Restaurant in Funchal, Portugal
Avista Ásia
290ptsMichelin-recognised fusion with Atlantic views.

About Avista Ásia
Avista Ásia, on the upper floor of Funchal's Cliff Bay hotel, earns a Michelin Plate (2024) for its Japanese-Chinese-Korean fusion with Madeiran ingredients and Atlantic views. Four menu formats (3 to 7 courses, plus Omakase) make it the clearest choice in Funchal for a special-occasion dinner at the €€€ tier. Book the Nómada and request a window table.
The Verdict
Avista Ásia earns its place at the leading of Funchal's dining conversation. The Michelin Plate (2024) signals technical competence, the views over Funchal and the Atlantic are among the leading you will find at a restaurant table on the island, and the four-menu structure — Omakase, Descoberta, Nómada, and Premium — gives you a clear way to calibrate spend against appetite. At the €€€ price tier, it is not cheap for Funchal, but it is not the most expensive option either. Book here for a special occasion when you want Asian fusion with genuine craft rather than a tourist-facing approximation, and when the room itself needs to do some work for you.
About Avista Ásia
Avista Ásia sits on the upper floor of the Cliff Bay hotel's dining tower, one level above Avista, the hotel's Mediterranean sibling. The two restaurants share a building but diverge sharply in direction. Where Avista follows the Atlantic coast, Avista Ásia pivots east: Japanese, Chinese, and Korean influences are the structural backbone, with Mediterranean and Madeiran ingredients woven in as counterpoint. Chef Rui Pinto, whose background spans restaurants in Portugal and abroad, uses that tension deliberately. Dishes like the scallop tartare with jalapeño, kalamansi sauce, and fig leaf, and the smoked eel donburi with trout roe and uruchimai rice, show a kitchen working in two registers simultaneously , the precision of Japanese technique and the brightness of Atlantic ingredients. The dessert Do Funchal a Tokyo, which pairs passion fruit and Madeiran mango with ginger and yuzu, reads like a thesis statement for the whole project.
The setting reinforces the proposition. The upper-floor position gives Avista Ásia unobstructed sightlines over Funchal's coastal spread and out to the Atlantic horizon. At dinner this translates to a slow fade from golden light to deep blue as the meal progresses. For a special occasion , an anniversary, a significant birthday, a meaningful dinner for two , the combination of considered cooking and that view is hard to match anywhere else on the island. The Google rating of 4.6 across 1,185 reviews suggests this is not a niche judgment but a consistent reality.
The menu structure is worth understanding before you book. The Omakase option places decisions in the kitchen's hands entirely, which works leading if you are eating as a pair or a small group with no strong dietary constraints. The Descoberta (3 courses) is the lowest-commitment entry point and the right call if you are not sure how hungry you will be or if you are combining dinner here with drinks elsewhere. The Nómada (5 courses) is where most regular diners will land: enough range to understand the kitchen's full vocabulary without the commitment of the 7-course Premium. The Premium menu is the format to choose when the occasion demands something sustained and when you want the kitchen to make every decision. For a first visit, the Nómada is the practical recommendation.
Booking is direct. Avista Ásia sits in Funchal's easy-to-book tier , reservations are available without the weeks-in-advance pressure you face at the island's most sought-after tables. That said, the upper-floor room has a finite number of window-adjacent seats, and for a special occasion those positions matter. Book with enough lead time to request a table with an Atlantic view, and specify the occasion when you make the reservation. The Cliff Bay hotel context works in your favour here: the reservations team is accustomed to handling celebration bookings and coordinating between the restaurant and hotel services.
Planning Your Visit
Avista Ásia is part of the Cliff Bay hotel complex on Estrada Monumental in São Martinho, a short drive from Funchal's city centre. The hotel address , Estrada Monumental 145, 9004-532 Funchal , is the practical anchor for navigation. If you are staying at the Cliff Bay, the restaurant is a lift ride away. If you are coming from elsewhere in Funchal, a taxi or rideshare is the direct option; the road runs along the western coastal strip and parking at the hotel is available. Hours are not confirmed in our data, so verify directly with the hotel before planning a tight itinerary around a specific arrival time.
For context on how Avista Ásia fits within Portugal's broader fine-dining picture: the Michelin Plate recognition places it in the same conversation as technically competent restaurants across the country, though it stops short of the star-level recognition you find at Belcanto in Lisbon, Vila Joya in Albufeira, or Ocean in Porches. Within the Funchal dining scene specifically, it occupies a distinct niche: no other restaurant in the city is running Asian fusion at this level of ambition. For comparable fusion ambition at the international level, Jae in Düsseldorf and Soseki in Winter Park offer useful reference points, but neither comes with Funchal's Atlantic setting. Elsewhere in Portugal, The Yeatman in Vila Nova de Gaia, Antiqvvm in Porto, and Casa de Chá da Boa Nova in Leça da Palmeira represent the Michelin-starred tier for reference.
