Restaurant in Poznań, Poland
Marino Bistrot
210Pearl PointsMichelin-recognised Italian without the booking battle.

About Marino Bistrot
Marino Bistrot holds back-to-back Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) and a 4.8 Google rating at the €€ price point, making it one of Poznań's strongest cases for Italian cooking without the starred-restaurant bill. Booking is easy, the room skews local rather than tourist, and it works well for dates or small celebration dinners. Weekday evenings give you the best experience.
Verdict: Book It for a Special Occasion in Poznań's Italian Corner
Marino Bistrot is one of the easier Michelin-recognised restaurants to get into in Poland, and that accessibility makes it a smart pick for a date night or celebration dinner in Poznań. Two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) signal consistent kitchen quality at the €€ price point, which is genuinely rare in this recognition tier. If you are planning a special occasion meal and want the credibility of a Michelin-listed address without the booking anxiety or the three-figure bill that comes with a starred room, Marino Bistrot belongs near the leading of your shortlist.
Portrait: Italian in Poznań, Done with Enough Seriousness to Matter
Marino Bistrot sits on Poznańska 50, in the southern residential belt of Poznań, away from the Old Town tourist circuit. That address matters: this is not a restaurant performing Italianness for passing visitors. The crowd is largely local, repeat, and invested in what's on the plate. A Google rating of 4.8 from 385 reviews over a sustained period suggests a kitchen that delivers consistency rather than one good night every few months.
The cuisine is Italian, which in this context means the kitchen is working in one of the most comparison-heavy categories a restaurant can occupy. Polish diners have access to a growing number of credible Italian addresses, so a two-year Michelin Plate citation carries real weight here. The Plate designation, for those unfamiliar, does not indicate starred quality, but it does mean Michelin's inspectors found the cooking good enough to call out by name. Two consecutive years suggests this is not a fluke.
On the editorial angle of wine: the database does not confirm specific wine list details for Marino Bistrot, so concrete claims about particular bottles or regions are off the table. What is worth noting is that Italian bistro-format restaurants at the €€ level in Central Europe increasingly use their wine programs as a differentiator, and a Michelin Plate citation at this price point often reflects a room where food and drink are considered together rather than separately. If the wine program is important to your booking decision, calling ahead to ask about the list's Italian regional depth or by-the-glass range would be time well spent.
For timing, a weekday evening is your leading entry point. Poznań's dining scene concentrates weekend traffic on Friday and Saturday nights, so a Tuesday or Wednesday reservation gives you a calmer room and more attentive service pacing, which matters on a date or a business dinner where conversation is part of the agenda. If your schedule forces a weekend, book earlier in service rather than late, when any kitchen running at capacity will show seams.
For a special occasion framing, Marino Bistrot works well for groups of two to four. The bistrot format typically supports intimate seating arrangements, and the €€ price range means you can order with freedom rather than anxiety, adding a bottle of wine without the bill becoming a distraction. For larger celebrations of six or more, it would be worth confirming whether the space can accommodate your group comfortably before committing.
To place Marino Bistrot in a wider Polish context: if you have eaten at Bottiglieria 1881 in Kraków or Arco by Paco Pérez in Gdańsk, you know that Poland's better restaurants are punching above regional expectations. Marino Bistrot is operating in that same upward current at a more accessible price. For Italian specifically, the comparison point internationally would be a serious neighbourhood trattoria that earns its regulars through quality rather than theatre, closer in spirit to cenci in Kyoto in its local-first orientation than to the showpiece Italian dining of somewhere like 8½ Otto e Mezzo Bombana in Hong Kong.
Other Poznań options worth considering alongside your research: Fromażeria covers Mediterranean ground with a cheese-forward approach if you want something more casual, and A nóż widelec is worth a look for modern Polish cooking if Italian is not a firm requirement. For a broader view of eating and drinking options in the city, our full Poznań restaurants guide covers the category in depth, and if you are visiting from out of town, our Poznań hotels guide pairs well. We also have guides for bars, wineries, and experiences in Poznań.
Elsewhere in Poland, if you are building a broader itinerary, hub.praga in Warsaw, 1911 in Sopot, Giewont in Kościelisko, and Acquario in Wrocław are all Pearl-tracked addresses worth knowing.
