listing. The room is dressier than Estimar and the booking is easier, usually available one to two weeks out.

**Order:**
- Tasting Menu 'Amar Lentamente' (€145)
- Lobster, smoked salmon and caviar trikini (€170)
- Roses XXL prawns (€19/u)
- Brioche toast, butter and caviar (€22)
- Scampi carpaccio, homage to El Bulli 1995 (€37)

> "Sol: outstanding cuisine" — Repsol Guide, 2026

### 4. RíasKru

*One Repsol Sol and a 3,500-litre live tank in the Iglesias-family Galician compound*

- **Neighbourhood:** el Poble Sec
- **Address:** Carrer de Lleida, 7, 08004 Barcelona (Poble Sec)
- **Price:** €€€
- **Distinction:** Michelin Selected · Repsol 1 Sol
- **Website:** https://riaskru.com
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/riaskru

RíasKru is the unified house that resulted from the Iglesias family merging the historic Galician marisquería Rías de Galicia (founded 1986 by Cándido Iglesias and Pura Fernández) with the raw-bar Espai Kru, sharing one kitchen and one dining room on Carrer de Lleida in Poble Sec. Chef Robert Gelonch runs a menu that pivots between the two halves: Galician marisco from the 3,500-litre tank at the front of the room (lobster, spiny lobster, spider crab) and Japanese-inspired raw cuisine in the back: tartares, nigiris, tiraditos, tatakis, and the signature one-sided langoustine. The kitchen holds one Repsol Sol. The restaurant is run today by the founders' three sons (Juan Carlos, Borja and Pedro Iglesias) as the anchor of Grup Iglesias / ElBarri, which from 2010 expanded through a partnership with Ferran and Albert Adrià into Tickets, 41° and the other Adrià projects in the same neighbourhood.

**Order:**
- Menú Mariscada seafood tasting (+€50 wine pairing) (€160)
- Menú RíasKru tasting (€125)
- Lunch Menu (Tuesday to Friday) (€65)
- Cantabrian turbot, charcoal-grilled donostiarra style (€48)
- KRU sashimi selection (12 pieces) (€38)

> "Sol: outstanding cuisine" — Repsol Guide, 2026

### 5. Eldelmar - Hermanos Torres

*Torres brothers' Port Olímpic seafood, one Repsol Sol with a marina view*

- **Neighbourhood:** la Vila Olímpica del Poblenou
- **Address:** Moll del Gregal, 3, Port Olímpic, 08005 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€€
- **Distinction:** Michelin Selected · Repsol 1 Sol
- **Website:** https://www.eldelmarhermanostorres.com
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/eldelmar-hermanos-torres

Eldelmar is the waterfront seafood project of brothers Javier and Sergio Torres, whose flagship Cocina Hermanos Torres holds three Michelin stars. The Eldelmar room occupies the Balcó Gastronòmic at Port Olímpic in la Vila Olímpica del Poblenou, with a panoramic glass front looking out over the harbour and Nova Icària beach. The kitchen holds one Repsol Sol and focuses on Catalan-Mediterranean seafood with the Torres brothers' technique: whole-fish preparations, suquets, shellfish rices, and a short tasting menu that rotates with the day's catch. The format is dressier than the Barceloneta houses and the view is the dressing, so book the early sitting for the light.

**Order:**
- Imperial Gold caviar (30g) (€115)
- 100% Ibérico acorn-fed ham Fisán (D.O. Guijuelo) (€30)
- Oyster Spéciale Utah Beach with Imperial Gold caviar (€13.50)
- Ratte potato gnocchi with Imperial Gold caviar (€38)
- Lightly smoked wagyu cecina (€32)

> "Sol: outstanding cuisine" — Repsol Guide, 2026

### 6. Besta

*Galician-Catalan crossover with one Repsol Sol on Aribau*

- **Neighbourhood:** l'Antiga Esquerra de l'Eixample
- **Address:** Carrer d'Aribau, 106, 08036 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€€
- **Distinction:** Michelin Selected · Repsol 1 Sol
- **Website:** https://www.bestabarcelona.com
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/besta

Besta is the project of chef Manu Núñez and Carles Ramon on Carrer d'Aribau, 106 in l'Antiga Esquerra de l'Eixample. Núñez trained at Gastrologik in Stockholm and Ekstedt before returning to Barcelona, and the kitchen reflects both: Galician seafood treated with the Nordic-style restraint that Núñez learned in Sweden, paired with Catalan technique and a wine list of small Iberian producers. The dining room is small, the carta is short and changes with the market, and the kitchen holds one Repsol Sol. The format is dressy-casual: a serious restaurant that doesn't ask you to wear a jacket. Núñez also operates Batea, the marisquería bistró on Gran Via, as a more accessible sibling project.

