Restaurant in Sankt Anton am Arlberg, Austria
Gourmetrestaurant Tannenhof
1,005ptsTwo Michelin stars, six courses, book early.

About Gourmetrestaurant Tannenhof
Gourmetrestaurant Tannenhof is the most technically accomplished dinner in Sankt Anton am Arlberg, with two Michelin stars, a 600-label wine list, and mountain views that justify the refined setting. Book here for a special occasion or a serious food-focused visit. Reservation difficulty is near-impossible during ski season, so plan months ahead.
The Verdict
Picture this: a winter evening in the Tyrolean Alps, snow banked against the windows of a seven-suite boutique hotel, and inside, a dining room serving food serious enough to earn two Michelin stars. Gourmetrestaurant Tannenhof is the kind of place that makes you reconsider what a ski-resort restaurant can be. If you are visiting Sankt Anton am Arlberg and want the most technically accomplished meal available, book here. The qualification: this is a near-impossible reservation, it sits at the leading of the local price range (€€€€), and it rewards those who come specifically for the food rather than those seeking a casual après-ski wind-down.
The Space
The dining room at Tannenhof is designed around a single structural advantage: its refined position above Sankt Anton, with large windows that frame the mountain panorama directly. The room reads as intimate rather than grand, in keeping with the boutique hotel that contains it. Seating is limited to the scale of a property with only seven suites, which means the atmosphere stays controlled and the service-to-cover ratio stays high. The terrace, open in the right season, extends that spatial generosity further. This is not a cavernous hotel ballroom dressed up as a fine-dining room; the proportions work in the guest's favour, keeping the experience personal without feeling crowded. For a special-occasion dinner where the physical setting matters as much as the plate, the room earns its place in the argument.
The Food
Chef Dennis Ilies arrived at Tannenhof after formative time at The Table Kevin Fehling in Hamburg, a three-Michelin-star operation. That pedigree is visible in the cooking's technical register. The cuisine is classified as Alpine but operates in a contemporary mode rooted in classical technique: expect dishes built on precise flavour contrasts and high-quality sourcing rather than rustic mountain straightforwardness. The Michelin citation references dishes such as calf sweetbreads with crunchy amaranth, barbecued red peppers, braised apricots, saffron hollandaise, and veal head jus — a combination that signals both classical training and willingness to layer unexpected textures. Diners choose between a six-course set menu and à la carte, which gives a flexibility not every two-star operation offers. La Liste scored the restaurant 78 points in its 2026 edition (up from 76.5 points in 2025), a consistent upward trajectory that suggests the kitchen is not coasting on its star count. Opinionated About Dining placed Tannenhof at rank 528 in Europe in 2025, which in a continent this saturated with serious restaurants is a meaningful signal.
The Wine and Drinks Program
The wine list runs to approximately 600 international labels. For a restaurant of this size and category, that is a well-stocked cellar: deep enough to support serious wine pairing across multiple courses without looping back on familiar bottles, and international in scope rather than narrowly regional. If your visit is partly structured around the wine, this list gives you genuine range. For food-and-wine pairings across the six-course menu, the depth here is a practical asset, not just a numbers game. What Tannenhof's drinks program does not appear to offer is a standalone bar experience in the cocktail-bar sense: this is a hotel restaurant whose drinks operation is built around table service and wine pairing rather than a counter destination. If you are looking for a bar to sit at independently of a full dinner, our full Sankt Anton am Arlberg bars guide will serve you better. Within the fine-dining context, though, 600 labels across an intimate room is a strong position.
Booking and Logistics
Tannenhof carries a near-impossible booking difficulty rating, which in a ski resort context makes sense on two levels. First, the hotel has only seven suites, and hotel guests will always have priority access to the dining room. Second, the restaurant's award profile (two Michelin stars, consistent La Liste recognition) pulls demand from beyond the immediate resort. Book as far in advance as possible, and treat the ski season window — roughly December through April , as the high-demand period where last-minute availability is close to zero. The address is Nassereinerstraße 98 in St. Anton am Arlberg. If you are travelling to the area for the dining rather than the skiing, note that Sankt Anton sits on a major rail line connecting Innsbruck to Bregenz, making it accessible without a car. For broader context on the destination, see our full Sankt Anton am Arlberg restaurants guide and our full Sankt Anton am Arlberg hotels guide.
