Restaurant in Stavanger, Norway
K2
600Pearl PointsTwo Michelin stars. Book early or miss out.

About K2
K2 holds a Michelin star for the second consecutive year (2025) under chef Andrew Minitelli, making it Stavanger's strongest argument for Michelin-level cooking at the €€€ price tier. Star Wine List recognition adds depth to the wine programme. Book 3–4 weeks out minimum — demand is real and the room fills.
K2, Stavanger: The Verdict
If you've already been to K2 once, the question on a second visit is simpler than it sounds: did the kitchen deliver enough precision to make returning worthwhile? The answer, backed by two consecutive Michelin stars (2024 and 2025) and a 4.7 Google rating from 162 reviews, is yes. Chef Andrew Minitelli runs a modern cuisine programme that has proven it can hold its standard — not just earn it once. For Stavanger dining at the €€€ price tier, K2 gives you Michelin-credentialed cooking without the €€€€ outlay that RE-NAA or Sabi Omakase Stavanger require. That gap matters if you're deciding where to spend.
Why K2 Matters in Stavanger
Pedersgata is one of Stavanger's most lived-in streets — a stretch where neighbourhood bars, independent shops, and everyday life sit alongside the dining options. K2 at number 69 isn't positioned as a tourist destination or an occasion-only room. It functions as an anchor for serious cooking in a part of the city that doesn't rely on the old town's foot traffic. That distinction shapes what kind of dinner you're walking into: less theatrical than some of Stavanger's higher-priced rooms, more focused on the plate.
For regulars, that positioning is a feature. The room isn't performing. It's cooking. If your first visit confirmed the kitchen's technical level, a return trip rewards the same expectation: consistent modern cuisine from a chef who has now held a Michelin star across two consecutive cycles. Norway's Michelin guide is selective , Maaemo in Oslo, FAGN in Trondheim, and Under in Lindesnes are the names that get international attention , and K2 holding its star in 2025 means the inspectors agreed the standard didn't slip.
Stavanger's restaurant scene has real depth at the top tier, but K2 occupies a specific and useful position within it: Michelin-level cooking at a price point one band below the city's highest-spend rooms. If you're building a trip around food and need to allocate your budget across multiple meals, that positioning makes K2 the easier yes. Save the €€€€ spend for Hermetikken or RE-NAA if a single-night splurge is part of your plan. Use K2 for the meal where you want the quality without the ceiling price.
What to Focus On as a Return Visitor
Without confirmed menu details in our data, specific dish recommendations would be speculation , and Pearl doesn't do that. What the record does confirm is that K2's Star Wine List recognition (published July 2024) means the wine programme has been independently assessed as worth attention. If you moved through dinner quickly on your first visit, a return is the right time to slow down on the pairing side. Star Wine List recognition at a one-Michelin-star address in a Norwegian city of this size is not a given , it signals a list with real depth.
The question of what to order sits with the chef's current seasonal direction. Modern cuisine at Michelin level in Norway tends to shift with the season, so what was on the menu at your first visit may not repeat. Ask the room what's changed. If Minitelli's kitchen is running a tasting format, that's likely the format where the cooking shows at its leading , the Michelin inspectors aren't awarding stars to à la carte menus that underperform.
Booking K2
Booking difficulty is rated Hard. Two consecutive Michelin stars with a 162-review Google average of 4.7 means demand has had two full years to build. Book as far ahead as your plans allow , three to four weeks minimum is a reasonable floor for a weekend table, and further out is safer. No booking method is confirmed in our data, so check the restaurant directly or use a local concierge if you're arriving as part of a wider Norway itinerary.
