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    Restaurant in Belgrade, Serbia

    Mezestoran Dvorište

    290pts

    Michelin-noted Greek food, budget prices.

    Mezestoran Dvorište, Restaurant in Belgrade

    About Mezestoran Dvorište

    A Michelin Plate-recognised Greek-Mediterranean restaurant at a budget price point, Mezestoran Dvorište earns its 4.7 Google rating (4,400+ reviews) through consistent, honest cooking and a shady courtyard that locals return to repeatedly. Chickpea fritters, gyros, and Cretan Dokos croutons at single-euro-per-dish pricing make this one of Belgrade's stronger casual dining decisions.

    Should You Book Mezestoran Dvorište?

    Yes, and without much hesitation. Mezestoran Dvorište is one of Belgrade's more reliable answers to the question of where to eat well without spending much: a Michelin Plate-recognised Greek-Mediterranean restaurant that holds a 4.7 rating across more than 4,400 Google reviews, at a price point that keeps the bill firmly in the single-digit-euro-per-dish territory. If you want honest, well-executed Mediterranean food in a setting that genuinely earns its reputation with locals, this is worth your time.

    The Portrait

    What Mezestoran Dvorište does well is deliver disproportionate quality for its price tier, which is the hardest thing to do consistently. The Michelin Plate, awarded in both 2024 and 2025, signals food that clears a meaningful bar, not the kind of recognition handed to places coasting on nostalgia or a pleasant courtyard. The menu reads as a confident Greek-Mediterranean survey: chickpea fritters, tzatziki, Cretan-style croutons known as Dokos, assorted olives, chicken and pork gyros. These are not ambitious dishes, but the kitchen executes them with enough care to justify the Plate and the repeat visits that show up in the review volume.

    The courtyard is the detail most regulars cite, and it earns its reputation. A shady alfresco patio gives the place a quality that is harder to manufacture than a well-designed interior: the smell of a warm outdoor space, the kind that carries just enough of the kitchen's garlic and herb work to sharpen your appetite without overwhelming the conversation. In Belgrade's warmer months, that courtyard becomes the main event, and it's one of the reasons locals return rather than drift elsewhere. For anyone who has already visited and sat inside, the next move is an outdoor table when the season allows.

    The setting is informal, which matters more here than it might at a higher price point. The colourful tableware and bright interior communicate that this is not a restaurant asking you to perform at dinner, and that relaxed register is well-matched to the food. Greek-Mediterranean dining at this level works leading when it's unglamorous in presentation and generous in portion, and Dvorište seems to understand that. The 4.7 rating across more than 4,400 reviews is not the result of occasional brilliance; it reflects consistent execution across a high volume of covers, which is the harder achievement.

    If you've visited once and tried the gyros, the chickpea fritters are worth prioritising on a return. The Dokos, the Cretan-flavoured croutons, are the kind of detail that separates a place doing genuine regional cooking from one applying a generic Mediterranean template. These are specific, sourced influences, not a catch-all category. That specificity is what keeps Dvorište interesting beyond a first visit.

    For context within the broader Mediterranean category: Belgrade is not an obvious city for this cuisine, which makes Dvorište's sustained quality more notable. Diners who want to explore what else the city's restaurant scene offers can find a different price and ambition level at The Square, or a more contemporary Serbian take at Bela Reka. For those whose interest runs to Mediterranean cooking across other European contexts, it's worth noting how restaurants like Krug in Split or Il Buco in Sorrento approach the same culinary tradition at different price and prestige tiers. Dvorište sits at the accessible end of that spectrum, but it belongs on it.

    For a fuller picture of where to eat and drink in the city, see our full Belgrade restaurants guide. If you're planning a stay, our Belgrade hotels guide and bars guide are worth bookmarking alongside it. Those planning to explore Serbia's wine scene more broadly should check our Belgrade wineries guide, and for things to do beyond restaurants, our Belgrade experiences guide covers the city's broader offer.

    Ratings at a Glance

    • Michelin recognition: Plate (2024, 2025)
    • Google rating: 4.7 from 4,468 reviews
    • Price tier: € (budget-friendly)
    • Cuisine: Greek-Mediterranean

    Booking and Practical Details

    Reservations: Easy to book; walk-ins are likely manageable on quieter weekday lunches, but given the local popularity and volume of reviews, reservations are worth making for weekend evenings. Dress: Informal; no dress code implied. Budget: Single-euro-tier pricing per dish; expect a full meal with drinks to remain modest by any European benchmark. Address: Svetogorska 46, Belgrade 11000, Serbia. Outdoor seating: Courtyard patio available; prioritise an outdoor table in warmer months. Booking difficulty: Easy.