If Funchal's restaurant scene is new to you, our full Funchal restaurants guide covers the full range of options. The Audax and Casal da Penha are worth checking if your itinerary has room for a second serious meal. For everything beyond restaurants, our Funchal hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide cover the rest.
How It Compares
Compare Avista Ásia
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Avista Ásia | Fusion | It completes the culinary offering of the luxurious Cliff Bay hotel! This restaurant, located on the upper floor of Avista, firmly backs Asian fusion cuisine with Japanese, Chinese and Korean influences, always with robust flavours to which are added touches from the Mediterranean and the Madeira archipelago. Chef Rui Pinto’s background, acquired in renowned restaurants at home and abroad, takes him on a unique sensorial journey, with singular views over Funchal and the Atlantic. His proposal, based on four distinct menus: Omakase (chef’s choice), Descoberta (3 courses), Nómada (5 courses) and Premium (7 courses) offer you dishes such as scallop tartare, which brings jalapeño together with kalamansi sauce and fig leaf, eel donburi of smoked eel with trout roe and uruchimai (Japanese short‑grain rice) and the dessert Do Funchal a Tokyo, which blends the tropical flavour of passion fruit and Madeiran mango with a touch of ginger and yuzu.; It completes the culinary offering of the luxurious Cliff Bay hotel! This restaurant, located on the upper floor of the likewise mentioned Avista, is firmly committed to Asian fusion cuisine, so you will find typical dishes from Chinese, Japanese and Korean recipes, always with very pronounced flavours, enhanced by nods to both the Mediterranean and the Madeira archipelago itself. It offers great views over Funchal, an à la carte service and several menus (3, 5 and 7 courses, as well as a 7-course premium version).; Michelin Plate (2024) | Easy | — |
| Il Gallo d'Oro | Modern Cuisine | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| Desarma | Contemporary | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Oxalis | Contemporary | Unknown | — | |
| Gazebo | Contemporary | Unknown | — | |
| Avista | Mediterranean Cuisine | Unknown | — |
How Avista Ásia stacks up against the competition.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can Avista Ásia accommodate groups?
Groups are possible given Avista Ásia's position within the Cliff Bay hotel, which has the infrastructure to handle larger bookings. The multi-course format — Descoberta (3 courses), Nómada (5 courses) and Premium (7 courses) — works well for parties who want a shared experience rather than individual ordering. Contact the Cliff Bay hotel directly to confirm private dining arrangements and minimum group sizes, as these details are not published. For larger groups where flexibility matters more than format, the à la carte option gives more control over pacing.
Is Avista Ásia good for a special occasion?
Yes — this is one of the stronger special-occasion cases in Funchal. The Michelin Plate (2024) signals the kitchen is operating at a credible level, the Atlantic views over Funchal add a setting that most city-centre options cannot match, and the 7-course Premium menu gives the meal a clear celebratory structure. At €€€ pricing, it sits at the upper end of Madeira dining, so it fits occasions where the spend is intentional. If you want Michelin recognition plus a view, Avista Ásia is the clearest option in this category on the island.
Does Avista Ásia handle dietary restrictions?
The menu architecture — four formats including an Omakase — suggests the kitchen is built around flexible, composed dishes rather than rigid set plates, which typically means dietary adjustments are possible with advance notice. Dishes listed in available records include scallop tartare, eel donburi, and fruit-based desserts, indicating varied proteins and formats. Confirm specific restrictions directly with the Cliff Bay hotel when booking; do not assume substitutions are automatic on tasting menus at this price tier.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Avista Ásia?
The 5-course Nómada or 7-course Premium menus are the format this kitchen is built for: Chef Rui Pinto's approach blends Japanese, Chinese and Korean technique with Madeiran ingredients, and that kind of cross-influence shows better across multiple courses than à la carte. The Michelin Plate (2024) backs the technical side. At €€€, the value case depends on whether the format suits you — if you prefer ordering freely, Il Gallo d'Oro (Michelin-starred) is the stronger single-dish benchmark in Funchal. But for a structured progression of Asian-Madeiran cooking with Atlantic views, the tasting menu is the right way to eat here.
Is Avista Ásia good for solo dining?
The Omakase format makes Avista Ásia more solo-friendly than most tasting-menu restaurants at this tier — counter or chef's-choice dining is a natural fit for one. The Michelin Plate (2024) and €€€ pricing mean it is a considered spend solo, but not an unusual one in this category. If the counter seats with views are available, solo is arguably the best way to engage with an omakase format. Book ahead and request counter or view seating when you confirm.
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