**Order:**
- Festival Menu (12 passes) (€95)
- Tasting Menu (9 courses) (€78)

> "Sol: outstanding cuisine" — Repsol Guide, 2026

### 7. Els Pescadors

*1980 Poblenou seafood house on Plaça de Prim, one Repsol Sol and a Cuina Catalana certification*

- **Neighbourhood:** el Poblenou
- **Address:** Placa de Prim, 1, 08005 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€€
- **Distinction:** Repsol 1 Sol
- **Website:** https://elspescadors.com/en
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/els-pescadors

Els Pescadors has been on the leafy Plaça de Prim in Poblenou since 1980, occupying a restored 1913 tavern set back from the square under the plane trees. Head chef Xavi Llanta runs a kitchen built around daily-sourced Mediterranean seafood, Cantabrian shellfish and Catalan rices. The restaurant holds one Repsol Sol and a Cuina Catalana certification (the regional government's mark for traditional Catalan cooking), and it occupies a different niche to the Eixample-based seafood projects. Forty-five years on the same square, three rooms, a terrace under the trees, and a menu that hasn't chased trends. The room fills weekend nights so book a few days out.

**Order:**
- Sautéed Red Shrimps from La Barceloneta (€44)
- Grilled Sea Cucumbers from Benicarló with Iberian Pork Belly (€53)
- Coral rice with Sea Urchins and Squids, Black Allioli (€37)
- Seasonal Proposal (€39)
- Salted Anchovy Fillet with Extra Virgin Olive Oil (6u) (€19.80)

> "Sol: outstanding cuisine" — Repsol Guide, 2026

### 8. Xerta

*Barcelona's only Ebro Delta gastronomic specialist, one Repsol Sol and a former Michelin star*

- **Neighbourhood:** la Dreta de l'Eixample
- **Address:** Carrer de Corsega, 289, 08008 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€€€
- **Distinction:** Michelin Selected · Repsol 1 Sol
- **Website:** https://www.xertarestaurant.com
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/xerta

Xerta is the only gastronomic restaurant in Barcelona working primarily from the Ebro Delta, the protected wetland two hours south of the city where the Ebro meets the Mediterranean. The restaurant occupies a dining room inside Ohla Eixample hotel and held a Michelin star from 2016 to 2024, dropped at the 2024 ceremony but kept as Michelin Selected; it currently holds one Repsol Sol. Chef Jose Guadalupe has led the kitchen since 2024 (he trained at Xerta for eight years before taking the head role), under the umbrella of Villa Retiro Grup founded by chef Fran López, the two-star Catalan chef whose original Xerta restaurant is in the Ebro Delta itself. Roughly ninety percent of the ingredients arrive from the Delta: elvers, oysters, sea anemones, sea cucumbers, galera shrimp, blue crab, rice. The format is tasting menus and à la carte.

**Order:**
- Menú de Producte (premium tasting) (€115)
- Menú de Temporada (seasonal tasting) (€55)
- Wine pairing (optional, both menus) (€65)

> "Sol: outstanding cuisine" — Repsol Guide, 2026

### 9. La Taverna del Clínic

*Simões brothers' modernised tavern with one Repsol Sol near Hospital Clínic*

- **Neighbourhood:** l'Antiga Esquerra de l'Eixample
- **Address:** C/ de Rosselló, 155, 08036 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€€
- **Distinction:** Michelin Selected · Repsol 1 Sol
- **Website:** https://www.latavernadelclinic.com
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/la-taverna-del-clinic

La Taverna del Clínic took over a tapas bar near Hospital Clínic in 2015 and turned it into one of the Eixample's reference seafood-leaning rooms. Brothers Toni and Manu Simões run it together: Toni in the kitchen (Best Young Chef of Catalunya in 2014, trained under Santi Santamaria) and Manu front-of-house. The format is modernised tavern cuisine with a strong seafood throughline: oysters, anchovies, suquet, daily fish, alongside a small selection of meat and a serious bottle list. The kitchen holds one Repsol Sol and a Michelin Selected listing. The dining room is small and the bookings tight on weekends; lunch is the easier sitting.

