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    Restaurant in Tampa, United States

    Olivia

    210Pearl Points

    Pasta-forward value with a Michelin stamp.

    Olivia, Restaurant in Tampa

    About Olivia

    Olivia earned a Michelin Plate in 2025 and delivers one of Tampa's stronger value cases for serious Italian cooking: house-made pasta across a wide range, a beverage program run by a dedicated partner, and a room designed for lingering — all at a $$ price point. Book for pasta-focused dinners when you want credentialed cooking without a $$$$ bill.

    Is Olivia in Tampa worth booking in 2025?

    Yes — and the Michelin Plate recognition it earned in 2025 makes the answer easier than it used to be. Olivia on West Swann Avenue is the kind of neighborhood Italian that earns repeat visits not because it chases novelty, but because it executes with enough ambition to stay interesting. House-made pasta drives the menu, the room is genuinely comfortable rather than performatively designed, and the beverage program is handled by a dedicated partner rather than treated as an afterthought. At a $$ price point, it is one of the stronger value propositions among Tampa's recognized restaurants.

    What to expect

    The room at Olivia reads relaxed before it reads refined — think the kind of space where you settle in rather than sit up straight. That visual ease is a deliberate signal: this is not a white-tablecloth occasion restaurant, but a place designed for lingering. The pasta shapes arrive with enough visual specificity to tell you someone is paying attention in the kitchen. Bronze-die extruded gemelli carries a rougher, more textured surface that holds sauce differently than a smooth-extruded noodle would; hand-shaped tortellini filled with braised duck is the kind of item that signals real prep time rather than bulk production. Both read as thoughtful on the plate before you take a bite.

    The menu spans a wider range than most single-cuisine pasta houses. Tagliatelle Bolognese anchors the traditional end , a dish that functions as an honest benchmark for whether a kitchen can do the fundamentals. At the other end, ricotta gnocchi paired with coconut lobster bisque and black garlic is the kind of combination that could easily tip into confusion, but Olivia's Michelin recognition suggests they are pulling the flavors into coherence rather than collision. Umbrian sausage with pecorino cream in the gemelli sits comfortably between those poles: regional Italian in spirit, assertive in seasoning. The throughline across the menu, according to the Michelin description, is bold flavor , this is not delicate or restrained cooking.

    The beverage program

    Olivia's partnership structure is worth understanding before you book, because it shapes what you are actually getting. Austin Carson handles beverages as a dedicated partner role, which is a meaningfully different arrangement than a sommelier reporting to a chef-owner. The cocktail program is described as inventive and positioned as a genuine aperitif option , worth ordering before your pasta rather than defaulting to wine from the first pour. For a $$ restaurant in Tampa, a beverage program with this level of internal ownership is less common than you might expect. The wine list specifics are not publicly detailed, but the structural commitment to beverages as a co-equal department suggests the list will reward attention. If wine is central to your evening, ask the server to walk you through what's working with the pasta dishes you've ordered , that conversation is more likely to yield a good match here than at a restaurant where wine is managed by kitchen staff.

    For context: restaurants with genuinely integrated beverage programs at this price tier are rare enough that it changes the calculus on what your per-head spend actually buys. Compare Olivia's $$ positioning against Tampa's $$$$ options like Koya or Lilac, and Olivia starts to look like an obvious first move for anyone building a Tampa dining shortlist.

    If you've been once

    If your first visit was the tagliatelle Bolognese or the tortellini, the return visit case is easy: work toward the ends of the menu. The ricotta gnocchi with coconut lobster bisque is the higher-risk, higher-reward order , it tells you more about what the kitchen is actually trying to do. The cocktail program is also worth more time on a second visit; the aperitif framing in Michelin's own description suggests the cocktails are designed to be drunk before food, not alongside it, and that sequencing changes the experience. The relaxed room makes lingering easy, so the better approach is fewer courses ordered more slowly rather than a quick in-and-out.

    How Olivia compares in Tampa

    Olivia is the clearest value play among Tampa's Michelin-recognized restaurants. The $$ price point sits well below Lilac or Koya, both of which operate at $$$$, and the Michelin Plate credential gives it a credibility floor that makes the spend feel grounded. Against Rocca, its closest Italian peer at the same price tier, the differentiation is in ambition: Olivia's menu range and the dedicated beverage partnership push it into a different category of intentionality. For a broader look at where Olivia fits across Tampa's dining options, the full Tampa restaurants guide gives useful context on the wider field.

    Practical details

    Address: 3601 W Swann Ave, Tampa, FL 33609. Cuisine: Italian, pasta-forward. Price range: $$ per head. Awards: Michelin Plate 2025. Google rating: 4.6 from 2,346 reviews. Booking difficulty: Easy , reservations are accessible without weeks of advance planning, though weekends fill faster than weekdays. Dress: No formal dress code; the room signals relaxed and comfortable. Leading for: Couples, solo diners at the bar, and small groups who want a credentialed Italian meal without a $$$$ price tag. Reservations: Book in advance for weekend evenings; weekday tables are generally available with shorter lead times.

    Explore more in Tampa

    Italian at this level, elsewhere

    If Olivia's combination of pasta craft and beverage ambition interests you, it is worth knowing how it fits into a wider Italian dining context. At the far end of the spectrum, 8½ Otto e Mezzo Bombana in Hong Kong and cenci in Kyoto represent what happens when Italian technique is taken to a different cultural context entirely , useful reference points for understanding what makes Olivia's more grounded, American-neighborhood approach distinctive. For domestic reference on what committed partnership-driven restaurants can look like at higher price tiers, Smyth in Chicago and Lazy Bear in San Francisco are worth understanding as comparators.

