Restaurant in Munich, Germany
Landersdorfer & Innerhofer
275ptsSerious kitchen, low profile, worth the detour.

About Landersdorfer & Innerhofer
Landersdorfer & Innerhofer is Munich's most convincing argument for understated fine dining: an easy-to-book Old Town address with a Mediterranean kitchen ranked #214 on OAD Classical Europe in 2025 and a 4.8 Google rating. Open weekdays only for lunch and dinner, it suits food-focused travellers who want serious cooking without the ceremony of the city's tasting-menu circuit.
A Quiet Achiever in Munich's Old Town
If you're weighing up where to spend serious money on fine dining in Munich, most lists will point you toward the tasting-menu circuit: Tantris, Atelier, or Tohru in der Schreiberei. Landersdorfer & Innerhofer operates on different terms: no theatrics, no grand room, no elaborate ceremony. What it delivers instead is a consistently high standard of Mediterranean cooking in a setting that asks nothing of you except to eat well. That, combined with a 4.8 Google rating across 278 reviews and a steady upward climb on the Opinionated About Dining Classical in Europe list (from Recommended in 2023 to #272 in 2024 to #214 in 2025), makes it one of the more convincing arguments for understated dining in the city.
What to Expect
The address is Hackenstraße 6-8, in Munich's Old Town, and the exterior gives little away. According to OAD's own framing, it's the kind of place you'd walk past without a second glance. That is precisely the point. Inside, the atmosphere is calm and considered: not hushed in the way of a Michelin temple, not loud in the way of a brasserie, but settled. This is a room where conversation is the main event, and the energy stays at a consistent, unhurried pitch throughout service. Chef Johann Landersdorfer steers a Mediterranean kitchen that prioritises clarity over complexity, letting the cooking speak without requiring the diner to decode it.
The OAD ranking sits within the "Classical" category, which signals a kitchen rooted in technique and discipline rather than novelty. For the food-focused traveller who has already worked through the avant-garde end of the city's dining scene, this is a useful counterpoint: restaurants ranked in OAD's Classical list tend to reward repeat visits in a way that one-time-spectacle tasting menus do not. The trajectory from Recommended to #214 in two years is a meaningful signal that the kitchen is tightening, not coasting.
Practical Details
Landersdorfer & Innerhofer is open Monday through Friday for both lunch (11:30am to 1:30pm) and dinner (6:30pm to 9:30pm), and closed entirely on Saturday and Sunday. That weekend closure is worth planning around if you're visiting Munich on a short trip. Lunch here is a genuine option, not an afterthought: the same kitchen, a compressed window, and a central Old Town location that makes it a logical midday anchor for a day that might also include the nearby Viktualienmarkt or the galleries around Marienplatz. Given the 278 Google reviews averaging 4.8, booking is advisable, but the overall picture suggests a venue where securing a table is direct compared to the city's most in-demand spots. Booking difficulty here is rated as easy.
Price range is not published in the available data. Given the OAD Classical Europe ranking at #214 and the fine-dining positioning, expect mid-to-upper-tier pricing for Munich, though the absence of an elaborate tasting-menu structure likely keeps the bill more manageable than Alois - Dallmayr Fine Dining or Tantris. Dress code information is not confirmed, but given the restaurant's discreet, classical positioning, smart-casual is a reasonable baseline.
The Case for Booking
The argument for Landersdorfer & Innerhofer is essentially this: it delivers a level of kitchen seriousness that the exterior and the unpretentious room do not advertise. The OAD Classical Europe ranking puts it in the same conversation as some of Germany's most technically accomplished restaurants, including Aqua in Wolfsburg, Schwarzwaldstube in Baiersbronn, and Vendôme in Bergisch Gladbach. Within Munich specifically, it occupies a different register from the Japanese-influenced modernism at Tohru in der Schreiberei or the creative tasting formats at JAN. If your preference runs toward Mediterranean discipline with less conceptual overhead, this is the stronger call. If you want format-driven tasting menus or a prestige address, look elsewhere in the city.
For the food traveller building a Munich itinerary, Landersdorfer & Innerhofer fits well as a weekday lunch or an early dinner, and it pairs naturally with broader exploration of the city's dining offer. See our full Munich restaurants guide for how it sits within the wider field, and our Munich hotels guide, Munich bars guide, and Munich experiences guide for building out the rest of your stay.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What should I wear to Landersdorfer & Innerhofer? Dress code information is not confirmed, but the restaurant's discreet, classical positioning in Munich's Old Town suggests smart-casual is the right call. You're unlikely to be underdressed in a collared shirt or a neat dress. It is not the kind of room that requires a jacket, but equally not one where trainers and a t-shirt would feel appropriate.
- Is Landersdorfer & Innerhofer good for solo dining? Yes, in principle. The calm atmosphere and unhurried service pace at a classical Mediterranean restaurant of this type tend to suit solo diners well. Munich's Old Town location also makes it easy to combine with other plans. No specific solo-dining or counter-seating information is available from venue data, so it's worth confirming the setup when you book.