**Order:**
- Gran Menu Taverna (8 courses, cheese tasting, 2 desserts) (€115)
- Caviar Menu (€90)
- Gastro Menu (6 courses and 1 dessert) (€85)

> "Sol: outstanding cuisine" — Repsol Guide, 2026

### 10. Can Sole

*1903 Barceloneta fishermen's tavern, still run by the fourth generation*

- **Neighbourhood:** la Barceloneta
- **Address:** Carrer de Sant Carles, 4, Ciutat Vella, 08003 Barcelona, Spain
- **Price:** €€€
- **Website:** https://restaurantcansole.com
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/can-sole

Can Solé opened in 1903 on Carrer de Sant Carles in Barceloneta, taking over a corner that had been a soap shop in the late eighteenth century run by a man named Gregorio Solé. The founder Josep Homs kept the old name. The restaurant started as a tavern feeding the fishermen who worked the harbour and the dining room is little changed from the early twentieth century: tile floors, wood panelling, a long bar, and the same recipes the fourth generation of the founding family now serves the great-grandchildren of the original customers. Joan Miró and Antoni Tàpies were both regulars. The kitchen is built around the day's fish and shellfish, rice dishes, and Catalan-Mediterranean classics; the wine list is short and the prices are restrained for a restaurant that has been on the same corner for over a century.

**Order:**
- Sole grilled or à la meunière (€29.80)
- Sautéed red prawns from the coast (€27.00)
- Local lobster grilled or boiled (500–600g) (€55.50)
- Cod puff-balls, frittered (€19.50)
- Croquettes of Jabugo ham and foie (€19.00)

> "Founded 1903, fourth-generation family operation" — Can Solé, 2026

### 11. Can Ros

*1908 Barceloneta casa de comidas with one 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 has been on the same Barceloneta corner since 1908, a year after Can Solé opened a few streets away, and runs the older casa de comidas format: family-owned, daily-market sourcing, a short carta of Catalan seafood classics, no pretensions. Chef Jordi Kevin Ballester now runs the kitchen, and the restaurant holds one Repsol Solete. The dining room is small, the prices are some of the most restrained on this list for venues of comparable age, and the format works equally well for a Saturday-lunch family long-table and a Tuesday-night quiet dinner. The kitchen does rice dishes, grilled fish, suquet and a small selection of shellfish from the daily market.

**Order:**
- Seafood paella (per portion, minimum two portions) (€22.50)
- Rice with blue crab from the Ebro Delta, spring garlic (€22.00)
- Grilled octopus with confit potatoes and sautéed cherry tomatoes (€21.60)
- Oyster from Delta de l'Ebre (€4.50/u)
- Weekday lunch menu (€19)

> "Solete: distinguished by Repsol Guide" — Repsol Guide, 2026

### 12. Botafumeiro

*1975 Galician institution on Gran de Gràcia, half a century of daily lorries from Galicia*

- **Neighbourhood:** la Vila de Gràcia
- **Address:** Gran de Gràcia, 81, 08012 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€€
- **Website:** https://botafumeiro.com
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/botafumeiro

Botafumeiro is one of the longest-running Galician marisquerías in Barcelona, opened in 1975 by Galician chef Moncho Neira on Gran de Gràcia 81 and run by the same Moncho's group ever since. Moncho died on 5 October 2025 at age 84; his widow Noa El Hadri is now sole partner of the group. The dining room is closer to a Galician hotel restaurant than a Catalan tasca: wood panelling, brass fittings, a long seafood bar down one wall, private salons alongside, and a non-stop kitchen running from noon until 01:00 daily. Shellfish arrives by overnight lorry from Galician ports several times a week, the carta is broad (Galician marisco, Mediterranean fish, traditional rice dishes, stews, a long shellfish list by weight), and the format works equally well for a long lunch and a midnight dinner.

**Order:**
- Galician shellfish natural or à la plancha (percebes, centollo, nécora, langoustine) (Market price)
- Fish baked or grilled over holm-oak coals (Market price)
- Seafood rice dishes (Market price)

> "Founded 1975: half a century of Galician seafood on Gran de Gràcia" — Botafumeiro, 2026

### 13. Carballeira

*1944 Born marisquería, Michelin Plate, often called Barcelona's first quality marisquería*

- **Neighbourhood:** Sant Pere, Santa Caterina i la Ribera
- **Address:** Carrer de la Reina Cristina, 3, 08003 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€€
- **Website:** https://www.carballeira.com
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/carballeira

Carballeira opened in 1944 on Carrer de la Reina Cristina in the Born, near Port Vell, and is regularly cited as Barcelona's first quality marisquería: the restaurant that brought the Galician seafood culture into the city before the postwar restaurant boom made marisquerías common. The original founders were Mr and Mrs Millán; the restaurant has changed hands over the eighty-plus years since and kept its essence intact. The dining room is heavy on nautical decoration (lamps, portholes, dark wood) and the carta runs the long Galician list: percebes, Gillardeau oysters from France alongside Galician oysters, whole rodaballo grilled over charcoal, navajas, large crustacea by weight, pulpo a la gallega. The kitchen holds Michelin Plate.

