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    Restaurant in Hamburg, Germany

    CARLS Brasserie an der Elbphilharmonie

    210pts

    Solid German brasserie for a pre-concert dinner.

    CARLS Brasserie an der Elbphilharmonie, Restaurant in Hamburg

    About CARLS Brasserie an der Elbphilharmonie

    CARLS Brasserie an der Elbphilharmonie is a Michelin Plate–recognised German brasserie (2024 and 2025) at €€, sitting directly beside the Elbphilharmonie in HafenCity. With a 4.2 Google rating from over 1,600 reviews, it is the most accessible Michelin-noted dinner option in one of Hamburg's most visited addresses. Book two to three weeks ahead for concert-night sittings.

    Verdict: The Right Hamburg Brasserie for a Special Night Out Near the Elbphilharmonie

    If you're comparing CARLS Brasserie an der Elbphilharmonie to a higher-end Hamburg option like The Table Kevin Fehling or bianc, the calculus is direct: CARLS is the sensible pick when you want a proper dinner in a landmark setting without committing to a four-figure tasting menu. At the €€ price point, it holds a Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025, which is a meaningful signal that the cooking meets a defined standard of quality. The 4.2 Google rating across 1,604 reviews adds weight to that case. Book this for a celebration dinner, a client meal, or a date night where the location and atmosphere need to carry as much as the food.

    Portrait: German Brasserie at a Concert Hall Address

    CARLS sits at Am Kaiserkai 69 in Hamburg's HafenCity, directly beside the Elbphilharmonie. The address alone does a lot of the heavy lifting here. HafenCity is Hamburg's most architecturally ambitious neighbourhood, and a dinner at CARLS before or after a concert is a considered, coherent evening rather than an afterthought. For anyone planning a special occasion in Hamburg, that combination of setting and cuisine at the €€ tier is difficult to replicate elsewhere in the city.

    The cuisine is German, and at brasserie register that means accessible interpretations of the national kitchen: dishes rooted in local and regional tradition rather than the hyper-technical modernism you'd find at Restaurant Haerlin or the creative boundary-pushing of 100/200 Kitchen. That positioning is a feature, not a limitation. If you want serious German cooking at brasserie pace — without a pre-set tasting format — CARLS fits a gap that the city's more formal fine-dining rooms don't cover.

    The Michelin Plate recognition, awarded in consecutive years, tells you the kitchen is consistent. Michelin does not hand out Plates as a courtesy gesture; they indicate that inspectors found quality cooking worth noting, even if a star wasn't warranted. For a brasserie-format restaurant at €€, two consecutive Plates represent a credible quality floor. Compare that to the broader Hamburg market: many restaurants in this price tier carry no Michelin recognition at all.

    On the wine side, a German brasserie at this address has every reason to build a list that takes the food seriously. German cuisine pairs naturally with the country's white wine tradition , Rieslings from the Mosel and Rhine, Spätburgunder from Baden and the Pfalz , and a Michelin-recognised kitchen tends to attract wine programming that keeps pace. The wine list at CARLS is not documented in available data, but at €€ alongside Michelin Plate recognition, expect a list that goes beyond the obvious. If wine is a priority for your evening, the brasserie format means you can order by the glass and build the meal at your own pace, which is a practical advantage over tasting-menu-only formats where pairings are pre-set. For comparison, Lakeside and Zeik operate at €€€€ , a meaningfully higher spend for an evening that prioritises wine pairing depth.

    For context on where CARLS sits in the broader German dining conversation: the country's most ambitious German-cuisine restaurants , Schwarzwaldstube in Baiersbronn, Aqua in Wolfsburg, Vendôme in Bergisch Gladbach , operate at three-star level with corresponding price points. CARLS is not competing in that tier, nor does it need to. Its value is accessibility: Michelin-recognised German cooking in a landmark HafenCity address, priced to allow a full evening without the financial commitment of a destination tasting menu. If you're in Hamburg and want a reference point for what serious German cooking looks like internationally, Sühring in Bangkok or JAN in Munich give you a sense of the creative ceiling , CARLS is playing a different and deliberately more grounded game.

