Restaurant in Gijón, Spain
Auga
1,150Pearl PointsTerrace, Michelin star, book ahead.

About Auga
Auga holds a Michelin star and sits on Gijón's marina breakwater, making it the city's most complete special-occasion restaurant at the €€€ tier. The menu rotates with Cantabrian market availability, so what you eat depends on when you go — autumn and winter bring the strongest shellfish. Book three to four weeks out and request the terrace explicitly.
Book the terrace, and book it early
If you want the terrace at Auga, request it at the time of reservation, not on arrival. The restaurant sits on one of the breakwaters at Gijón's marina, and the outdoor seats facing the water are taken first, every service. Auga holds a Michelin star and a 4.5 Google rating across more than 1,500 reviews, which means it books hard, particularly on Friday and Saturday evenings. Plan three to four weeks ahead for dinner, or consider a Tuesday or Wednesday lunch slot if your schedule allows — the room is the same, the menu is the same, and the terrace view over the Cantabrian Sea is identical at 1 PM.
What you are booking
Auga occupies a converted breakwater building at the heart of Gijón's marina. The dining room is bright and wood-forward, mixing classic proportions with a cleaner, more contemporary finish than the harbour setting might suggest. It does not feel like a tourist-facing fish restaurant. The interior is calm and polished, and the terrace extends over the water in a way that makes it genuinely useful for a special occasion, not merely decorative.
The kitchen is led by Gonzalo Pañeda, a chef whose work is anchored in Asturian tradition but pushed forward by technique. The menu varies with market availability, which in practical terms means what the Cantabrian coast is producing right now. Asturias is one of Spain's most ingredient-driven regions: the sea here delivers spider crabs, percebes, sea bass, and bream in rotation across the year, while the interior brings cheeses, hazelnuts, cider-country produce, and game depending on the season. At Auga, that regional calendar is not decoration — it is the organizing principle of the menu.
When to visit, and what changes by season
This is the detail that most people miss when booking Auga: the menu shifts substantially depending on when you go, and the timing matters to what you will eat. Autumn and winter bring the strongest shellfish runs from the Cantabrian coast, and percebes and spider crab tend to feature most prominently in those months. Spring is when lighter reef fish and vegetable-forward preparations appear more often. Summer is peak tourist season in Gijón, which means the terrace is at its most atmospheric but the room is at its hardest to book.
The Michelin guide notes specific dishes , a scallop preparation with roe and seaweed, and a goat's cheese soup with hazelnuts and honey at dessert , but given that the menu is market-driven, treat those as signals of the kitchen's direction rather than guaranteed items. What you can count on is Asturian ingredients handled with precision and a menu that reads shorter and more focused than the price tier might imply. That focus is a feature, not a limitation.
For special occasions, the autumn-to-winter window is the strongest recommendation. The produce is at its peak, the terrace is less crowded than in summer (though you will still need to book weeks ahead), and the overall experience has a coherence that comes from a kitchen working with ingredients at their leading.
Is the price justified?
At €€€ pricing with a Michelin star, Auga sits in a tier where you are paying for cooking skill and ingredient quality in roughly equal measure. For comparison, Marcos in Gijón operates at €€€€ with a modern cuisine approach, so Auga represents the stronger value proposition if you want a Michelin-level meal without pushing into the leading price bracket. If your priority is simply good Asturian seafood at a lower price point, Abarike covers that at €€. Auga is the right choice when the occasion calls for a room that matches the ambition of the cooking.
The €€€ tier in a Spanish regional city like Gijón is meaningfully different from the same tier in Madrid or Barcelona. You are likely spending less in absolute terms than a comparable starred meal in a major city, which makes Auga's value case stronger than the price band alone suggests. For reference on what Spanish starred cooking costs at higher tiers, see Arzak in San Sebastián or Azurmendi in Larrabetzu.