**Order:**
- Percebes de la Costa da Morte (€49 / €29 (half))
- Kokotxas de merluza de pincho del Cantábrico (€34)
- Carpaccio de gamba roja de Palamós con pistachos (€25)
- Ostra Gillardeau Especial Nº2 (€6/u)
- Anchoas del Cantábrico en aceite de oliva virgen extra (€18.50 / €12.50 (half))

> "Michelin Plate: a quality kitchen worth a stop" — Michelin Guide, 2026

### 14. El Passadís del Pep

*No-sign no-menu seafood at Pla de Palau, founded 14 November 1979, one Repsol Solete*

- **Neighbourhood:** Sant Pere, Santa Caterina i la Ribera
- **Address:** Pla de Palau, 2, 08003 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€€
- **Distinction:** Repsol Solete
- **Website:** https://www.passadis.com
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/passadis-del-pep

El Passadís del Pep is the longest-running no-sign no-menu seafood restaurant in El Born. Joan Manubens opened it on 14 November 1979 at Pla de Palau, 2 (the historic commercial square at the foot of the Born where the city's produce from overseas was sold for centuries) and named it after his brother Pep (Josep), who encouraged the project. There's no sign on the street. The dining room is reached through a literal corridor (the passadís of the name) off an unmarked door. There's no printed menu inside. Waiters bring small dishes one after another based on what the market delivered that morning: salazones to start, shellfish, anchovies, prawns, a fish, a small rice. The meal builds from there. The kitchen holds one Repsol Solete. Booking is by phone only and the bill is calibrated to the day's market. The Manubens family also operates Cal Pep (founded 1989 by Joan's brother Pep) on Plaça de les Olles two streets away.

**Order:**
- Daily market seafood tasting (no fixed menu, average per person without drinks) (~€90)

> "Solete: distinguished by Repsol Guide" — Repsol Guide, 2026

### 15. Cal Pep

*Pep Manubens's 1989 counter-only seafood institution at Plaça de les Olles*

- **Neighbourhood:** Sant Pere, Santa Caterina i la Ribera
- **Address:** Plaça de les Olles, 8, Ciutat Vella, 08003 Barcelona
- **Price:** €€€
- **Website:** https://www.calpep.com
- **Full profile:** https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/cal-pep

Cal Pep opened in 1989 at Plaça de les Olles, 8 in El Born, founded by Josep 'Pep' Manubens Figueres, the brother of Joan who opened El Passadís del Pep a decade earlier two streets away. The format is a long counter and a small back room, and the kitchen behind the bar cooks whatever the market delivered that morning: fritters of small fish, plancha shellfish, baby squid, hake a la Donostiarra, grilled octopus, the daily fish. There is no fixed menu in the Manubens sense: the carta exists but the better move is to take a counter seat and let the kitchen send out what is good that day. The room is louder and busier than Passadís, with the chef-led-from-the-bar energy that has made Cal Pep a 50 Best Discovery listing and one of the most cited seafood addresses in the city. No reservations on the counter; show up early and queue.

**Order:**
- Roasted octopus (€24.50)
- Monkfish 'a la espalda' (€20.60)
- Soupy rice with prawn tails (€20.50)
- Fried triphasic (squid, small fish, shrimp) (€15.45)
- Grilled prawns (€180/kg)

