Restaurant in Budapest, Hungary
Babel
925Pearl PointsBudapest's best case for Hungarian modern tasting menus.

About Babel
Babel is Budapest's strongest case for Hungarian-rooted modern tasting menu cooking, with La Liste recognition (76pts, 2026) and OAD Europe credentials to back it. Chef Aviv Moshe's multi-course format runs Tuesday through Saturday evenings, with Saturday lunch the only midday option. Booking is straightforward relative to peers, but the tasting menu format is non-negotiable — come ready to commit to the full experience.
Should You Book Babel?
If you are weighing Babel against Costes for Budapest's leading modern tasting-menu experience, Babel is the stronger choice for diners who want Hungarian identity woven into technically precise cooking. Costes delivers polished European fine dining; Babel gives you that same level of execution with a sense of place that feels harder to find at that price tier. At €€€€, this is a considered spend, but it is one of the few restaurants in Budapest that holds both La Liste recognition and a firm position on the Opinionated About Dining Europe list, which means it is benchmarked against the continent's serious competition, not just local favourites.
The Portrait
Babel occupies a historically significant space on Piarista köz in central Budapest, and the fabric of the building is part of the dining experience. The walls carry visible marks from the 1838 Great Flood of Pest, a detail that grounds the room in the city's physical history without the restaurant making a performance of it. Interior designer Annamaria Dekany has balanced that aged architecture with a chic, contemporary finish, so what you get is a space that reads as modern without erasing what is underneath it.
Chef Aviv Moshe leads a kitchen that takes Hungarian culinary heritage as its starting point and builds outward into creative modern territory. The multi-course tasting menu is the format here, and it is structured to move between ingredients and techniques that are recognisably Hungarian and moments that reach further afield. Dishes documented in the awards data include red shrimp with tomato and plankton, and guinea fowl with a steamed bun — combinations that reflect a kitchen confident in mixing coastal seafood sourcing with Central European protein traditions. The casino egg is noted as an add-on worth requesting. These are the benchmarks the restaurant itself has put on record; if the menu has rotated since those notes were written, the underlying approach, precision cooking with Hungarian reference points, should remain consistent.
On the question of seasonality: a tasting menu of this construction will shift with the Hungarian agricultural calendar. Spring and early summer bring the soft vegetable window, autumn pushes toward game and root-driven dishes, and winter menus at this level in Budapest tend to compress into deeper, more mineral-leaning plates. The awards data does not specify current seasonal iterations, but if you are visiting with flexibility, autumn is historically the richest period for Hungarian fine dining given the game season and the harvest context. That said, Babel's La Liste score has held and improved year-on-year from 75 points in 2025 to 76 points in 2026, which suggests the kitchen is consistent regardless of which season you land in. For the most seasonally specific intelligence before booking, contact the restaurant directly.
On logistics: Babel is dinner-focused from Tuesday through Friday, opening at 5:30 PM and running until midnight. Saturday is the only day with lunch service, running 12 PM to 3 PM, followed by the evening session from 5:30 PM. The restaurant is closed Sunday and Monday. If your visit window is limited, Saturday lunch is the only midday opportunity at this tier in Budapest at Babel specifically. Booking is rated easy relative to peers in the €€€€ Budapest category, so you do not need to plan weeks out, but given the tasting menu format and limited covers typical of this style of restaurant, booking ahead is still advisable rather than arriving speculatively. Google reviewers rate Babel at 4.6 from 545 reviews, which is a stable signal at that volume.
For context on how Babel sits within Budapest's wider food scene: Stand and essência are worth knowing about at this tier, while Salt and Arany Kaviár cover different registers of the Budapest fine dining map. If you are building a broader Hungary itinerary around serious cooking, Platán Gourmet in Tata, Pajta in Őriszentpéter, 42 Restaurant in Esztergom, 67 Sigma in Székesfehérvár, A Konyhám Stúdió 365 in Fonyód, and Alkimista Kulináris Műhely in Szeged represent the wider regional circuit worth mapping. You can also browse our full Budapest restaurants guide, hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide for broader trip planning. If your interests extend to comparable modern cuisine at this level across Europe, De Librije in Zwolle and De Bokkedoorns in Overveen are worth benchmarking against for reference.
Ratings and Recognition
- La Liste Leading Restaurants 2026: 76 points
- La Liste Leading Restaurants 2025: 75 points
- Opinionated About Dining Leading Restaurants in Europe: Ranked #464 (2025), Ranked #327 (2024)
- Google: 4.6 stars from 545 reviews
Practical Details
- Address: Piarista köz 2, 1052 Budapest
- Hours: Tuesday to Friday, 5:30 PM–midnight; Saturday, 12 PM–3 PM and 5:30 PM–midnight; closed Sunday and Monday
- Price tier: €€€€
- Format: Multi-course tasting menu
- Booking difficulty: Easy
- Chef: Aviv Moshe
FAQ
How far ahead should I book Babel?