Practical context
Auga is closed on Mondays. Tuesday through Saturday service runs lunch (1 PM to 4 PM) and dinner (9 PM to 11:30 PM). Sunday is lunch only (1 PM to 4 PM). Those dinner end times are Spanish-standard , 9 PM is an early sitting by local convention, and 10 PM arrivals are normal. If you are arriving from outside Asturias and want to understand the broader dining scene, see our full Gijón restaurants guide, our Gijón hotels guide, and our Gijón bars guide.
For other Gijón options worth considering alongside Auga: Farragua at €€ offers modern cuisine at a lower entry point; El Recetario and Fūmu round out the city's contemporary end. If you are touring northern Spain's starred restaurants more broadly, Quique Dacosta in Dénia, Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona, El Celler de Can Roca in Girona, and Martin Berasategui in Lasarte-Oria are the obvious reference points at higher star counts. For traditional cuisine peers in other regions, see Cave à Vin & à Manger in Narbonne and Coto de Quevedo Evolución in Torre de Juan Abad.
Know Before You Go
- Price tier: €€€ (Michelin-starred; stronger value than equivalent Madrid pricing)
- Awards: Michelin 1 Star (2024); Google 4.5 / 1,574 reviews
- Hours: Tue–Sat lunch 1–4 PM, dinner 9–11:30 PM; Sun lunch only 1–4 PM; closed Monday
- Booking difficulty: Hard , reserve 3–4 weeks ahead for weekends; request the terrace explicitly at booking
- Leading timing: Autumn–winter for peak Cantabrian shellfish; summer for terrace atmosphere (book earlier)
- Occasion suitability: Strong for dates, celebrations, and business meals; the setting and service standard support all three
- Getting there: Marina location, central Gijón , see our Gijón experiences guide for area orientation
Frequently Asked Questions
Can Auga accommodate groups?
The venue data does not confirm private dining or dedicated group spaces at Auga. Given the marina breakwater setting and the restaurant's Michelin-star format, larger parties should check the venue's official channels when reserving to discuss seating options. Groups of 6 or more may find the experience better suited to a private arrangement rather than the open dining room.
Can I eat at the bar at Auga?
Bar seating is not confirmed in the available venue data for Auga. The dining room is described as a classic-contemporary space with a wood-forward interior, which suggests a seated table-service format. If bar dining is your priority, verify directly with the restaurant before booking.
Does Auga handle dietary restrictions?
The menu at Auga is market-driven and shifts with seasonal availability, which means the kitchen is already accustomed to working around what is and is not available. That flexibility typically extends to dietary requests, but because this is a Michelin-starred kitchen with a creativity-led approach, flag any restrictions at the time of reservation rather than on arrival.
Is lunch or dinner better at Auga?
Lunch is the stronger call, especially for the terrace. The setting overlooks the sea and the light during the 1 PM to 4 PM service is hard to replicate at dinner. Sunday is lunch only, which makes it a natural option for visitors. Dinner runs until 11:30 PM Tuesday through Saturday and suits those who prefer the slower pace of a late Asturian evening meal.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Auga?
Auga holds a Michelin star and its kitchen is led by Gonzalo Pañeda, whose cooking is built around seasonal Asturian ingredients and market availability. At €€€ pricing, a tasting menu format here is appropriate for the tier. If you want to get the most from the kitchen's creativity-led approach, the tasting menu is the better route than ordering à la carte.
Is Auga worth the price?
At €€€ with a 2024 Michelin star, Auga is priced correctly for what it delivers: a skilled, ingredient-led kitchen working in an unusually good physical setting on Gijón's marina. For fine dining in Asturias, it competes well at this price point. If you are looking for a cheaper entry into Asturian cooking, the region has solid options at lower price points, but none with this combination of cooking pedigree and setting.
Is Auga good for a special occasion?
Yes, and it is one of the better-suited options in Gijón for exactly this. The Michelin star, the waterfront terrace, and the creative seasonal menu all support a celebratory meal. Book the terrace in advance and request it explicitly at reservation rather than hoping for it on arrival. Lunch on a clear day is the strongest version of this experience.