> "Founded 1989 by Josep 'Pep' Manubens Figueres" — Cal Pep, 2026

## Honourable mentions

- **[Tunateca Balfegó](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/tunateca-balfego)** (l'Antiga Esquerra de l'Eixample) — Repsol Recomendado. Billed by its founders as the world's first gastronomic space dedicated entirely to bluefin tuna, created by the Balfegó group (the family business that catches the fish in the Mediterranean between Ametlla de Mar and the open sea) in l'Antiga Esquerra de l'Eixample. Chef Luis Felipe Salinas Aldunate runs a menu split between Japanese-tradition and Mediterranean treatments of the same single species: every cut of the fish across multiple preparations.
- **[Ostras Thierry](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/ostras-thierry)** (l'Antiga Esquerra de l'Eixample) — Founded 1998 by Thierry on Carrer de Paris, the first French oyster importer in Barcelona. The format is an oyster bar with no hot kitchen: oysters from Marennes Oléron and Normandy, dressed cold, accompanied by salazones, French wine, and a short selection of preserved fish. The most specialised seafood format on the list.
- **[Lluritu](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/lluritu)** (la Vila de Gràcia) — Casual seafood specialist in Gràcia, no institutional credentials yet but a particularly clean execution of the plancha-and-grill format on day-of-market fish. Promote to the ranked list when it earns a Repsol distinction; for now an honourable mention based on multi-source consensus.
- **[Batea](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/batea)** (la Dreta de l'Eixample) — Repsol Recomendado. Modern marisquería bistró on Gran Via next to Hotel Avenida Palace, run by chef Manu Núñez (the same chef as Besta) with bar director Marta Morales. Sharing-format Galician-Catalan seafood at a more accessible price point than Besta itself.
- **[Ultramarinos Marín](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/ultramarinos-marin)** (Sant Gervasi - Galvany) — Repsol Recomendado and a 50 Best Discovery listing. Chef Borja García trained at Etxebarri in the Basque Country, Noma in Denmark and Dos Pebrots in Barcelona before opening this asador on Carrer de Balmes in Sant Gervasi-Galvany. The kitchen is half seafood (grilled langoustines, mackerel in escabeche, briny sea-urchin toast, house garum) and half charcoal meat. We've kept it as an honourable mention because the identity isn't seafood-first.

## The Seafood scene in Barcelona

Barcelona's seafood scene runs across three distinct geographies. Barceloneta (the old fishermen's quarter built on reclaimed land in 1753) still holds the city's longest-running seafood houses, including two restaurants over a century old. The Eixample grid hosts the new generation of chef-driven seafood: the Michelin-starred fish laboratory, the two-Repsol-Soles temple, and the chef-driven marisquerías. Gracia and Poble Sec hold the Galician institutions whose daily lorries from Galician ports have been arriving for half a century or more. The Born has the no-sign no-menu institutions where the meal builds from the day's market. Across the city, fewer than ten venues hold a Michelin or Repsol Sol distinction specifically for seafood, and most of those are on this list.

## Know before you go

### 1. Order whatever is on the ice

At Estimar, Amar Barcelona, RíasKru, Eldelmar and the Galician marisquerías, the best dishes are the simplest ones built around whatever arrived from the boats or the lorry that morning. Whole grilled fish, plancha shellfish, plain oysters, the langoustine of the day. Choose by what's on display, not by what's on the printed carta.

### 2. Check whether lunch and dinner pricing differ

Several of the higher-end Eixample venues run a separate lunch menu at a different price point to evening service. Pricing structures change with the season, so check each restaurant's posted menu before booking. The Barceloneta houses (Can Solé, Can Ros) and the marisquerías generally serve the same carta at both services, so book the time that suits you.

### 3. Tipping in Spanish restaurants

Tipping is welcome but not expected at Spanish prices. A couple of euros at the marisquerías and a slightly larger round-up at the upper tier. Cards are accepted at the higher-credentialed venues without issue; carry some cash for the older Barceloneta and Gràcia rooms in case the terminal is offline.

### 4. Galician shellfish is market-priced. Ask before ordering

Percebes, centollo, lobster and large langoustines are all sold by weight at the Galician marisquerías. The price posted is per 100 grams or per kilo, not per dish, and the final bill can move sharply depending on what gets sliced off the display. Ask the waiter to weigh and quote before the kitchen starts cooking.

### 5. El Passadís del Pep has no menu. Show up hungry

The Passadís books only by phone and serves only what the market delivered that morning. Waiters bring small dishes one after another with no list to choose from (shellfish, anchovies, prawns, a fish, a rice) and the meal lasts as long as you keep eating. The bill is calibrated to the day's market.

### 6. Drink Catalan or Galician white, not red

Garnatxa Blanca, Picapoll, Xarel·lo and Albariño do better work with raw shellfish and grilled fish than any red. The better seafood rooms in Barcelona carry a serious local-white list (RíasKru, Besta and Amar Barcelona all have particularly deep Iberian wine programmes) and the staff will pair to the day's product if you ask.

### 7. Book the upper tier well ahead

Estimar's dining room is small and weekend dinners book out far in advance. Lunch sittings are usually the easier way in. Fishology, Amar Barcelona and Eldelmar are typically more accessible than Estimar but still benefit from a booking made at least a week ahead, particularly for Friday and Saturday.

