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    Restaurant in Tel Aviv, Israel

    Habasta

    300Pearl Points

    Come for the wine list, stay for the food.

    Habasta, Restaurant in Tel Aviv

    About Habasta

    Habasta is the clearest answer to the question of where to drink Israeli wine seriously in Tel Aviv. Steps from the Carmel Market, it holds a World of Fine Wine 3-Star Accreditation and an OAD Casual Europe 2025 ranking of #467. The atmosphere is lively and local-facing. Book ahead for weekend evenings; Saturday lunch is the most relaxed entry point.

    Habasta, Tel Aviv: The Verdict

    If you have already been to Habasta once, you already know the short answer: yes, come back. The wine list is the reason, and it keeps changing. For first-timers, the case is equally direct: this is the address in Tel Aviv that takes Israeli wine seriously enough to have earned a 3-Star Accreditation from the World of Fine Wine Awards and a 2025 ranking of #467 on Opinionated About Dining's Casual Europe list. That combination of credentials, in a side-street spot steps from the Carmel Market, is unusual enough to make a booking worthwhile.

    What Habasta Is

    Habasta sits on HaShomer Street in the Carmel Market area, one of Tel Aviv's most concentrated stretches for independent food and wine. The room has the energy of a place that locals return to regularly, not a destination built for out-of-towners. Expect a convivial, animated atmosphere, especially as the evening progresses. The noise level reflects genuine popularity rather than design theatre, and that distinction matters: the crowd here tends toward people who want to drink well alongside a plate of food, rather than the reverse. If a quiet, conversation-friendly dinner is your priority, arrive early in the evening or at lunch when the pace is calmer.

    Chef Elon Amir leads the kitchen with an Israeli cooking approach that serves the wine program rather than competing with it. The cuisine is designed to keep the glass moving, which is exactly what you want when the wine list is the main event. Habasta has built its reputation as the reference point for Tel Aviv's wine-attentive diners, and the 3-Star World of Fine Wine accreditation confirms that the list is being taken seriously at an international level.

    The Wine Program

    The wine list is the single strongest reason to choose Habasta over comparable Israeli restaurants in Tel Aviv. The 3-Star World of Fine Wine accreditation puts it in a narrow tier of restaurants globally where the wine program is considered a destination in its own right. For visitors interested in Israeli wine specifically, Habasta is one of the clearest entry points: the list reflects the depth of what Israeli producers are doing, particularly in the country's emerging natural and minimal-intervention segment. If you are coming from abroad and want a single evening that answers the question of what Israeli wine tastes like right now, this is a better use of your time than most other options in the city. For broader regional context on where to drink in Tel Aviv, see our full Tel Aviv bars guide and our full Tel Aviv wineries guide.

    Practical Context

    Habasta's Google rating of 4.1 across nearly 2,000 reviews indicates consistent delivery rather than the occasional exceptional visit. That volume of reviews also confirms it is not a secret: expect the room to be occupied, and plan accordingly. Booking is rated easy, but easy does not mean unnecessary. Given the OAD ranking and the loyal local following, a reservation on a Thursday or Friday evening is advisable. Saturday lunch, which runs until 4:30 pm, is the most approachable entry point if you want a relaxed first visit.

    For a broader picture of where Habasta sits in Tel Aviv's restaurant scene, our full Tel Aviv restaurants guide covers the city's current options across price points and cuisines. If you are building a multi-day itinerary, our full Tel Aviv hotels guide and our full Tel Aviv experiences guide are useful companions.

    Israeli cooking has found strong footholds internationally. If you want to compare what Habasta does to Israeli restaurants elsewhere, 12 Chairs in New York City, Balaboosta in New York City, Ash'Kara in Denver, and Berta in Berlin each give a useful frame of reference. None of them, however, carry the wine program credentials Habasta holds.

    Within Israel, the picture is equally worth mapping. Abu Hassan in Jaffa is a different category entirely, focused on hummus rather than wine. Chakra in Jerusalem and Helena in Caesarea each represent strong regional alternatives if your itinerary takes you beyond Tel Aviv. Pescado in Ashdod rounds out the broader coastal picture.

    Know Before You Go

    • Address: HaShomer St 4, Tel Aviv-Yafo, Israel
    • Hours: Monday–Thursday 12–11 pm | Friday 11 am–4 pm and 6–11 pm | Saturday 12–4:30 pm and 6–11 pm | Sunday 12–11 pm
    • Booking difficulty: Easy, but reserve ahead for Thursday and Friday evenings
    • Leading time to visit: Saturday lunch for a calmer atmosphere; Friday evening for the full energy of the room
    • Wine credentials: World of Fine Wine 3-Star Accreditation; OAD Casual Europe #467 (2025)
    • Google rating: 4.1 (1,952 reviews)
    • Neighbourhood: Carmel Market area, central Tel Aviv
    • Tel Aviv guides: Restaurants | Hotels | Bars | Wineries | Experiences

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Habasta good for a special occasion?

    Yes, particularly if the occasion centres on wine. The 3-Star World of Fine Wine accreditation and consistent OAD ranking put Habasta in a different tier from most Tel Aviv restaurants on that dimension alone. For a celebratory dinner where the bottle matters as much as the food, it works well. If you need a large private space or formal service theatrics, look at HaSalon instead.

    What should a first-timer know about Habasta?

