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    Restaurant in Rome, Italy

    Il Ristorante - Niko Romito

    230pts

    Romito's cooking, easier to book than his best.

    Il Ristorante - Niko Romito, Restaurant in Rome

    About Il Ristorante - Niko Romito

    Il Ristorante - Niko Romito sits on the fifth floor of the Hotel Bulgari Rome with views of the Mausoleum of Augustus, carrying a 2025 Michelin Plate and the culinary signature of three-star chef Niko Romito. At €€€€ pricing and easy booking, it is a credible fine dining choice for those who want technical Italian cooking in a setting with genuine architectural drama. Start at the bar before dinner.

    A Michelin Plate at the Bulgari: Should You Book Il Ristorante - Niko Romito?

    A Google rating of 4.5 from 67 reviews is a modest sample for a restaurant operating inside one of Rome's most prestigious hotel addresses, but the number that matters more here is three: the Michelin stars Niko Romito holds at his flagship Reale in Castel di Sangro. Il Ristorante carries a 2025 Michelin Plate, which positions it as a serious dining room rather than a hotel convenience, but clearly below the ceiling of Rome's top-awarded tables. At €€€€ pricing, that gap is worth understanding before you commit.

    The Venue: Fifth Floor, Piazza Augusto Imperatore

    The address alone earns attention. Il Ristorante sits on the fifth floor of the Hotel Bulgari Rome, overlooking the Mausoleum of Augustus, one of the city's most significant ancient monuments. The dining room uses mahogany panelling and a curated selection of artworks to create a room that reads as quietly confident rather than ostentatious. The terrace, when conditions allow, extends that experience into direct contact with the Roman skyline. This is not a setting you'll find replicated elsewhere in the city, and for travellers who treat the physical context of a meal as part of its value, it carries real weight.

    The route to your table is itself part of the structure: you pass through the hotel bar, and the recommendation from those familiar with the space is to use it. Starting your evening with an aperitif at the bar before moving to the dining room mirrors the rhythm of Italian dining in a way that feels intentional, not incidental. For food and wine explorers who want to understand how a restaurant operates as a complete experience, this transition is worth building into your timing.

    The Menu: Romito's Approach at a Hotel Outpost

    Niko Romito's culinary thinking, developed over years at Reale, centres on restraint: stripping traditional Italian dishes back to their essential flavour logic and rebuilding them with technical precision. At Il Ristorante, that philosophy arrives in a format designed for the hotel dining context, lighter and more accessible than the full tasting experience at his three-star kitchen, but recognisably from the same hand.

    The menu as documented includes spaghetti in tomato sauce, artichoke soup, saffron risotto, and a Piedmontese bonet dessert. These are not showpiece dishes built for Instagram; they are tests of whether a kitchen can make deeply familiar things taste better than you expect. The spaghetti al pomodoro is the clearest signal of Romito's project: concentrating tomato flavour to a point where simplicity becomes a form of technical ambition. The bonet, a Piedmontese chocolate-and-amaretti dessert, closes the meal with a regional reference that speaks to the menu's broader intention, a course-by-course movement through Italian culinary geography rather than a Roman-only focus.

    For the explorer diner, this structure rewards engagement. Knowing that a dish as apparently plain as tomato spaghetti is the product of the same thinking applied at one of Italy's most technically decorated restaurants adds a layer of context that makes the meal worth following closely. If you want theatrical presentation or elaborate multi-component plates, this is not the right room. If you want to understand what Italian cooking looks like when excess is removed, it earns its price point.

    The Bar: Where to Start

    The editorial angle here deserves its own consideration. The bar at Hotel Bulgari Rome is not a waiting area; it operates as a genuine aperitif destination. Arriving early and spending time at the bar before dinner is the advised sequence, both because the bar carries its own quality and because it prepares the pace of the evening correctly. Rome's dining rhythm runs later than most northern European or American visitors expect, and the bar provides a natural buffer. For groups who want to talk before food arrives, or couples who want the full arc of the evening, build in 45 minutes at the bar. This also gives you a read on the room's energy before committing to the dining room pace.

    Booking and Timing

    Booking difficulty for Il Ristorante is rated Easy, which separates it from harder-to-access Rome tables like La Pergola. At €€€€ pricing inside a luxury hotel, the audience is self-selecting, and that keeps reservation pressure lower than at independently operated fine dining rooms. Booking through the Hotel Bulgari is the most direct route. For peak travel periods, particularly spring and early autumn when Rome hotel occupancy runs high, booking two to three weeks out is sensible. Outside peak season, shorter lead times are likely workable.

    How It Compares

    See the comparison section below for a full breakdown against Rome's €€€€ peers.