Leading Time to Visit
The optimal window is mid-January through early March, when the ski season is at full depth, the mountain views through those large windows carry maximum impact, and the hotel is operating at its most focused pitch. The shoulder weeks of early December and late April are worth considering if you want the full experience with slightly less competition for tables. Summer visits are possible , the terrace position above Sankt Anton would be genuinely pleasant in warmer months , but the restaurant's identity and the destination's energy are both winter-oriented, and the experience is calibrated accordingly.
How It Compares
See the comparison section below for how Tannenhof sits against the other serious options in Sankt Anton am Arlberg.
Pearl Picks: More Alpine Fine Dining in Austria
If Tannenhof resonates but you want to build a broader Austrian fine-dining itinerary, the following are worth knowing: Griggeler Stuba in Lech offers a comparable alpine fine-dining format in a neighbouring resort. Döllerer in Golling an der Salzach is among the most serious Alpine-focused kitchens in the country. Steirereck im Stadtpark in Vienna is the reference point for Austrian fine dining at the highest level. For mountain-adjacent options further afield, Die Geniesserstube im Alpenhof in Tux and Johannesstube in Nova Levante both operate in the same refined Alpine register. Ikarus in Salzburg, Kräuterreich by Vitus Winkler in Sankt Veit im Pongau, Landhaus Bacher in Mautern an der Donau, and Obauer in Werfen round out Austria's upper tier. For the full picture of what Sankt Anton offers beyond restaurants, explore our experiences guide and our wineries guide for the region.
FAQs
- What should a first-timer know about Gourmetrestaurant Tannenhof? You are booking a two-Michelin-star Alpine restaurant inside a boutique hotel, not a casual mountain dinner. The price range is €€€€, the format is either a six-course set menu or à la carte, and the experience is formal without being stiff. Arrive knowing what you want to drink: the 600-label wine list is the drinks story here, and it rewards some pre-research.
- Can I eat at the bar at Gourmetrestaurant Tannenhof? Bar seating is not confirmed in the available data, and the restaurant's format as a hotel dining room suggests the primary experience is table-based. If a counter or bar-seat option matters to you, confirm directly when booking. For standalone bar options in Sankt Anton, our bars guide is a better starting point.
- How far ahead should I book Gourmetrestaurant Tannenhof? Treat this as a near-impossible booking and plan accordingly. During ski season (December to April), the combination of hotel-guest priority and two-Michelin-star demand means tables can disappear months in advance. Book as early as you can confirm your travel dates. Outside peak ski season, the timeline may be more forgiving, but do not count on it.
- Is Gourmetrestaurant Tannenhof good for a special occasion? Yes, directly: the two-star kitchen, intimate room, mountain-view setting, and extensive wine list make this one of the strongest special-occasion options in Sankt Anton. The €€€€ price point fits the occasion framing. If you want the most serious meal in the resort for a birthday, anniversary, or milestone dinner, this is the clearest answer.
- Is the tasting menu worth it at Gourmetrestaurant Tannenhof? The six-course menu is the format that makes the most sense here. Chef Dennis Ilies trained under a three-star operation in Hamburg, and the La Liste score has moved upward year-on-year. At €€€€ in a ski resort, you are paying for technical cooking that outranks the postcode. If tasting menus in general work for your table, this one is backed by a credential set that justifies the spend.
- What are alternatives to Gourmetrestaurant Tannenhof in Sankt Anton am Arlberg? For a slightly lower price point, Endlich (Scandinavian, €€€) and Verwallstube (International, €€€) both offer serious cooking without the booking difficulty or the two-star formality. At the same price tier, Alpin Gourmet Stube (Modern Cuisine, €€€€) and Hospiz Alm (Contemporary, €€€€) are the closest comparisons in spend. If Tannenhof is fully booked, Alpin Gourmet Stube is the natural first alternative. For the full picture, see our Sankt Anton am Arlberg restaurants guide.