    The wine list is the main event — chef Elon Amir's kitchen supports it, but first-timers who arrive without engaging the wine program are missing the point. The restaurant sits on HaShomer Street, just off the Carmel Market, so the setting is market-neighbourhood rather than formal dining room. Go with an open agenda and let the list guide the meal.

    Can Habasta accommodate groups?

    The Carmel Market location and the room's format suggest this is better suited to parties of two to four than to large group bookings. For groups of six or more, check the venue's official channels to confirm capacity, as the space prioritises the dining experience over event-style seating. HaSalon is a more practical option for large group occasions in Tel Aviv.

    What are alternatives to Habasta in Tel Aviv?

    For Israeli cuisine with a similar wine focus, Ha'Achim is the closest peer. HaSalon suits larger groups or occasions where atmosphere and scale are the priority. Mashya covers the upper end of the market with a more formal format. Dr. Shakshuka and Jasmino are better choices if the goal is casual, food-first dining without the wine programme.

    How far ahead should I book Habasta?

    Book at least one week ahead for weekday lunches; weekend evenings and Friday lunch, which closes at 4 pm, fill faster and warrant two weeks' notice minimum. Saturday hours split into two sittings (12–4:30 pm and 6–11 pm), so be specific when booking. Walk-in availability exists but is unreliable given the volume implied by nearly 2,000 Google reviews.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Habasta?

    Dinner gives you the full experience — longer hours and more time to work through the wine list. Friday lunch (11 am–4 pm) is worth considering if you want a shorter, tighter sitting with a market-day atmosphere around the Carmel. Saturday lunch ends at 4:30 pm sharp, so pace accordingly. For a first visit, a weekday dinner is the lowest-risk slot.

    Is Habasta good for solo dining?

    Yes. A market-adjacent neighbourhood restaurant with a serious wine list is a reasonable solo destination, and the counter or smaller tables typical of venues like this suit a single diner without awkwardness. Going solo also makes it easier to have a proper conversation with staff about the wine list, which is where the real value sits.

    Location

    HaShomer St 4, Tel Aviv-Yafo, Israel

    Tel Aviv, Israel

    Compare Habasta

    The Complete Picture: Habasta and Peers
    VenueCuisineAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    HabastaIsraeliHaBasta is where all the hustle and bustle are happening, and a place considered the must-go spot for Tel Aviv's wine aficionados. It is located on a side street, just a few steps from the Carmel Mark...; Opinionated About Dining Casual in Europe Ranked #467 (2025); Opinionated About Dining Casual in Europe Ranked #580 (2024); Opinionated About Dining Casual in Europe Recommended (2023); {"wbwl_source": {"slug": "ha-basta", "page_type": "star_accreditation", "category_slug": "star-accreditation", "award_result": "Accredited", "is_global_winner": "False"}, "scraped_details": {"hero_image": "", "page_title": "3-Star Accreditation", "page_url": ""}, "source_row_snapshot": {"raw_name": "Ha Basta"}}Easy
    Dr. ShakshukaMiddle EasternUnknown
    Ha'AchimIsraeliUnknown
    HaSalonIsraeli - Mediterranean, IsraeliUnknown
    JasminoKebabsUnknown
    MashyaIsraeliUnknown

    Comparing your options in Tel Aviv for this tier.

    Also Consider

    • Dr. Shakshuka — Middle Eastern, Middle Eastern
    • Ha'Achim — Israeli, Israeli
    • HaSalon — Israeli - Mediterranean, Israeli, Israeli - Mediterranean, Israeli
    • Jasmino — Kebabs, Kebabs
    • Mashya — Israeli, Israeli

    How Habasta Compares in Tel Aviv

    Among Israeli restaurants in Tel Aviv, Habasta occupies a specific position: it is the wine-first choice. If your evening is built around a serious bottle, no comparable option in the city carries the same international credentialing. HaSalon and Mashya both deliver strong Israeli-Mediterranean cooking and are worth knowing, but neither is organised around the wine list the way Habasta is. For food-led dining with a more formal register, Mashya is the stronger call. For a looser, more social atmosphere with equally serious Israeli cooking, Ha'Achim is the direct competitor, and the choice between the two often comes down to whether wine depth or kitchen ambition is your priority on a given evening.

    Port Said and Miznon serve a different purpose: both are lower-key, more casual, and better suited to a quick, affordable lunch than an evening built around a wine list. If you want market-adjacent Israeli food without a reservation, those are the more accessible alternatives. Dr. Shakshuka and Jasmino are in an entirely different category, focused on shakshuka and kebabs respectively, and are better understood as complementary visits rather than alternatives to Habasta.

    The practical summary: book Habasta when the wine program is the reason you are going out. Book Alena at The Norman if you want polished Israeli cuisine in a hotel setting with more service structure. Book Ha'Achim if you want the same Carmel-area energy with the kitchen taking the lead. Habasta is not the only good restaurant in this part of Tel Aviv, but it is the one with the most defensible claim to being the city's wine destination.

    Hours

    Monday
    12–11 pm
    Tuesday
    12–11 pm
    Wednesday
    12–11 pm
    Thursday
    12–11 pm
    Friday
    11 am–4 pm, 6–11 pm
    Saturday
    12–4:30 pm, 6–11 pm
    Sunday
    12–11 pm

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