- Booking difficulty is rated easy relative to Budapest's other €€€€ tasting menu restaurants, so a week or two of lead time is typically sufficient.
- That said, Saturday lunch is the only midday slot and likely fills faster than weekday evenings — book Saturday lunch as early as your plans allow.
- La Liste and OAD recognition means Babel does attract international visitors, so if your trip dates are fixed, booking as soon as they are confirmed is the sensible approach.
What should a first-timer know about Babel?
- This is a tasting menu restaurant , there is no à la carte option, so commit to the full format before booking.
- The casino egg add-on is specifically noted in the awards record as worth requesting; factor that into your decision when the menu is presented.
- The building's flood-marked walls are part of the atmosphere, not a quirk , the room has a genuinely historical character without feeling museum-like.
- At €€€€, this sits at the leading of Budapest's price range. If that tier requires justification, the dual La Liste and OAD credentials are the clearest evidence available that the kitchen operates at a serious level.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Babel?
- For diners who want Hungarian culinary identity expressed through modern, technically driven cooking, yes , the awards trail supports the price.
- If you want à la carte flexibility or a shorter meal, Babel is not the right fit. Consider Borkonyha Winekitchen at €€€ instead, which gives you modern Hungarian cooking with more flexibility on format.
- The La Liste score improving from 75 to 76 points year-on-year suggests the kitchen is maintaining quality, which matters when you are committing to a multi-course menu at this price point.
Is lunch or dinner better at Babel?
- Saturday lunch is the only midday service available, running 12 PM to 3 PM. It is the right choice if you prefer to eat your main meal in daylight or want the evening free.
- Dinner runs until midnight Tuesday through Saturday, which gives it a more extended, unhurried pace , better for the full tasting menu experience if you are not time-constrained.
- There is no structural reason to prefer one over the other on quality grounds; the format is the same. The choice is logistical.
Can Babel accommodate groups?
- Seat count is not published in available data, so contact the restaurant directly for group bookings.
- Tasting menu restaurants at this level typically have limited capacity, which means large groups (six or more) should enquire early and expect the possibility of a private dining arrangement rather than a standard table.
- For group dining at a lower price point with more flexibility on numbers, Stand25 Bisztró at €€ is a more practical option.
Does Babel handle dietary restrictions?
- No specific dietary policy is published in available data. For a tasting menu kitchen at this level, communicating restrictions at the time of booking rather than on arrival is standard practice and gives the kitchen time to adjust.
- Contact Babel directly before booking if you have significant dietary requirements , a multi-course tasting menu with a fixed structure has less flexibility than an à la carte format.
Can I eat at the bar at Babel?
- No bar seating information is available in the current venue data. Contact the restaurant directly to confirm seating arrangements before arriving expecting a bar option.
- If bar dining in Budapest at a serious culinary level is the priority, check our full Budapest restaurants guide for venues where counter or bar formats are confirmed.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I eat at the bar at Babel?
No bar seating information is confirmed in the venue data. Babel operates as a tasting-menu restaurant, which typically means seated table service rather than a bar dining option. If a more informal or drop-in format is what you want, Borkonyha Winekitchen is a better match for walk-in flexibility in Budapest.
Does Babel handle dietary restrictions?
No specific dietary policy is listed in the available venue data, but the multi-course modern tasting format typically requires advance notice for restrictions to be accommodated properly. check the venue's official channels when booking — at this price point and format, last-minute requests are harder to manage. Be specific: vague requests like 'vegetarian-friendly' are less useful than listing exact restrictions.
Can Babel accommodate groups?
The venue data does not confirm private dining rooms or specific group capacities, so check the venue's official channels before booking for parties of six or more. At €€€€ pricing with a tasting-menu format, larger group dynamics can slow service, and it is worth confirming whether the full menu format applies to all group sizes.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Babel?
At the €€€€ price point, Babel earns its place if a modern, produce-led tasting menu is what you want — it has held OAD Top 500 Europe ranking across multiple consecutive years and climbed from 75 to 76 La Liste points between 2025 and 2026. The format is multi-course with Hungarian heritage as a through-line, not just a backdrop. If you are looking for à la carte or something more casual, Babel is not the right fit.
Is lunch or dinner better at Babel?