## Seafood by neighbourhood

### Barceloneta

The old fishermen's quarter, built on reclaimed land in 1753, still anchors the city's seafood culture. Two restaurants on this list opened before 1910 (Can Solé in 1903, Can Ros in 1908) and both are still on the same corners they started on, run today by descendants of the founding families or by the families that took them over. The Barceloneta format is unfussy: tablecloths, fish from that morning's market, rice dishes, Catalan whites by the carafe.

**Picks:**
- #10 [Can Sole](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/can-sole)
- #11 [Can Ros](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/can-ros)

### Eixample

Eixample holds the new generation of chef-driven seafood. Fishology's Michelin-starred fish charcuterie on Carrer del Comte d'Urgell. Amar Barcelona in Hotel El Palace's 1919 dining hall on Gran Via. Xerta's Ebro Delta gastronomy at Ohla Eixample. Besta, La Taverna del Clínic, Batea and Tunateca Balfegó are all within the Eixample grid as well.

**Picks:**
- #2 [Fishology](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/fishology)
- #3 [Amar Barcelona](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/amar-barcelona)
- #8 [Xerta](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/xerta)
- #6 [Besta](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/besta)
- #9 [La Taverna del Clínic](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/la-taverna-del-clinic)

### El Born

The Born holds the chef-driven seafood that doesn't fit Eixample's formality and the no-sign institutions that don't fit anywhere else. Estimar on Carrer de Sant Antoni dels Sombrerers. Carballeira on Carrer de la Reina Cristina, opened 1944 as Barcelona's first quality marisquería. El Passadís del Pep at Pla de Palau, 2, where the no-sign no-menu format has been the house style since 1979.

**Picks:**
- #1 [Estimar](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/estimar)
- #13 [Carballeira](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/carballeira)
- #14 [El Passadís del Pep](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/passadis-del-pep)

### Poble Sec and Vila Olímpica

Two waterfront-adjacent neighbourhoods hold the family-run Galician operations and the larger chef-led projects. RíasKru on Carrer de Lleida is the Iglesias family's compound, where the historic Rías de Galicia marisquería (founded 1986) and the raw-bar Espai Kru now share one kitchen and one dining room. Eldelmar by the Torres brothers occupies the Balcó Gastronòmic at Port Olímpic, with the marina out the front window.

**Picks:**
- #4 [RíasKru](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/riaskru)
- #5 [Eldelmar - Hermanos Torres](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/eldelmar-hermanos-torres)

### Gràcia and Poblenou

Two restaurants on this list anchor neighbourhoods well away from the waterfront. Botafumeiro on Gran de Gràcia has imported Galician seafood daily since 1975. Els Pescadors sits on the leafy Plaça de Prim in Poblenou, in a restored 1913 tavern, holding one Repsol Sol and a Cuina Catalana certification.

**Picks:**
- #12 [Botafumeiro](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/botafumeiro)
- #7 [Els Pescadors](https://guidavera.com/spain/barcelona/restaurants/els-pescadors)

## Glossary

- **Marisquería** — A restaurant specialising in shellfish. The Galician tradition centres on Atlantic crustacea (percebes, centollo, nécora, navajas, langoustine, oysters), most of which arrive by overnight lorry from Galician ports. The Catalan tradition leans Mediterranean (gamba, escamarlà, galera, sípia).
- **Pescadería-restaurant** — A fish-shop format that doubles as a restaurant. The day's catch is displayed in a glass-fronted cabinet at the front of the room, and the kitchen will cook anything off the display in the back. The format is older than restaurants in the modern sense and survives in a handful of Barcelona houses.
- **Suquet de peix** — A Catalan fish stew built on a sofrito base, fish stock, potatoes, and whatever the boat brought back. The Barceloneta houses each do their own version. The classic Catalan answer to the question of what to do with the smaller and less-photogenic fish in the catch.
- **Plancha and brasa** — Two dry-cooking methods that dominate Barcelona seafood. Plancha is a flat steel griddle, high heat, oil and salt only; suits prawns, scallops, baby squid, razor clams. Brasa is open-flame grilling over wood or charcoal: the format Ultramarinos Marín and several of the marisquerías use for whole fish.
- **Percebes** — Gooseneck barnacles harvested by hand from the Galician coast at low tide. Among the most expensive shellfish in Spain by weight. Cooked very briefly in salted water and eaten with the fingers.
- **Centollo and nécora** — Two Galician crabs. Centollo is the larger spider crab eaten cold with the body meat dressed back inside the shell. Nécora is the smaller velvet swimming crab eaten by hand, usually as a starter shared at the table.
- **Pulpo a la gallega** — Galician-style octopus: boiled, sliced thin, dressed with paprika, olive oil and coarse salt, served on a wooden plate. The marker dish of any serious Galician kitchen in Barcelona.
- **Salazones and conservas** — Salt-cured and tinned fish. Anchovies, sardines, tuna belly, mackerel and bonito, preserved in salt or oil. A short list of high-quality conservas (Galician brands like Real Conservera, La Brújula, Don Bocarte) is the test of a serious Barcelona seafood bar.
- **Tasca and casa de comidas** — Two older Catalan formats. A tasca is a small tavern with a counter and a short carta, the format Botafumeiro and Cal Pep both nominally fit. A casa de comidas is the traditional family-run dining house: the format Can Ros has kept since 1908.
- **Ebro Delta** — The river delta two hours south of Barcelona where the Ebro meets the Mediterranean. A protected wetland that produces the best rice in Catalonia along with eels, oysters, sea anemones, blue crab and galera shrimp. Xerta is the only gastronomic restaurant in Barcelona working primarily from Ebro Delta sourcing.