Compare Gourmetrestaurant Tannenhof
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gourmetrestaurant Tannenhof | Alpine | €€€€ | La Liste Top Restaurants (2026): 78pts; Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Europe Ranked #528 (2025); La Liste Top Restaurants (2025): 76.5pts; Michelin 2 Stars (2025); After working at top-flight restaurants including the three-star The Table Kevin Fehling in Hamburg, Dennis Ilies has ended up in the Tyrolean mountains – at the exclusive boutique Hotel Tannenhof, to be precise. Alpine-style luxury is not confined to the seven suites; the restaurant also exudes elegance and sophistication. The view through the large windows is magnificent, and the terrace here in this elevated position overlooking St Anton is simply wonderful. The cuisine deserves a special mention: Modern yet rooted in classic culinary tradition, it delivers the highest quality through innovative creations. Sophisticated details and harmonious flavour contrasts are showcased in dishes such as calf sweetbreads with crunchy, nutty amaranth, barbecued red peppers and braised apricots, as well as saffron hollandaise and veal head jus. You can opt for the six-course set menu or order à la carte. The excellent wine list comprises around 600 international labels. | Near Impossible | — |
| Alpin Gourmet Stube | Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Endlich | Scandinavian | €€€ | Unknown | — | |
| Hospiz Alm | Contemporary | €€€€ | Unknown | — | |
| Verwallstube | International | €€€ | Unknown | — |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should a first-timer know about Gourmetrestaurant Tannenhof?
This is a two-Michelin-star restaurant inside a seven-suite boutique hotel above Sankt Anton, so the experience is intimate and unhurried rather than buzzy or high-volume. Chef Dennis Ilies trained at The Table Kevin Fehling in Hamburg, a three-star operation, and the cooking reflects that precision: modern technique grounded in classical form, with a six-course menu or à la carte available. Come expecting a considered, course-by-course evening with mountain views through large windows, not a casual après-ski dinner.
Can I eat at the bar at Gourmetrestaurant Tannenhof?
No bar-dining format is documented for Tannenhof. Given the hotel runs only seven suites and the restaurant seats a small room, seating is structured around the dining room itself. If you want flexibility, the à la carte option gives you more control over the meal format than committing to the full six-course menu.
How far ahead should I book Gourmetrestaurant Tannenhof?
Book as early as possible, ideally months out if you are targeting peak ski season between mid-January and early March. The hotel has only seven suites, which means hotel guests have structural priority, and the restaurant is small enough that it fills quickly once the season opens. Treating this like any other resort dinner reservation will leave you without a table.
Is Gourmetrestaurant Tannenhof good for a special occasion?
Yes, this is one of the stronger cases for a special-occasion booking in the Austrian Alps. Two Michelin stars, a 600-label wine list, mountain views, and a small room that does not feel factory-formal adds up to a setting that works for anniversaries or milestone dinners. The €€€€ price point is the honest qualifier: factor that in before booking for a large group.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Gourmetrestaurant Tannenhof?
At two Michelin stars and €€€€ pricing, the six-course menu is the format Tannenhof is built around, and Chef Ilies's pedigree at a three-star Hamburg restaurant is visible in the precision of the cooking. If you prefer to dictate your own pace or avoid a full commitment, the à la carte option exists, but the tasting menu is how the kitchen makes its argument. For comparison, Verwallstube in the same village offers a less expensive entry point if the full Tannenhof spend feels steep.
What are alternatives to Gourmetrestaurant Tannenhof in Sankt Anton am Arlberg?
Verwallstube and Alpin Gourmet Stube are the most direct local alternatives for serious dining in Sankt Anton. Hospiz Alm skews more towards a convivial mountain atmosphere than a fine-dining format. Endlich is worth considering if you want something less formal or at a lower price point. None of them carry Tannenhof's two-star credential, which is currently the highest Michelin rating in the immediate area.
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