Awards and Recognition
- Michelin Plate — 2025
- Michelin Plate — 2024
- Google rating: 4.8 from 385 reviews
Booking and Practical Details
Booking difficulty is rated Easy. You do not need to plan weeks in advance for most dates, though weekend evenings in Poznań's tighter dining calendar will benefit from a few days' lead time. The address is Poznańska 50, 60-851 Poznań. Phone and online booking details are not confirmed in our database, so check directly with the restaurant or use a local reservation platform. The price range is €€, which positions this as an accessible mid-range option rather than a splurge. No dress code is confirmed, but a bistro of this calibre in a Michelin-cited setting typically expects smart-casual without strict enforcement.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should a first-timer know about Marino Bistrot?
Marino Bistrot is an Italian restaurant on Poznańska 50, in Poznań's quieter southern residential belt rather than the Old Town. It holds a Michelin Plate for 2024 and 2025, which signals cooking above the average city bistrot without the formality of a starred room. At €€ pricing, the barrier to entry is low enough that you can walk away without regret if it doesn't fully land.
How far ahead should I book Marino Bistrot?
Booking difficulty here is rated Easy, so for most weeknight visits a few days' notice should be sufficient. Weekend evenings in Poznań's tighter dining calendar move faster, so aim for at least a week ahead on Fridays and Saturdays. This is one of the more accessible Michelin-recognised restaurants in Poland, which is part of the value proposition.
Can I eat at the bar at Marino Bistrot?
Bar seating details are not confirmed in the available venue data for Marino Bistrot. Given its bistrot format and residential Poznańska 50 address, this is worth confirming directly before arriving with that expectation.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Marino Bistrot?
Specific menu formats for Marino Bistrot are not documented in the available data, so a confirmed tasting menu cannot be verified here. What is confirmed: two consecutive Michelin Plates at a €€ price point suggests the kitchen is operating with more precision than the price implies, which tends to make structured menus good value when available.
Is Marino Bistrot good for a special occasion?
Yes, and it's one of the more practical choices in Poznań for exactly that. The Michelin Plate recognition gives the evening credibility, the €€ pricing means you're not overcommitting financially, and the address away from the Old Town tourist belt keeps the atmosphere grounded. For a date or a small celebratory dinner where you want quality without a booking battle, this works well.
Is Marino Bistrot worth the price?
At €€, Marino Bistrot is one of the better-value Michelin-recognised Italian options in Poland. Two consecutive Michelin Plates confirm the kitchen is operating above what the price range typically delivers in this city. If you're comparing to a standard Poznań bistrot, the gap in cooking quality justifies the modest premium.
Location
Poznańska 50, 60-851 Poznań, Poland
Compare Marino Bistrot
Within Poznań's mid-range dining tier, Marino Bistrot competes most directly with Cucina and Delicja, both priced at €€. Cucina covers Mediterranean ground with overlap in the Italian direction; Delicja leans into traditional Polish cooking. If your occasion calls specifically for Italian cuisine with Michelin credibility behind it, Marino Bistrot is the clearer choice of the three. Delicja is worth considering if you want to eat Polish rather than Italian, and Cucina suits diners who want a broader Mediterranean range without a fixed national focus.
At the other end of the price spectrum, Muga at €€€€ is Poznań's most ambitious modern cuisine option. If budget is not the constraint and you want the most technically demanding cooking in the city, Muga is the answer. But for value, Marino Bistrot gives you more recognised quality per euro than the step up to €€€€ requires. For a casual mid-week dinner rather than a celebration, PASODOBRE at € covers Spanish cooking at the lowest price point in this comparison set, and NOOKS at €€ is the pick if meat-focused cooking appeals over Italian.
The booking difficulty picture is broadly easy across this peer group, which means Marino Bistrot's Michelin recognition is its clearest differentiator rather than any scarcity advantage. If you are deciding purely on the combination of occasion-worthiness, Italian cuisine quality, and price, Marino Bistrot wins the comparison. If you are after the most affordable night out or a broader cuisine range, PASODOBRE and Cucina respectively give you alternatives worth weighing.
Recognized By
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