    Booking and Practical Details

    Reservations: Booking is rated Easy. A week's notice is typically sufficient for most sittings, though for weekend evenings , particularly pre- or post-concert slots at the Elbphilharmonie , book at least two to three weeks ahead. Concert nights fill the neighbourhood quickly and CARLS benefits directly from that foot traffic. Budget: €€ per head, making this one of the more accessible Michelin-recognised options in Hamburg. Dress: Not documented, but a brasserie at this address in HafenCity warrants smart casual as a minimum; concert evenings tend to raise the room's dress standard naturally. Location: Am Kaiserkai 69, HafenCity, Hamburg. Walkable from the Elbphilharmonie plaza. Group dining: Brasserie format suggests standard group accommodation; contact the restaurant directly to confirm private dining or large-party arrangements, as specific capacity data is not available.

    How It Compares

    See the comparison section below for a full peer breakdown against Hamburg's other Michelin-recognised and fine-dining options.

    For a broader look at eating and drinking in the city, see our full Hamburg restaurants guide, our Hamburg bars guide, our Hamburg hotels guide, our Hamburg wineries guide, and our Hamburg experiences guide.

    Compare CARLS Brasserie an der Elbphilharmonie

    Booking Options Near CARLS Brasserie an der Elbphilharmonie
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    CARLS Brasserie an der ElbphilharmonieGerman€€Easy
    The Table Kevin FehlingCreative€€€€Unknown
    biancModern Mediterranean, Mediterranean Cuisine€€€€Unknown
    LakesideGerman Lakeside€€€€Unknown
    HeimatjuwelGerman, Creative€€€Unknown
    ZeikModern European, Modern Cuisine€€€€Unknown

    What to weigh when choosing between CARLS Brasserie an der Elbphilharmonie and alternatives.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can CARLS Brasserie an der Elbphilharmonie accommodate groups?

    Groups are manageable here given the brasserie format, which typically handles larger parties more comfortably than a tasting-menu-only restaurant. For parties of six or more, book well in advance, especially on weekend evenings when pre-concert demand peaks at this Elbphilharmonie-adjacent address. check the venue's official channels to confirm private dining or group arrangements, as specific policies are not documented.

    How far ahead should I book CARLS Brasserie an der Elbphilharmonie?

    A week's notice is generally enough for most sittings at this €€ brasserie. The exception is weekend evenings, particularly those tied to Elbphilharmonie concert schedules — for those, book two to three weeks ahead. Booking is rated Easy overall, so this is not a hard-to-secure reservation outside peak periods.

    What should a first-timer know about CARLS Brasserie an der Elbphilharmonie?

    The address at Am Kaiserkai 69, directly beside the Elbphilharmonie in HafenCity, is a significant part of the draw. CARLS holds a Michelin Plate for both 2024 and 2025, which signals consistent kitchen quality without the price or formality of a starred room. At the €€ price point, first-timers should expect a capable German brasserie experience rather than a destination fine-dining meal.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at CARLS Brasserie an der Elbphilharmonie?

    Tasting menu details are not documented in available venue data, so a specific verdict on format or pricing cannot be given. What is confirmed: CARLS operates at a €€ price point with Michelin Plate recognition, which places it in the reliable mid-range rather than the full-commitment fine-dining tier. If a multi-course format is your priority, The Table Kevin Fehling is the stronger call in Hamburg.

    Is CARLS Brasserie an der Elbphilharmonie good for a special occasion?

    Yes, for occasions where setting matters as much as the food. The Elbphilharmonie address in HafenCity gives the evening a sense of occasion that most Hamburg restaurants at this price level cannot match. With two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024, 2025), the kitchen holds up its end. For a milestone dinner where the food itself needs to be the centrepiece, step up to bianc or The Table Kevin Fehling instead.

    What are alternatives to CARLS Brasserie an der Elbphilharmonie in Hamburg?

    The Table Kevin Fehling is Hamburg's most decorated fine-dining option and the right call if budget is not a constraint and you want a full tasting-menu experience. bianc sits closer to CARLS in tone but with stronger culinary ambition. Zeik and Heimatjuwel are worth considering if you want something with a more local, neighbourhood feel. Lakeside is a credible option if waterside setting is a priority.

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