## Frequently asked questions

### What is the best seafood restaurant in Barcelona?

Estimar is our top pick. It holds two Repsol Soles and a Michelin Selected listing, was opened in 2017 by ex-elBulli chef Rafa Zafra in partnership with the Pescadors de Roses fishing family, and operates as a pure-marisco temple where the day's catch is shown on ice at the counter. Fishology is the second pick: it earned its first Michelin star in the 2026 guide for chef Riccardo Radice's treatment of fish as charcuterie.

### Which seafood restaurants in Barcelona have a Michelin star?

Only Fishology currently holds a Michelin star specifically for a seafood-first kitchen, awarded in the 2026 guide. Estimar holds a Michelin Selected listing (the level below the star). Carballeira holds Michelin Plate. Xerta held a Michelin star from 2016 to 2024 and now holds Michelin Selected. Several Michelin-starred restaurants outside this list cook seafood well as part of broader cuisines but aren't primarily seafood restaurants.

### Which seafood restaurants in Barcelona have a Repsol Sol?

Eight restaurants on this list hold one or more Repsol Soles. Estimar holds two. Amar Barcelona, RíasKru, Eldelmar (Hermanos Torres), Besta, Els Pescadors, Xerta and La Taverna del Clínic each hold one. Below that, Can Ros and El Passadís del Pep hold Repsol Solete distinctions, and Batea, Ostras Thierry (informally) and Tunateca Balfegó hold Repsol Recomendado.

### What is the oldest seafood restaurant in Barcelona?

Can Solé in Barceloneta opened in 1903 and is the oldest restaurant on this list, currently run by the fourth generation of the founding family. Can Ros, two streets away in the same neighbourhood, opened in 1908. Carballeira, the Galician marisquería in the Born, opened in 1944 and is often credited as Barcelona's first quality marisquería. Botafumeiro on Gran de Gràcia is the oldest of the Gracia Galician institutions, opened in 1975.

### Where are most of Barcelona's best seafood restaurants located?

The Eixample holds the new generation of chef-driven seafood (Fishology, Amar Barcelona, Xerta, Besta, La Taverna del Clínic). Barceloneta holds the two restaurants over a century old (Can Solé, Can Ros). The Born holds the chef-driven and no-sign institutions (Estimar, Carballeira, El Passadís del Pep, Cal Pep). Poble Sec holds the Iglesias-family RíasKru compound. Gràcia and Poblenou each hold one anchor venue (Botafumeiro, Els Pescadors).

### What is the difference between Catalan-Mediterranean seafood and a Galician marisquería?

The Catalan-Mediterranean tradition runs on fish from the Catalan coast (hake, monkfish, John Dory, gilthead bream, sardines, anchovies, baby squid, octopus, Mediterranean prawn, spider crab) and centres on rice dishes and suquets (Catalan fish stews). The Galician marisquería tradition runs on Atlantic shellfish (percebes, centollo, nécora, navajas, pulpo a la gallega, Cantabrian lobster, oysters) brought to Barcelona by overnight lorry several times a week. Many restaurants on this list draw from both, and the Eixample seafood-first projects in particular run mixed sourcing.

