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    Restaurant in Madrid, Spain

    DiverXO

    2,125Pearl Points

    Book months out. Theatre-first tasting menu.

    DiverXO, Restaurant in Madrid

    About DiverXO

    DiverXO is David Muñoz's three-Michelin-star flagship in Madrid, ranked #4 in the World's 50 Best (2024) and 98 points on La Liste (2026). The single "Flying Pigs Cuisine" tasting menu blends Asian technique with Spanish ingredients in deliberately provocative combinations. Booking difficulty is near-impossible — reserve three to four months out, and only come if you're ready for a long, high-energy evening with no à la carte option.

    Verdict: One of the Most Ambitious Tasting Menus in Europe — If You Can Get a Table

    At the €€€€ price point, DiverXO delivers something that most restaurants at this tier don't attempt: a genuinely disorienting, theatrically charged tasting menu that abandons culinary convention almost entirely. Ranked #4 in the World's 50 Best Restaurants (2024), #6 on La Liste's Leading Restaurants (2026, 98 points), and holding three Michelin stars, this is one of the most credentialed restaurants in Europe. The question isn't whether the cooking is serious — it plainly is. The question is whether you're the right diner for it. If you want classical French technique or composed, meditative courses, look elsewhere. If you want a menu that genuinely surprises you from the first course to the last, DiverXO is the strongest case Madrid makes for destination dining.

    The Experience: What You're Actually Booking

    The room inside the NH Eurobuilding hotel in Chamartín is visually striking before a single plate arrives. Flying pigs appear throughout , in the art, the wall hangings, the crockery , a reference to Dabiz Muñoz's childhood bet with his father that he'd one day run a restaurant with a queue around the corner. His father's sceptical reply has become the restaurant's identity. The visual language of the space is intentionally maximalist, which either sets the right tone for what follows or signals that this isn't a quiet dinner.

    The single "Flying Pigs Cuisine" tasting menu is the only option. There are no à la carte choices, no abbreviated formats. Dishes draw on Asian technique alongside Spanish ingredients: think Pyrenean-matured nigiri, Japanese paella, or roasted caviar with vindaloo curry and Greek yoghurt. The La Liste citation describes a Galician lobster dish "waking up on the beaches of Goa" and a mini pork sandwich paying homage to childhood snacks. These aren't descriptions for the sake of whimsy , the menu is genuinely structured around emotional and cultural reference points, not around showcasing a single ingredient or regional tradition.

    David Muñoz trained at Hakkasan, Nobu, Nahm, and Locanda Locatelli in London before returning to Madrid in 2007 and opening DiverXO. He earned his third Michelin star by the age of 33. The Asian thread running through the menu is not decorative , it reflects formative professional experience, which gives the fusion an internal logic that many pan-Asian tasting menus lack.

    Service: Does It Earn the Price?

    At this tier, service is part of the proposition, not a background condition. DiverXO's service philosophy matches the energy of the food , it is theatrical and engaged rather than formal and deferential. Dishes are explained with genuine animation. The pace is long: sessions run deep into the evening, and the kitchen's ambition means courses arrive with intention rather than speed. For the right diner, this feels immersive. For someone expecting the hushed precision of a more classical three-star room, it may read as chaotic.

    The comparison worth making: [Coque](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/coque-madrid-restaurant) in Madrid offers a more formally choreographed service experience at the same price tier, with a cellar-to-dining-room progression that feels architecturally considered. [DSTAgE](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/dstage-madrid-restaurant) offers two Michelin stars with a slightly more intimate room. Neither matches DiverXO's creative intensity, but both are easier to book and deliver a more controlled environment. Whether DiverXO's service earns its premium depends on how much you value precision over personality , at this restaurant, personality wins by design.

    Booking: The Hardest Table in Madrid

    Booking difficulty is rated Near Impossible, and that classification is accurate. DiverXO operates Tuesday through Friday only (closed Monday, Saturday, and Sunday), with lunch and dinner services. The restaurant closes entirely from August 1 through August 22. Given the acclaim , three Michelin stars, a consistent top-five World's 50 Best ranking across multiple years , demand significantly outstrips availability. Plan on booking several months in advance, not weeks. If you're travelling to Madrid specifically for this meal, lock in the reservation before you book flights.

    There are plans to move DiverXO to a larger space, which may eventually ease access, but at the time of writing the current configuration remains in place at NH Eurobuilding, C. del Padre Damián, 23, Chamartín.

    Who Should Book DiverXO

    DiverXO is the right call if: you're a food-focused traveller treating Madrid as a destination for this meal specifically; you have eaten widely across Europe's tasting menu circuit and want something that doesn't follow the established grammar; or you're comfortable with a long, high-energy evening rather than a composed, quiet one.

