Restaurant in Bergen, Norway
Lysverket
1,070Pearl PointsMichelin-starred Norwegian tasting menu, museum setting.

About Lysverket
Lysverket holds a Michelin star inside Bergen's KODE 4 art museum, serving a ten-course New Nordic tasting menu with lake views and a hands-on chef-owner presence. One of Norway's most credentialed regional restaurants, it prices at €€€€ and books hard — plan three to four weeks ahead. Counter seats are the configuration to request if kitchen access matters to you.
Verdict: One of the strongest cases for fine dining in Bergen, and a genuine argument for the city as a destination in its own right
Lysverket earned its first Michelin star in 2022 and has held it through 2024, placing it on La Liste's global ranking at 79 points in 2026 and Opinionated About Dining's European top 225 in 2025. That combination of sustained critical recognition is your clearest signal: this is not a restaurant riding early hype. If you are planning a serious food trip to western Norway, Lysverket belongs on the shortlist alongside Maaemo in Oslo and RE-NAA in Stavanger — though Lysverket sits in a price tier and register that most diners will find more approachable than either of those.
The Room and the Setting
Lysverket sits inside KODE 4, Bergen's contemporary art museum on Rasmus Meyers allé, overlooking lake Lille Lungegårdsvannet. The visual experience begins before the first course arrives: the room is gallery-adjacent in its proportions and light, and the lake views give the meal a natural rhythm that most urban fine dining rooms cannot replicate. For a food and travel enthusiast, the setting alone distinguishes this from a standard tasting menu evening — the context of eating inside a functioning cultural institution, with that particular Nordic light over the water, is part of what you are booking.
The kitchen's approach is New Nordic in discipline: a ten-course menu built around Norwegian produce, with a documented commitment to local sourcing. The Michelin notes specifically reference scallops landed by a friend of chef-owner Christopher Haatuft, which is a useful shorthand for the kitchen's philosophy , the supply chain is personal, not transactional. Expect the menu to reflect what the current season makes available in western Norway. In late autumn and winter, that means shellfish, preserved and cured fish, root vegetables, and game. Spring and summer shift the register toward brightness and acid. Book knowing that the menu you eat will be materially different from the one a friend ate six months ago.
The Chef's Counter: Why It Matters Here
The counter or chef-facing seats at Lysverket are not a premium upsell , they are a genuinely different experience from the main dining room. Haatuft is described in Michelin's own notes as someone who moves through the room, engages guests directly, and serves dishes himself. A counter seat puts you inside that dynamic rather than at the edge of it. For a diner who wants the kitchen's thinking explained as the meal progresses, this is the configuration to request. If you are booking for a group who want privacy and conversation over immersion, the main room tables are the right call. If you are a solo traveller or a pair with serious food interest, ask specifically about counter availability when reserving.
Booking is hard. The restaurant operates Tuesday through Saturday, dinner only, from 6 PM to 11 PM, and is closed Sunday and Monday. A one-star tasting menu in a 579-review destination with consistent critical attention will fill weeks in advance. Build a minimum of three to four weeks' lead time into your plans, more in peak summer when Bergen sees high visitor volumes. There is no published booking method in Pearl's data, so your most direct route is via the restaurant's own website or a reliable concierge channel.
Price and Value
Lysverket prices at €€€€, which is the top tier. For that spend, you are getting a Michelin-starred ten-course menu in a museum setting with a chef who is present and engaged in the room. The relevant comparison is not whether €€€€ is a lot of money in the abstract , it is , but whether it delivers against what else that spend gets you in the same city. Against Gaptrast, also €€€€ and modern cuisine, the differentiator is Lysverket's external credentialing and the Michelin validation. Against Oslo's two- and three-star options, Lysverket represents a step down in price intensity while retaining serious kitchen credentials. For the Norwegian New Nordic category specifically, consider also FAGN in Trondheim and Iris in Rosendal if you are building a wider Scandinavian food itinerary , both operate at a comparable critical level and different settings.
Who Should Book
Lysverket is the right choice if: you want a tasting menu anchored in Norwegian produce with a legible creative identity; the museum setting and lake view matter to you as part of the evening; or you want counter access to the kitchen and the chef. It is less suited to diners who prefer à la carte flexibility, groups larger than six or eight, or anyone who finds ten-course formats too demanding for a weeknight dinner. For Bergen dining at a lower price point and a more relaxed register, Allmuen Bistro is worth considering, and Fjellskål offers a different angle on Norwegian produce without the tasting menu commitment.
Google's 4.4 from 579 reviews is a healthy signal for a fine dining restaurant, where review volumes are structurally lower than casual venues. The gap between strong critical recognition and strong public ratings here is narrow, which is relatively uncommon at this price tier and suggests the experience translates consistently across diner types, not just food press.
For context on Bergen's broader dining options, see our full Bergen restaurants guide. If you are building a full trip around the meal, our Bergen hotels guide, Bergen bars guide, and Bergen experiences guide cover the practical context around the dinner. For the wider Norwegian fine dining circuit, Under in Lindesnes and Boen Gård in Tveit are two further reference points if you are travelling the country specifically for this category.
Practical Details
| Detail | Lysverket | Gaptrast | Omakase by Sergey Pak |
|---|---|---|---|
| Price tier | €€€€ | €€€€ | €€€€ |
| Cuisine | New Nordic / Modern | Modern Cuisine | Japanese / Omakase |
| Michelin star | Yes (1 star, 2024) | Not confirmed | Not confirmed |
| Dinner service | Tue–Sat, 6 PM–11 PM | Check venue | Check venue |
| Lunch service | Not available | Check venue | Check venue |
| Booking difficulty | Hard (3–4 weeks min) | Hard | Hard |
| Setting | Art museum, lake views | City centre | City centre |
| Format | 10-course tasting menu | Tasting menu | Omakase |
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the tasting menu worth it at Lysverket?