### How far in advance do I need to book?

Estimar's small dining room books out far in advance for weekend dinners, so lunch is usually the easier sitting. Fishology, Amar Barcelona and Eldelmar (Hermanos Torres) benefit from a booking made at least a week ahead. The Barceloneta houses (Can Solé, Can Ros), the Galician marisquerías (Botafumeiro, Carballeira) and the larger Eixample rooms take same-week reservations comfortably except on weekend evenings in summer. El Passadís del Pep and Cal Pep both take phone bookings only (Cal Pep is counter-first and walk-in friendly if you queue).

### How much should I expect to pay for seafood in Barcelona?

Pricing varies sharply by tier. Casual seafood rooms (Lluritu, Bar Electricitat, the Barceloneta tapas bars) come in around €30 to €45 per person without drinks. The Galician marisquerías (Botafumeiro, Carballeira) run €60 to €120 depending on what you order from the shellfish display. The Repsol-Sol tier (RíasKru, Besta, La Taverna del Clínic, Els Pescadors, Xerta) lands around €80 to €130. The upper tier (Estimar, Amar Barcelona, Fishology) runs €120 to €250 per person without drinks. Shellfish by weight (percebes, centollo, lobster) can move bills sharply in either direction.

### Where does the seafood actually come from?

Catalan-Mediterranean fish (hake, monkfish, anchovies, sardines, baby squid) arrives daily from the Catalan coast: boats from Roses, Barceloneta, Vilanova and the Ebro Delta. Estimar receives its supply directly from Pescadors de Roses, the fishing family of co-owner Anna Gotanegra. Galician shellfish (percebes, centollo, nécora, oysters) is trucked overnight from Galician ports, and Botafumeiro, RíasKru and Carballeira all run on this model. Xerta works almost entirely from the Ebro Delta two hours south of the city. Ostras Thierry imports French oysters from Marennes Oléron and Normandy.

### Are there serious seafood restaurants outside this list worth knowing about?

Yes. Tunateca Balfegó bills itself as the world's first gastronomic space dedicated entirely to bluefin tuna. Ostras Thierry has been Barcelona's specialist French-oyster bar since 1998. Ultramarinos Marín is the Etxebarri-trained asador on Carrer de Balmes that does half its menu around fish. Lluritu in Gràcia and Batea on Gran Via both cover the casual end of the seafood spectrum at solid execution. We listed these as honourable mentions rather than ranked positions because each fits the seafood category at a slight angle (single-species, no hot kitchen, half-meat). They're worth knowing about and would anchor the main list of a less seafood-saturated city.

### Where do popular self-service marisquerías like Puertecillo and La Paradeta fit on this list?

They don't, and that's a deliberate choice rather than an oversight. Puertecillo (four locations including Born, Sagrada Família and Paral·lel) and La Paradeta (operating since 1994) are family-run self-service marisquerías where you pick fresh fish and shellfish from a counter and the kitchen grills or fries it to order. The Puertecillo Born and Sagrada Família locations were rebranded from La Paradeta in recent years and remain at the same addresses. Both groups are well-liked by visitors looking for fresh seafood at €25 to €40 per head without a reservation. We excluded the self-service format from the ranked list because the methodology prioritises chef-driven kitchens, Michelin and Repsol distinctions, and historic importance to Barcelona's seafood culture: three criteria the self-service chain format doesn't compete on regardless of how well-loved the venues are.

### Is seafood in Barcelona as good as in San Sebastián or Lisbon?

Different rather than worse. San Sebastián and the Basque coast have the deepest pintxo culture in Spain and a denser concentration of Michelin-starred seafood. Lisbon has Atlantic sourcing closer to Galicia and a stronger conserva (tinned-fish) tradition. Barcelona's advantage is the double identity (Mediterranean Catalan and Atlantic Galician under the same roof in most of the better restaurants) and the depth of historic continuity in Barceloneta, where two restaurants have been operating continuously since before 1910. The upper tier (Estimar, Fishology, Amar Barcelona, RíasKru) holds its own against the best in either city.

### Has the city's seafood scene changed recently?

Yes. Fishology was awarded its first Michelin star in the 2026 guide announcement (November 2025), the first Michelin star for a seafood-first kitchen in the city in over a decade. Moncho Neira, the founder of Botafumeiro, died in October 2025 at age 84; the restaurant continues to operate under his widow Noa El Hadri as sole partner of the Moncho's group. Xerta dropped its Michelin star at the 2024 ceremony after holding it from 2016 and now operates as Michelin Selected with one Repsol Sol. We verified open status and current operating structure for every venue on this list before publishing.

## 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

---

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