Restaurant in Palma, Spain
Adrián Quetglas
390Pearl PointsPalma's best value tasting menu. Book ahead.

About Adrián Quetglas
One of the most compelling tasting-menu restaurants in the Balearics, Adrián Quetglas holds a Michelin Plate (2024, 2025) and a 4.6 Google rating across 1,670+ reviews. The €€€ pricing delivers a quality-to-value ratio that Michelin has cited as among the best in Spain. Book 2–4 weeks ahead; the room fills consistently.
Is Adrián Quetglas worth booking in Palma?
Yes — and book sooner than you think you need to. Adrián Quetglas is one of the most compelling arguments for tasting-menu dining in the Balearics, holding a Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025 and a Google rating of 4.6 across more than 1,600 reviews. At a €€€ price point, it delivers a level of technical cooking that most restaurants at this tier in Spain simply do not match. If you are weighing where to spend your one serious dinner in Palma, this belongs at the leading of the shortlist.
What to expect
The restaurant sits on Passeig de Mallorca, overlooking the dry bed of the Torrent de Sa Riera canal in the centre of Palma. The room reads as a polished bistro rather than a formal fine-dining box: a vertical garden adds texture to the space, and a background of jazz keeps the atmosphere from tipping into stiffness. It is the kind of room that makes a long tasting menu feel natural rather than ceremonial, which matters when you are committing to five or eight courses.
Chef Adrián Quetglas trained across Buenos Aires, London, Paris, and Moscow before landing in Mallorca, and the cooking reflects all of it. The Mediterranean is the backbone, but the menu moves through influences with enough confidence that it never feels like a geography lesson. The stated ambition is to democratise haute cuisine — that philosophy shows up directly in the pricing, which sits meaningfully below what comparable cooking costs at Marc Fosh or at the island's two-Michelin-star venues.
Two tasting menus are on offer: a 5-course and an 8-course, both available with wine pairing. Supplement options include pigeon, caviar, and a cheese course, which gives the format some flexibility if you want to push the experience further. For a food-focused traveller who wants to eat seriously without the formality of a three-star service protocol, this structure works well. Compare it against, say, El Celler de Can Roca in Girona or Arzak in San Sebastián , those demand months of advance planning and significantly higher spend. Adrián Quetglas gets you into a comparable creative conversation at a fraction of the friction.
The brunch and daytime case
For food enthusiasts specifically looking at the daytime or weekend format, Adrián Quetglas is one of the few places in Palma where a mid-afternoon or weekend lunch achieves the same kitchen ambition as a dinner service. The canal-facing position and the jazz-lit bistro interior make a weekend lunch here feel unhurried. The 5-course menu is a natural fit for a long Saturday lunch rather than a commitment you need to save for the evening. If you are planning a day around Palma's old town , perhaps picking up a drink first at Stagier Bar or Bàrbar , anchoring it to a lunch at Adrián Quetglas makes more sense than squeezing it into a packed dinner itinerary. The daytime setting also lets the room's vertical garden and natural light work in its favour in a way that an evening visit does not.
Booking window
This is an easy booking by the standards of serious Spanish restaurants , but that does not mean you should leave it until the week before. The restaurant is described consistently as usually full, and the Palma dining season accelerates sharply from May through September when the island's tourist population swells. Book at least two to three weeks ahead for a weekday dinner, and push that to a month for a Saturday lunch or dinner slot during summer. If you are comparing booking difficulty across Palma's better restaurants, Adrián Quetglas is more accessible than Zaranda or DINS Santi Taura at this level, but it is not a walk-in venue. The address is Pg. de Mallorca, 20 in the Centre district.
Practical details
Reservations: Book 2–4 weeks ahead; longer lead time needed in summer. Budget: €€€ , a meaningful but accessible spend for Mallorca's tasting-menu tier, with wine pairing available as a supplement and add-on options (pigeon, caviar, cheese course) if you want to extend. Format: 5-course or 8-course tasting menus only; no à la carte. Dress: Smart casual is the safe call , the bistro atmosphere is relaxed, but the culinary ambition warrants dressing up a notch from beachwear. Location: Pg. de Mallorca, 20, Centre, Palma , central and walkable from most of the old town. Phone and website: Not listed; check current reservation platforms for availability.