Location
C. de Claudio Alvargonzález, s/n, 33201 Gijón, Asturias, Asturias, Spain
Gijón, Spain
Compare Auga
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Auga | This restaurant is located on one of the breakwaters at the heart of Gijón’s marina in a delightful and unique waterfront setting. Guests will be pleasantly surprised by Auga’s bright, elegant feel, featuring a classic-cum-contemporary dining room with a predominance of wood, and a superb terrace overlooking the sea where you would like time to stand still! The cuisine here varies depending on market availability and is built around the creativity of Gonzalo Pañeda, a highly experienced chef who demonstrates consummate skill in his dishes along with a deep-seated respect for his ingredients and for the traditions of Asturias, which he has skilfully brought up to date. Dishes we particularly enjoyed include the delightfully creamy scallop, roe and seaweed, and for dessert the intensely flavoured goat’s cheese soup with hazelnuts and honey.; This restaurant is located on one of the breakwaters at the heart of Gijón’s marina in a delightful and unique waterfront setting. Guests will be pleasantly surprised by Auga’s bright, elegant feel, featuring a classic-cum-contemporary dining room with a predominance of wood, and a superb terrace overlooking the sea where you would like time to stand still! The cuisine here varies depending on market availability and is built around the creativity of Gonzalo Pañeda, a highly experienced chef who demonstrates consummate skill in his dishes along with a deep-seated respect for his ingredients and for the traditions of Asturias, which he has skilfully brought up to date. Dishes we particularly enjoyed include the delightfully creamy scallop, roe and seaweed, and for dessert the intensely flavoured goat’s cheese soup with hazelnuts and honey.; Michelin 1 Star (2024) | €€€ | — |
| Marcos | Michelin 1 Star | €€€€ | — |
| Farragua | €€ | — | |
| Gloria | €€ | — | |
| Abarike | €€ | — | |
| Restaurante La Tabla | — |
Comparing your options in Gijón for this tier.
Also Consider
- Marcos — Modern Cuisine, €€€€
- Farragua — Modern Cuisine, €€
- Gloria — Contemporary, €€
- Abarike — Seafood, €€
- Restaurante La Tabla — Notable alternative
Auga is the clearest choice in Gijón when you want a Michelin-starred meal with a setting that matches the ambition of the cooking. At €€€, it sits below Marcos (€€€€, modern cuisine), which means you are getting starred cooking at a more accessible price point. Marcos is the better pick if you want a more explicitly modern, technique-forward menu and are willing to spend more. Auga wins on setting — no other restaurant in the city puts you directly over the water in the same way.
For diners who want good Asturian cooking without the starred price tag, Farragua (€€, modern cuisine) and Abarike (€€, seafood) both deliver solid value. Abarike is the more focused seafood option at a lower price; Farragua offers a modern cuisine approach at €€ that suits a casual dinner better than a formal celebration. Neither competes with Auga on occasion-weight or room quality.
Gloria (€€, contemporary) and Restaurante La Tabla round out the mid-tier options for everyday dining. If your visit to Gijón is primarily about a single standout meal, Auga is the booking to prioritise — the combination of Michelin recognition, marina location, and market-driven Asturian cooking is not replicated elsewhere in the city at any price. If budget is the primary constraint, Farragua or Abarike are the practical alternatives.
Hours
- Monday
- closed
- Tuesday
- 1 PM-4 PM 9 PM-11:30 PM
- Wednesday
- 1 PM-4 PM 9 PM-11:30 PM
- Thursday
- 1 PM-4 PM 9 PM-11:30 PM
- Friday
- 1 PM-4 PM 9 PM-11:30 PM
- Saturday
- 1 PM-4 PM 9 PM-11:30 PM
- Sunday
- 1 PM-4 PM
Recognized By
Explore Gijón
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