Yes, for the right diner. Lysverket holds a Michelin star (awarded 2022, retained through 2024) and ranks 79 points on La Liste's 2026 global list, which puts the €€€€ price in context: this is a credentialed ten-course menu, not aspirational pricing. The value case is strongest if you want Norwegian produce handled with clear creative intent and a chef who is genuinely present in the room. If you want à la carte flexibility or a shorter format, this is not the right fit.
What should I order at Lysverket?
Lysverket runs a set ten-course tasting menu, so there is no individual ordering. The menu is built around local Norwegian produce, with scallops sourced from a fisherman personally known to chef Christopher Haatuft appearing regularly. If specific dietary requirements matter, check the venue's official channels before booking rather than on the night.
What should I wear to Lysverket?
Lysverket is a Michelin-starred restaurant set inside a contemporary art museum, which suggests a polished but not black-tie register. The venue data does not specify a dress code, but the combination of the €€€€ price point, the museum setting, and the ten-course format means smart dress is a reasonable baseline. Treat it closer to a formal dinner than a casual evening out.
Is lunch or dinner better at Lysverket?
Dinner is the only option. Lysverket is open Tuesday through Saturday from 6 PM to 11 PM and is closed Monday and Sunday. There is no lunch service listed, so the question of lunch versus dinner does not apply here.
Can Lysverket accommodate groups?
The venue data does not specify a private dining room or maximum group size, but the restaurant is set inside KODE 4 museum on Rasmus Meyers allé, which suggests a formal dining room rather than a flexible event space. For groups of six or more, contact Lysverket directly to confirm availability and seating arrangements before assuming the standard booking flow will work.
What are alternatives to Lysverket in Bergen?
For a less formal Bergen dinner at a lower price point, BARE Restaurant and Izakaya Skostredet are the most cited local alternatives. Gaptrast suits diners who want a wine-focused, smaller-plates format. Moon covers the cocktail bar end of the evening if you are building a night around more than one stop. None of these are direct tasting-menu competitors to Lysverket at the Michelin level, which is why Lysverket remains the clearest choice for a single special-occasion dinner in Bergen.
Location
Rasmus Meyers allé 9, 5015 Bergen, Norway
Compare Lysverket
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lysverket | New Nordic, Modern Cuisine | Lysverket gained its first Michelin star in 2022. The restaurant is part of the restaurant group of chef Christopher Haatuft. Today this stylish restaurant serves a ten-course or so menu based on loca...; La Liste Top Restaurants (2026): 79pts; Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Europe Ranked #225 (2025); La Liste Top Restaurants (2025): 81.5pts; Set in the KODE 4 art museum, this stylish restaurant offers views over lake Lille Lungegårdsvannet. Larger than life Chef-Owner Christopher Haatuft passionately oversees the whole place, serving dishes and engaging with guests. The 10 course tasting menu is informed by fabulous Norwegian produce, always including scallops landed nearby by Christopher’s close friend. Dishes have a freshness about them and allow the main ingredient to shine.; Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Europe Ranked #283 (2024); Michelin 1 Star (2024); Opinionated About Dining Top New Restaurants in Europe Highly Recommended (2023) | Hard | — |
| Gaptrast | Modern Cuisine | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Omakase by Sergey Pak | Japanese | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| BARE Restaurant | Japanese | Unknown | — | |
| Izakaya Skostredet | Japanese | Unknown | — | |
| Moon | French | Unknown | — |
What to weigh when choosing between Lysverket and alternatives.
Also Consider
- Gaptrast — Modern Cuisine, €€€€
- Omakase by Sergey Pak — Japanese, €€€€
- BARE Restaurant — Japanese, Japanese
- Izakaya Skostredet — Japanese, €€
- Moon — French, €€
At €€€€, Lysverket and Gaptrast are direct price-tier peers in Bergen's modern cuisine bracket. The practical difference is external credentialing: Lysverket has a confirmed Michelin star, La Liste placement, and consistent OAD ranking, which gives it a firmer basis for the spend. If you are choosing between the two on a single trip, Lysverket is the defensible choice for a food-focused traveller who wants that critical validation. Gaptrast may suit diners who prefer a setting or format less tied to the tasting menu structure — check current menus before booking.
Omakase by Sergey Pak and BARE Restaurant both sit in Japanese territory at the top of Bergen's price range, which means they are not direct substitutes for Lysverket but are competing for the same evening and budget. If you want Norwegian produce and a New Nordic kitchen, Lysverket is the only credentialed option at this level in the city. If you want a precision omakase format and Japanese technique, Omakase by Sergey Pak is the relevant alternative — the formats are different enough that the choice should come down to what kind of meal you want, not which is objectively better.
For diners on a tighter budget or wanting a lower-commitment dinner, Izakaya Skostredet at €€ and Moon (French, €€) offer solid alternatives without the tasting menu overhead. Neither competes with Lysverket on critical standing, but both are reasonable choices if €€€€ is not the plan or if you want a more flexible, à la carte evening in Bergen. For the full picture of what is available in the city, see our Bergen restaurants guide.
Hours
- Monday
- closed
- Tuesday
- 6 PM-11 PM
- Wednesday
- 6 PM-11 PM
- Thursday
- 6 PM-11 PM
- Friday
- 6 PM-11 PM
- Saturday
- 6 PM-11 PM
- Sunday
- closed
Recognized By
Explore Bergen
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