Know Before You Go
- Address: Pedersgata 69, 4013 Stavanger, Norway
- Price tier: €€€ (one band below RE-NAA and Sabi Omakase)
- Awards: Michelin 1 Star (2024 and 2025); Star Wine List recognition (July 2024)
- Google rating: 4.7 from 162 reviews
- Booking difficulty: Hard , book 3–4 weeks ahead minimum, further for weekends
- Dress code: Not confirmed; smart-casual is a safe default at this price tier
- Group bookings: Not confirmed in our data , contact the venue directly for parties of 5 or more
- Cuisine: Modern Cuisine, Chef Andrew Minitelli
K2 in Stavanger's Wider Context
Stavanger punches above its weight for serious dining relative to its size. Beyond K2, the city offers Söl, Tango, and the full range documented in our full Stavanger restaurants guide. If you're building a longer stay, our Stavanger hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide cover the rest of the picture. For comparison against Norway's broader fine dining circuit, Gaptrast in Bergen, Iris in Rosendal, and Boen Gård in Tveit are reference points worth knowing. At the Scandinavian scale, Frantzén in Stockholm and FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai show what the format looks like at higher spend and higher profile. K2 is not trying to be those restaurants. It's trying to be the most consistent serious kitchen in its own neighbourhood , and the 2025 Michelin star suggests it is.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can K2 accommodate groups?
Hours and floor plan details are not confirmed in our data, so exact group capacity is unknown. At €€€ pricing with a Michelin star and hard booking difficulty, K2 is best suited to tables of two to four — larger parties should check the venue's official channels at Pedersgata 69, 4013 Stavanger to confirm availability and any private dining options.
How far ahead should I book K2?
Book at least four to six weeks out. K2 has held a Michelin star in both 2024 and 2025, and a Google average of 4.7 across 162 reviews means demand is consistent, not seasonal. Leaving it to the week before is a gamble you will likely lose.
What should I wear to K2?
K2 sits in a working neighbourhood on Pedersgata, and nothing in the venue record indicates a formal dress code. At a €€€ Michelin-starred restaurant, smart casual is a reasonable baseline — polished but not black-tie. If in doubt, err on the side of neat.
What should I order at K2?
Pearl does not have confirmed menu data for K2, so specific dish recommendations would be speculation. What the record does confirm: the kitchen operates in modern cuisine under chef Andrew Minitelli and has earned back-to-back Michelin recognition, which points to a tasting menu format. Ask at booking whether a set menu or à la carte option is available.
Location
Pedersgata 69, 4013 Stavanger, Norway
Compare K2
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| K2 | €€€ | Hard | — |
| RE-NAA | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Sabi Omakase Stavanger | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Hermetikken | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| BELLIES | €€€ | Unknown | — |
| Bravo | €€ | Unknown | — |
Comparing your options in Stavanger for this tier.
Also Consider
- RE-NAA — New Nordic, Creative, €€€€
- Sabi Omakase Stavanger — Sushi, €€€€
- Hermetikken — Modern Cuisine, €€€€
- BELLIES — Vegan, €€€
- Bravo — Norwegian, €€
How K2 Compares in Stavanger
The direct decision here is straightforward: K2 at €€€ versus RE-NAA and Sabi Omakase Stavanger at €€€€. RE-NAA has the city's highest profile and a longer awards track record in the New Nordic format — if that's your reference point for a Stavanger splurge, it's the room to book. Sabi Omakase is the right call if omakase is the format you want and you're comfortable with the higher spend. K2 is the answer when you want Michelin-verified cooking without committing to the top price band. For two visits in one trip, K2 plus one €€€€ room is a stronger allocation than two €€€€ dinners.
Hermetikken sits at €€€€ in the modern cuisine category alongside K2's format, so the comparison is direct: Hermetikken at the higher price tier or K2 with a Michelin star at €€€. Unless Hermetikken's specific menu or setting is a priority, K2 offers better value for money in the same culinary register. BELLIES at €€€ is the right pick if a plant-based menu is what you're after — the two rooms aren't really competing for the same diner. Bravo at €€ is the easiest booking in this set and works well for a casual Norwegian meal, but it's a different category entirely from K2's Michelin-level offering.
On booking difficulty, all the €€€€ addresses in Stavanger require advance planning, and K2 is no exception at Hard difficulty. If you're visiting with limited lead time, Bravo is your best fallback for a quality dinner without a long booking window. For the full picture on where to eat across the city, see our full Stavanger restaurants guide.
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