    Explore More Mediterranean Dining

    If Dvorište's Greek-Mediterranean approach appeals and you want to compare it against other restaurants in the same culinary tradition at different price and setting tiers, these Pearl profiles are worth reading: La Brezza in Ascona, Gusto by Heinz Beck in Almancil, Bessem in Mandelieu-La Napoule, Un Piano nel Cielo in Praiano, and Löwen - Apriori in Bubikon. For something closer to Belgrade in the regional restaurant scene, Fleur de Sel in Novi Slankamen is worth considering.

    Compare Mezestoran Dvorište

    Comparing Mezestoran Dvorište to Alternatives
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    Mezestoran DvorišteMediterranean CuisineThe bright decor and colourful tableware of this restaurant reflect its happy-go-lucky, joyful Mediterranean spirit, as does the tempting culinary score, which includes chickpea fritters, tzatziki, different kinds of olives, typical ‘Dokos’ from Crete (imaginatively flavoured croutons), as well as chicken and pork gyros. A pleasant, informal setting in which to enjoy traditional Greek cuisine, flanked by an alfresco patio area in a refreshingly shady courtyard that further adds to its appeal and makes it very popular with locals.; Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024)Easy
    LangousteModern Cuisine€€€€Michelin 1 StarUnknown
    The SquareContemporary French, Modern Cuisine€€World's 50 BestUnknown
    Salon 1905Modern Cuisine€€€Unknown
    Iva New Balkan CuisineModern CuisineUnknown
    IstokVietnameseUnknown

    Comparing your options in Belgrade for this tier.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can Mezestoran Dvorište accommodate groups?

    The courtyard layout makes it a reasonable option for groups, and the informal, relaxed atmosphere suits casual gatherings well. For larger parties, booking ahead is sensible given its consistent local popularity — the outdoor patio area adds capacity but fills quickly with regulars. There is no private dining room documented, so large groups should confirm arrangements directly.

    What should a first-timer know about Mezestoran Dvorište?

    Come for the value: this is a Michelin Plate-recognised Greek-Mediterranean restaurant at the budget end of Belgrade's dining spectrum. The menu runs traditional — chickpea fritters, tzatziki, olives, gyros — so do not expect creative reinvention. The courtyard seating is a genuine draw in warmer months, and the colourful, informal setting signals the tone: casual, lively, and unpretentious.

    Is Mezestoran Dvorište good for a special occasion?

    Not the obvious choice if you want a formal, occasion-worthy dinner — the format is casual and the price point is budget. That said, the Michelin Plate recognition (2024 and 2025) confirms consistent quality, and the courtyard setting has genuine charm for a relaxed birthday lunch or low-key celebration. For a formal occasion, Salon 1905 or Iva New Balkan Cuisine would be stronger fits.

    How far ahead should I book Mezestoran Dvorište?

    A few days ahead is sufficient on most weekdays; weekends and warm-weather evenings when the courtyard is in full use warrant earlier booking. Walk-ins are likely possible at quieter weekday lunches, but given the restaurant's local popularity this is not guaranteed. At this price tier, losing a table here is a minor frustration, but booking costs nothing.

    What are alternatives to Mezestoran Dvorište in Belgrade?

    For a step up in formality and price, Salon 1905 and Iva New Balkan Cuisine cover different culinary territory but both sit higher in the Belgrade dining hierarchy. Istok and The Square are worth considering if you want to compare casual dining at a similar price tier. Langouste is the comparison to make if seafood-forward Mediterranean is the draw rather than Greek classics.

    Is Mezestoran Dvorište worth the price?

    Yes, clearly. A Michelin Plate restaurant in the budget price tier is a straightforward value proposition — the recognition signals consistent kitchen standards, and the menu of Greek-Mediterranean staples is delivered in a setting locals return to regularly. For the price, you are getting more than the category typically delivers in Belgrade.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Mezestoran Dvorište?

    No tasting menu is documented for Mezestoran Dvorište — the restaurant's format is informal and menu-driven, not omakase or set-course. The strength here is in grazing across smaller plates: chickpea fritters, olives, tzatziki, gyros. If a structured tasting format matters to you, this is not the right venue.

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