    Practical Details

    DetailIl Ristorante - Niko RomitoLa PergolaIdylio by Apreda
    Price tier€€€€€€€€€€€€
    Award levelMichelin Plate (2025)3 Michelin Stars1 Michelin Star
    SettingHotel rooftop, monument viewsHotel rooftop, city viewsHotel dining room
    Booking difficultyEasyHardModerate
    Bar-first optionYes (recommended)NoNo
    Cuisine focusItalian ContemporaryMediterranean/FrenchModern Italian

    Explore Further

    If Il Ristorante is on your list, you may also want to consider other Rome options: 53 Untitled, Adelaide, Pulejo, and Retrobottega all operate in the contemporary Italian space at varying price points. For the broader Italian fine dining picture, Osteria Francescana in Modena, Uliassi in Senigallia, Dal Pescatore in Runate, Quattro Passi in Marina del Cantone, Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler in Brunico, L'Olivo in Anacapri, and Agli Amici Rovinj are worth your attention. See our full Rome restaurants guide, Rome hotels guide, Rome bars guide, Rome wineries guide, and Rome experiences guide for more.

    FAQ

    Can Il Ristorante - Niko Romito accommodate groups?

    • The restaurant operates inside the Hotel Bulgari Rome, which has the infrastructure to handle larger bookings. For groups of six or more, contact the hotel directly well in advance, particularly during peak travel months.
    • At €€€€ pricing, group dining here is a significant investment. If you are organising a business dinner or celebration where setting carries weight, the terrace with its monument views is a strong argument in its favour.
    • For smaller groups (two to four), the standard dining room reservations apply, and booking is rated Easy, so short lead times are generally manageable outside peak season.

    What should I wear to Il Ristorante - Niko Romito?

    • The venue is a Michelin Plate-recognised restaurant inside one of Rome's most prestigious hotels. Smart dress is the baseline expectation. A jacket for men is appropriate, though not necessarily required. Avoid casual or beachwear.
    • Rome's fine dining rooms at €€€€ pricing consistently expect guests to dress at a level that matches the room. Treat this the same way you would a comparable address in Paris or London: err on the side of formal.
    • If you are coming directly from sightseeing, arriving early at the bar gives you time to settle into the room's register before dinner begins.

    Does Il Ristorante - Niko Romito handle dietary restrictions?

    • No specific dietary policy is listed in available data. For any allergy or restriction, contact the Hotel Bulgari Rome directly before your reservation, not on arrival.
    • Niko Romito's culinary approach is built on restraint and clarity of flavour rather than complex saucing or heavy dairy, which may make adaptation more workable than in a cuisine built around richer constructions. That said, verify specifics with the kitchen ahead of time.
    • Italian Contemporary cuisine at this level generally allows for advance accommodation of most dietary requirements, but the onus is on the diner to communicate early.

    Compare Il Ristorante - Niko Romito

    Worth the Price? Il Ristorante - Niko Romito vs. Peers
    VenuePriceValue
    Il Ristorante - Niko Romito€€€€
    Il Pagliaccio€€€€
    Enoteca La Torre€€€€
    Idylio by Apreda€€€€
    La Palta€€€
    Zia€€€

    Comparing your options in Rome for this tier.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can Il Ristorante - Niko Romito accommodate groups?

    Booking difficulty is rated Easy, which suggests the restaurant can absorb groups more readily than Rome's harder-to-access tables. That said, Il Ristorante sits inside the Hotel Bulgari at Piazza Augusto Imperatore — a formal hotel dining room with a defined layout — so larger parties should check the venue's official channels to confirm private or semi-private arrangements. Groups of 6 or more will want to do this well in advance; the room's elegant format is not designed for loud, casual gatherings.

    What should I wear to Il Ristorante - Niko Romito?

    This is a €€€€ restaurant inside one of Rome's prestige hotel addresses, with mahogany walls, artwork on display, and a terrace overlooking the Mausoleum of Augustus — dress accordingly. Think dinner-ready rather than business formal: well-cut trousers, a jacket for men, and equivalent polish for women. Arriving via the Bulgari bar for an aperitif, as the venue itself recommends, sets the tone; underdressing will feel conspicuous in that context.

    Does Il Ristorante - Niko Romito handle dietary restrictions?

    Niko Romito's culinary approach centres on restraint and the essential flavours of traditional Italian ingredients, with dishes like artichoke soup, saffron risotto, and tomato spaghetti anchoring the menu — a format that tends to accommodate dietary requests more readily than heavily protein-led tasting menus. At €€€€ with a Michelin Plate and a hotel operation behind it, the kitchen should be equipped to handle common restrictions, but confirm specifics when booking given the structured, multi-course format.

    What is Il Ristorante - Niko Romito known for?

    Il Ristorante - Niko Romito is primarily known for Italian Contemporary in Rome.

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