    It is a poor fit if: you want a more restrained or classically structured experience; you're travelling with someone who doesn't share your appetite for adventurous eating; or you need flexibility on format, timing, or dietary customisation.

    For broader context on Madrid's high-end dining options, see our full Madrid restaurants guide. Spain's wider three-star circuit includes [Arzak in San Sebastián](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/arzak-san-sebastin-restaurant), [El Celler de Can Roca in Girona](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/el-celler-de-can-roca-girona-restaurant), [Azurmendi in Larrabetzu](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/azurmendi-larrabetzu-restaurant), [Martin Berasategui in Lasarte - Oria](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/martin-berasategui-lasarte-oria-restaurant), [Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/aponiente-el-puerto-de-santa-mara-restaurant), and [Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/cocina-hermanos-torres-barcelona-restaurant) , all worth comparing if you're building a Spain itinerary around serious cooking. Internationally, if you're calibrating DiverXO against a similar creative-progressive format, [Atomix in New York City](https://www.joinpearl.co/restaurants/atomix) offers a useful reference point for Asian-influenced tasting menu ambition at comparable investment.

    Practical Reference

    Address: NH Eurobuilding, C. del Padre Damián, 23, Chamartín, 28036 Madrid. Hours: Tuesday–Friday, lunch 1–6:30 pm and dinner 7:30 pm–1 am. Closed Monday, Saturday, Sunday, and August 1–22. Price range: €€€€. Booking difficulty: Near Impossible , reserve months ahead. For Madrid hotel options near Chamartín, see our full Madrid hotels guide. For bars to extend the evening, see our full Madrid bars guide.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    • What should I wear to DiverXO? Smart casual is the practical answer. DiverXO's room is theatrical and art-filled rather than formally austere, so strict black-tie dress is unnecessary. That said, at the €€€€ price point and with Michelin three-star status, arriving in resort-casual clothes would be out of step with the room. Think of it as you would any other top-tier Madrid fine dining venue: dressed well, but not in a way that competes with the theatre on the plate.
    • Is DiverXO good for solo dining? It works for solo diners who are genuinely invested in the food. The tasting menu format means you're not dependent on conversation to fill the evening , the courses do that. Madrid's dining culture is warm toward solo guests at high-end restaurants. That said, the long duration of a DiverXO meal (multiple hours) is more comfortable when shared. If you're solo and primarily motivated by the creative cooking rather than the social experience, it's a sound booking. For a solo meal that's slightly easier to navigate logistically, Smoked Room offers a counter-based experience that suits individual diners well.
    • What should a first-timer know about DiverXO? The menu is a single tasting format , there are no alternatives and no à la carte option. Expect a long evening: this is not a two-hour dinner. The kitchen applies Asian technique to Spanish ingredients in combinations that are deliberately provocative, so come with an open approach rather than a preference for familiar flavour profiles. Dishes reference Muñoz's personal history and culinary influences directly, so reading a little about the restaurant's premise before you arrive improves the experience. Also: the flying pig imagery is everywhere, and it's intentional.
    • Is DiverXO worth the price? For food-focused travellers with experience across Europe's tasting menu circuit, yes , DiverXO offers a creative density and a singular culinary perspective that few restaurants at any price point match. Ranked #4 globally by World's 50 Best (2024) and 98 points on La Liste (2026), the credentials support the premium. The caveat: if you're not specifically drawn to high-concept, Asian-influenced progressive cooking, the price-to-satisfaction ratio tilts. At the same €€€€ tier, Deessa or Paco Roncero offer technically accomplished experiences that may suit a broader range of palates.
    • How far ahead should I book DiverXO? Aim for at least three to four months in advance. DiverXO operates only four days a week (Tuesday–Friday) and closes entirely for most of August, which compresses availability significantly. Given its sustained position in the World's 50 Best leading five, demand is consistent year-round. If you're planning around a specific travel window, check availability the moment your dates are confirmed. Waiting until a month out is a genuine risk of missing out entirely.
    • Can I eat at the bar at DiverXO? DiverXO does not operate a separate bar dining format in the way some fine dining venues do. The single tasting menu is the entire offer. There is no abbreviated bar menu or counter seating that gives access to a shorter version of the kitchen's output. If you're looking for a walk-in or shorter-format option in Madrid's high-end scene, Smoked Room or Chispa Bistró are more accessible entry points.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I wear to DiverXO?

    No formal dress code is documented for DiverXO, but at the €€€€ price point and with a World's 50 Best #4 ranking, most guests dress sharply — think business casual to formal. The theatrical setting means what you wear is part of the occasion. Turning up in trainers would feel incongruous with the room.