Saturday lunch is the only midday service available, making it the practical choice for those who prefer daylight dining or want a slightly less formal pace. Dinner runs Tuesday through Saturday until midnight and is the format the kitchen is built around. For a first visit, dinner gives you the full experience; Saturday lunch works well if you're planning a later afternoon elsewhere in Budapest.
What should a first-timer know about Babel?
Babel is a dinner-format restaurant with a multi-course tasting menu — arrive expecting a full evening, not a quick meal. The building on Piarista köz 2 carries visible marks from Budapest's 1838 Great Flood, so the room itself has context worth noticing. Chef Aviv Moshe's menu is modern but anchored in Hungarian references, which makes it a stronger introduction to the Budapest dining scene than somewhere purely international. Come hungry and go for the casino egg add-on.
How far ahead should I book Babel?
Book at least 2–3 weeks ahead for a weekday dinner; weekend slots fill faster. Babel is open Tuesday through Friday evenings and Saturday for both lunch and dinner, so Saturday lunch is your best shot if weeknights are fully booked. Given its La Liste Top Restaurants placement (76pts, 2026) and OAD Top 500 Europe ranking, demand is consistent. Don't leave it to the week of.
Location
Budapest, Piarista köz 2, 1052 Hungary
Budapest, Hungary
Compare Babel
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Babel | €€€€ · Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | La Liste Top Restaurants (2026): 76pts; Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Europe Ranked #464 (2025); La Liste Top Restaurants (2025): 75pts; A city institution, Babel represents the perfect blend of tradition and modernity. Its walls still show marks from the 1838 Great Flood of Pest, yet it’s also a chic, stylish place thanks to passionate owner Hubert and interior designer Annamaria Dekany. The cooking follows in a similar vein, with the multi-course tasting menu comprising consummately seasoned, creative modern dishes which simultaneously exhibit references to their Hungarian heritage. Highlights include red shrimp with tomato and plankton, and guinea fowl with a steamed bun; be sure to go for the casino egg ‘add-on’ too.; Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Europe Ranked #327 (2024); Michelin 1 Star (2024); Opinionated About Dining Top New Restaurants in Europe Highly Recommended (2023) | Easy | — |
| Borkonyha Winekitchen | €€€ · Modern Cuisine | €€€ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Costes | €€€€ · Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Rumour by Rácz Jenő | €€€€ · Creative | €€€€ | Unknown | — | |
| Stand25 Bisztró | €€ · Traditional Cuisine | €€ | Unknown | — | |
| Bilanx | €€€ · Contemporary | €€ | Unknown | — |
How Babel stacks up against the competition.
Also Consider
- Borkonyha Winekitchen — €€€ · Modern Cuisine, €€€
- Costes — €€€€ · Modern Cuisine, €€€€
- Rumour by Rácz Jenő — €€€€ · Creative, €€€€
- Stand25 Bisztró — €€ · Traditional Cuisine, €€
- Bilanx — €€€ · Contemporary, €€
At €€€€, Babel and Costes occupy the same price tier, but they serve different diner profiles. Costes is the more classical European fine dining proposition; Babel is the better choice if Hungarian culinary identity matters to you alongside technical precision. Rumour by Rácz Jenő also sits at €€€€ with a creative format, and is worth considering if you want a more playful, concept-driven experience rather than a tasting menu grounded in regional heritage. Between the three top-tier options, Babel has the clearest awards trail: La Liste scores improving year-on-year and a named OAD Europe ranking give it the most verifiable external validation in this peer group.
If the €€€€ commitment requires justification, Borkonyha Winekitchen at €€€ is the strongest value alternative in Budapest for modern Hungarian cooking. It offers comparable culinary ambition at a lower price point and with more à la carte flexibility — a meaningful difference if you prefer not to commit to a fixed multi-course format. For diners on a tighter budget who still want quality, Stand25 Bisztró at €€ covers traditional Hungarian cooking with a well-regarded kitchen at a fraction of the cost. Bilanx at €€€ offers contemporary cooking at a mid-range price, making it a sensible option for a second serious meal during a longer Budapest stay.
On booking difficulty, Babel rates as easy relative to its €€€€ peers, which is a practical advantage. If you are building a multi-restaurant itinerary in Budapest, lead with Babel for the tasting menu experience and use Borkonyha Winekitchen as the logical pairing for a second evening at a slightly lower price point — the two restaurants cover complementary registers of modern Hungarian cooking without significant overlap.
Hours
- Monday
- closed
- Tuesday
- 5:30 PM-12 AM
- Wednesday
- 5:30 PM-12 AM
- Thursday
- 5:30 PM-12 AM
- Friday
- 5:30 PM-12 AM
- Saturday
- 12 PM-3 PM 5:30 PM-12 AM
- Sunday
- closed
Recognized By
Explore Budapest
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