Worth knowing
Michelin's assessors noted that Adrián Quetglas has one of the leading quality-to-price ratios for its level not just in Spain but globally , a framing that appears in both the 2024 and 2025 Michelin notes. That is a meaningful signal for the food-focused traveller: you are getting cooking at a level that competes with venues costing significantly more. For context on where tasting-menu dining in Spain sits more broadly, destinations like DiverXO in Madrid, Azurmendi in Larrabetzu, Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona, and Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María all demand higher spend and substantially more planning. Adrián Quetglas occupies a productive middle ground: ambitious cooking, accessible pricing, and a room that does not require you to treat dinner as a formal occasion. For the food-focused traveller visiting Palma, this is where to spend your serious meal.
For more on eating, drinking, and staying in Palma, see our full Palma restaurants guide, Palma bars guide, Palma hotels guide, Palma wineries guide, and Palma experiences guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I wear to Adrián Quetglas?
The room runs bistro-style rather than formally dressed, so clean, presentable clothes are appropriate — think collared shirts or smart separates rather than a suit. There is no documented dress code on record, but at the €€€ price point and with Michelin recognition, overly casual attire would feel out of place. Arriving polished is the safe call.
Is Adrián Quetglas good for solo dining?
Yes. The bistro-style room with jazz in the background makes solo dining comfortable rather than awkward. Tasting menus in general work well for solo diners who want a structured, self-contained meal, and the format here — 5 or 8 courses — gives you something to engage with throughout. At €€€, it is a considered solo spend, but the quality-to-price ratio that Michelin flagged makes it easier to justify.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Adrián Quetglas?
Yes, with the 8-course format being the stronger case if you are committed to the full experience. Michelin assessors specifically flagged Adrián Quetglas as having one of the best quality-to-price ratios for its level in Spain — or globally — which is an unusual endorsement. Both the 5- and 8-course menus come with a wine-pairing option, and add-ons like pigeon, caviar, and a cheese course are available for a supplement. At €€€ in Palma, this is not a cheap dinner, but it is far from the outlier it would be in Madrid or Barcelona.
How far ahead should I book Adrián Quetglas?
Book 2–4 weeks ahead as a baseline; extend that to 4–6 weeks if you are visiting during summer, when Palma is at peak capacity. By the standards of Spain's serious tasting-menu restaurants, this is a manageable booking window — but do not treat that as an invitation to leave it late. The restaurant is noted as usually full.
Can I eat at the bar at Adrián Quetglas?
The venue database does not confirm a bar seating option. The room is described as bistro-style, which sometimes includes counter or bar seats, but this is not documented in available venue records. check the venue's official channels at Pg. de Mallorca, 20 to confirm seating configurations before assuming bar dining is possible.
Location
Pg. de Mallorca, 20, Centre, 07012 Palma, Illes Balears, Spain
Palma, Spain
Compare Adrián Quetglas
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adrián Quetglas | €€€ | Easy | — |
| Zaranda | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| DINS Santi Taura | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| La Bodeguilla | €€ | Unknown | — |
| Marc Fosh | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Aromata | €€€ | Unknown | — |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Also Consider
- Zaranda — Mallorcan, Creative, €€€€
- DINS Santi Taura — Mallorcan, Modern Cuisine, €€€€
- La Bodeguilla — Wine Bar, Traditional Cuisine, €€
- Marc Fosh — Modern Cuisine, €€€€
- Aromata — Contemporary, €€€
How It Compares
Adrián Quetglas sits at €€€ in a Palma fine-dining field where most of its nearest competitors price at €€€€. That one tier of difference is meaningful. Zaranda and DINS Santi Taura both sit at the higher price band and require more advance planning; Zaranda in particular is harder to book and delivers a more deeply Mallorcan-rooted menu. If the island's local culinary identity is what you are after, Zaranda is the choice. If you want technically accomplished modern cooking at a price that does not require a financial reckoning, Adrián Quetglas is the more practical answer.
Marc Fosh occupies the same €€€€ tier as Zaranda and brings a Michelin-starred pedigree with British-inflected Mediterranean cooking. It is a sharper, more formal experience than Adrián Quetglas. For diners who want the full fine-dining ceremony, Marc Fosh delivers more service polish. For diners who want the cooking without the ceremony, Adrián Quetglas wins on atmosphere and value. Aromata, also at €€€, is the closest peer in price terms and worth considering if you want a more flexible format without a fixed tasting menu.
At the other end, La Bodeguilla at €€ is the right call for a casual wine-driven meal without tasting-menu commitment. It does not compete with Adrián Quetglas on culinary ambition, but if you have already had your serious meal and want a relaxed wine bar evening, it fills that gap well. The summary: book Adrián Quetglas for your main food event; use La Bodeguilla for a lower-stakes night; go to Zaranda only if Mallorcan terroir cooking is specifically what you are chasing and you plan far enough ahead.
Recognized By
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