    Is DiverXO good for solo dining?

    Solo dining is viable here, particularly if you are food-focused and comfortable sitting with a long, multi-course tasting menu as your primary entertainment. The theatrical, course-by-course format gives solo diners plenty of engagement without needing a companion to carry conversation. That said, confirm seating arrangements when booking — availability for a single seat at a flagship like DiverXO can be tighter than for pairs.

    What should a first-timer know about DiverXO?

    DiverXO runs a single tasting menu — the 'Flying Pigs Cuisine' format — so there is no à la carte option and no ability to customise the format on arrival. The experience is long, multi-course, and deliberately disorienting, blending Spanish ingredients with Asian technique in combinations like Pyrenean-matured nigiri or roasted caviar with vindaloo curry. Come hungry, come with time, and come having read what Dabiz Muñoz's cooking actually involves — this is not a conventional fine dining meal.

    Is DiverXO worth the price?

    At €€€€, DiverXO sits among the most expensive meals in Madrid, and the awards back the ambition: three Michelin stars, World's 50 Best #4 in 2024, La Liste 98pts in 2026, and Opinionated About Dining's #6 in Europe for 2025. If progressive tasting menus with high creative risk are your format, the price is justified. If you want recognisable dishes, refinement over theatre, or a shorter meal, Coque or Deessa will serve you better for less.

    How far ahead should I book DiverXO?

    Book as far in advance as possible — weeks at a minimum, months if your dates are fixed. DiverXO operates only Tuesday through Friday (closed Monday, Saturday, Sunday, and through most of August), which significantly compresses availability. Booking difficulty is classified as Near Impossible; treat securing a reservation as a prerequisite of any Madrid trip built around this meal.

    Can I eat at the bar at DiverXO?

    There is no bar dining option documented for DiverXO. The restaurant operates a single tasting menu format with no walk-in or counter seating equivalent to what you might find at a sushi bar or casual fine dining counter. A confirmed reservation is the only reliable route in.

    Location

    NH Eurobuilding, C. del Padre Damián, 23, Chamartín, 28036 Madrid, Spain

    Compare DiverXO

    Value at a Glance: DiverXO
    VenuePriceValue
    DiverXO€€€€
    Coque€€€€
    Deessa€€€€
    Paco Roncero€€€€
    Smoked Room€€€€
    Chispa Bistró€€€

    What to weigh when choosing between DiverXO and alternatives.

    Also Consider

    • Coque — Spanish, Creative, €€€€
    • Deessa — Modern Spanish, Creative, €€€€
    • Paco Roncero — Creative, €€€€
    • Smoked Room — Progressive Asador, Contemporary, €€€€
    • Chispa Bistró — Modern Cuisine, €€€

    Within Madrid's €€€€ tier, DiverXO sits in a category of its own for creative ambition, but that doesn't automatically make it the right booking for every diner. Coque offers a more formally structured experience — its cellar-to-dining-room progression and classically rooted Spanish cooking deliver a different kind of three-star occasion, one with more service polish and less creative friction. If you want a landmark Madrid meal that feels composed and ceremonial rather than theatrical, Coque is the stronger choice. Deessa sits at the same price tier with a more accessible creative register and a room that rewards conversation — a better fit for mixed groups where not everyone is a committed food enthusiast.

    Paco Roncero delivers technically accomplished modern Spanish cooking with strong visual presentation, but without DiverXO's global culinary references or its sustained international ranking pedigree. Smoked Room is the easiest booking in this peer group and offers a focused asador-meets-contemporary format that punches above its booking difficulty — worth considering if DiverXO is unavailable and you want a high-quality, lower-friction alternative. For diners on a tighter budget, Chispa Bistró at €€€ is the practical fallback — modern cooking without the theatre or the wait-time problem.

    The direct comparison that matters most: DiverXO is the correct booking if the cooking itself is the point of the trip and you have the patience to secure a reservation months out. For a special occasion that prioritises ambiance, service rhythm, and a more legible menu, Coque or Deessa are easier to book and easier to share with guests who aren't deep into the tasting-menu format. DiverXO wins on sheer creative distinction; the others win on accessibility and control.

    Hours

    Monday
    Closed
    Tuesday
    1–6:30 pm, 7:30 pm–1 am
    Wednesday
    1–6:30 pm, 7:30 pm–1 am
    Thursday
    1–6:30 pm, 7:30 pm–1 am
    Friday
    1–6:30 pm, 7:30 pm–1 am
    Saturday
    Closed
    Sunday
    Closed Closure August 1-22

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