- Can Landersdorfer & Innerhofer accommodate groups? Seating capacity is not confirmed in available data. For groups of four or more, contact the restaurant directly to check availability and whether a private or semi-private arrangement is possible. Given the venue's classical positioning and measured service style, it is better suited to smaller groups who want a conversation-led evening than to large celebratory parties.
- Is Landersdorfer & Innerhofer good for a special occasion? Yes, for the right kind of occasion. The OAD Classical Europe ranking (#214 in 2025) and the 4.8 Google rating confirm kitchen quality, and the low-key atmosphere makes it a stronger choice for an intimate anniversary or a serious food-focused meal than for a high-energy celebration. If you want more ceremony and theatre, Tantris or Alois - Dallmayr Fine Dining would be the alternative to consider.
- Is lunch or dinner better at Landersdorfer & Innerhofer? Both services run from the same kitchen: lunch is 11:30am to 1:30pm, dinner is 6:30pm to 9:30pm, Monday through Friday only. Lunch makes practical sense if you're already in the Old Town during the day and want to avoid competing with dinner bookings. Dinner gives you more time and a more settled pace. Neither service has a published price differential, so the choice is primarily logistical rather than a quality trade-off.
Compare Landersdorfer & Innerhofer
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Landersdorfer & Innerhofer | Mediterranean | Landersdorfer & Innerhofer is based in the Old Town, not far from Grapes Wine Bar, and it’s a quite unsuspecting restaurant; you’d walk by and not expect much of it when you see it from the outside –...; Opinionated About Dining Classical in Europe Ranked #214 (2025); Opinionated About Dining Classical in Europe Ranked #272 (2024); Opinionated About Dining Classical in Europe Recommended (2023) | Easy | — |
| Tantris | Modern French, French Contemporary | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Tohru in der Schreiberei | Modern German - Japanese, Modern Cuisine | Michelin 3 Star | Unknown | — |
| Alois - Dallmayr Fine Dining | Creative | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| Atelier | Creative French | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| Acquarello | Italian - Mediterranean, Italian | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
A quick look at how Landersdorfer & Innerhofer measures up.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I wear to Landersdorfer & Innerhofer?
The exterior is low-key and the room follows suit, but OAD's #214 Classical Europe ranking (2025) signals genuine kitchen ambition. Dress as you would for a serious fine dining occasion: neat, put-together, avoiding anything casual. A jacket for men is a safe call at dinner; lunch may read slightly more relaxed, but this is not a jeans-and-trainers room.
Is Landersdorfer & Innerhofer good for solo dining?
Practically speaking, the compact hours (lunch 11:30am–1:30pm, dinner 6:30–9:30pm, Monday through Friday only) make it easy to plan a solo meal around a Munich weekday. A restaurant with this kind of kitchen focus and OAD recognition tends to suit solo diners who want to eat well without the social obligation of a group format. Call ahead to confirm counter or single-seat availability.
Can Landersdorfer & Innerhofer accommodate groups?
The Old Town address at Hackenstraße 6-8 and the unassuming scale of the venue suggest this is not a large-group operation. For parties of six or more, confirm availability directly before committing — the kitchen's format and room size likely favour smaller tables. Groups wanting a more event-ready space in Munich should weigh Tantris or Alois – Dallmayr Fine Dining as alternatives.
Is Landersdorfer & Innerhofer good for a special occasion?
Yes, with the right expectations. This is a quietly serious restaurant — OAD has ranked it in the top 215 Classical restaurants in Europe for 2025 — but it does not trade on spectacle or ceremony. If your occasion calls for a meaningful meal over a theatrical one, it delivers. For a more formal, landmark-room experience, Tantris carries more visual weight.
Is lunch or dinner better at Landersdorfer & Innerhofer?
Lunch (11:30am–1:30pm) is the more accessible window, particularly if you want the full experience without a late evening commitment. Dinner (6:30–9:30pm) runs Monday through Friday only, with no weekend service at all. If your schedule is flexible, dinner typically allows more time at the table; but given the closed weekends, lunch is often the only realistic option for visitors.
Hours
- Monday
- 11:30 am–1:30 pm, 6:30–9:30 pm
- Tuesday
- 11:30 am–1:30 pm, 6:30–9:30 pm
- Wednesday
- 11:30 am–1:30 pm, 6:30–9:30 pm
- Thursday
- 11:30 am–1:30 pm, 6:30–9:30 pm
- Friday
- 11:30 am–1:30 pm, 6:30–9:30 pm
- Saturday
- Closed
- Sunday
- Closed
Recognized By
More restaurants in Munich
- TantrisTantris is Munich's most credentialed fine dining address: two Michelin stars, #73 on the World's 50 Best list, and a wine program ranked #1 by Star Wine List two years running. Book for a special occasion with time to commit to a full menu evening. Availability is near-impossible, so plan well ahead.
- JANJan Hartwig's first solo restaurant holds three Michelin stars and ranked #3 in Europe on Opinionated About Dining in 2025. The tasting menu is built around precisely sourced Bavarian and alpine ingredients, changes constantly, and is delivered from an open kitchen in a warm, minimalist room. Booking is near impossible — plan months ahead.
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