    Frequently asked questions

    • What should I order at Olivia? Start with the cocktail program as an aperitif , the Michelin description specifically frames it that way, and it is a more interesting entry point than defaulting straight to wine. For pasta, the braised duck tortellini and the gemelli with Umbrian sausage represent the kitchen's range from hand-shaped to bronze-die technique. If you want to test the kitchen's more ambitious instincts, the ricotta gnocchi with coconut lobster bisque and black garlic is the higher-stakes order.
    • Is Olivia good for solo dining? Yes. The relaxed, comfortable room and the aperitif cocktail culture make solo dining at Olivia easier than at more formal Italian restaurants. At $$ in Tampa, it is one of the more credentialed solo options in the city , you are not paying a premium for a table-for-one, and the pasta-forward menu works well ordered one or two dishes at a time.
    • Can I eat at the bar at Olivia? The venue's atmosphere and cocktail program suggest bar seating is a practical option, and the relaxed room design supports it. For solo diners or couples who want a shorter, aperitif-and-pasta visit rather than a full sit-down, bar seating is likely the right call , confirm availability when booking or on arrival.
    • Can Olivia accommodate groups? At a $$ price point with a pasta-forward menu and a relaxed room, Olivia works for groups who want a shared, informal Italian dinner without the cost of a $$$$ venue. For larger parties, contact the restaurant directly to confirm capacity and any group booking arrangements , seat count is not publicly listed. Groups who want a more structured private dining experience may find the atmosphere better suited to parties of four to six than larger gatherings.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can Olivia accommodate groups?

    Olivia works for small groups of four to six, but the relaxed, neighbourhood-scale room at 3601 W Swann Ave is not built for large parties. For a group pushing eight or more, a venue with a private dining option — Bern's Steak House has dedicated private rooms — is a more practical choice. Book ahead regardless of group size; Olivia's 2025 Michelin Plate recognition has sharpened demand.

    Is Olivia good for solo dining?

    Yes. The comfortable, low-formality atmosphere and a beverage program worth exploring on its own make Olivia a reasonable solo call at the $$ price point. Sitting at the bar — if available — lets you engage with Austin Carson's cocktail list without the pace pressure of a full table booking. For a solo omakase-style experience, Olivia is not that format, but for a solo pasta dinner with a well-built drink, it delivers.

    What should I order at Olivia?

    The house-made pasta is the reason to be here: the database specifically flags bronze-die extruded gemelli with Umbrian sausage and pecorino cream, hand-shaped tortellini with braised duck, and ricotta gnocchi with coconut lobster bisque and black garlic. The range runs from traditional (tagliatelle Bolognese) to globe-trotting, so order across both ends to get the full picture. The cocktails are flagged as aperitif-worthy, so arrive early enough to use them that way.

    Can I eat at the bar at Olivia?

    Bar seating is consistent with Olivia's relaxed, comfortable room format, and the cocktail program is a deliberate part of the experience Austin Carson oversees. Hours and specific seating configurations are not confirmed in available data, so call ahead or check on arrival if bar seating is a priority for your visit. At $$, a bar meal here is one of Tampa's better low-commitment ways to trial a Michelin Plate restaurant.

    Location

    3601 W Swann Ave, Tampa, FL 33609

    Tampa, United States

    Compare Olivia

    Olivia in Context: Awards and Value
    VenueAwardsPriceValue
    OliviaMichelin Plate (2025); Partners Ty Leon, Austin Carson and Heather Morrison bring their talents to bear at one of the city's hottest tables, respectively overseeing cooking, beverages and hospitality (Morrison's daughter is also the restaurant's namesake). House-made pasta occupies the bulk of the menu, from bronze-die extruded gemelli with Umbrian sausage and pecorino cream, or hand-shaped tortellini filled with braised duck. The offerings range from fairly traditional, like the tagliatelle Bolognese, to inventively globe-trotting, as in ricotta gnocchi paired coconut lobster bisque and black garlic, but assertive flavors are a constant throughout. Inventive cocktails serve well as aperitifs, or to sip while lingering in the relaxed, comfortable atmosphere.$$
    KoyaMichelin 1 Star$$$$
    Bern’s Steak House$$$$
    Columbia$$$
    RoccaMichelin 1 Star$$
    LilacMichelin 1 Star$$$$

    What to weigh when choosing between Olivia and alternatives.

    Also Consider

    Olivia is the most practical entry point into Tampa's recognized dining scene if Italian pasta is your target. At $$, it undercuts every other Michelin-level option in the city, and its 2025 Plate recognition gives it a credibility anchor that Rocca — its closest Italian peer at the same price tier — does not yet carry. If your decision is purely Italian at a mid-range price, Olivia wins on ambition and credential. Rocca may suit diners who want a simpler, more traditional experience without the menu range that Olivia's globe-trotting combinations bring.

    Against Tampa's $$$$ options, the comparison shifts. Lilac at the Mediterranean end and Koya on the Japanese side both offer a different level of formality and service architecture — if you are booking for a special occasion where the full-evening experience matters as much as the food, those venues deliver more in terms of production. Olivia is the better pick when the food itself is the priority and you would rather spend the price difference on a second visit. Bern's Steak House operates in a different category entirely: a Tampa institution for beef and an extraordinary wine cellar, worth booking if steak and depth of list are what you are after — but it does not compete with Olivia on pasta or Italian technique.

    Columbia at $$$ fills the gap between Olivia and the top tier — Cuban rather than Italian, with a much longer institutional track record and a very different atmosphere. If your group is split between cuisine preferences or wants the most historically grounded Tampa dining experience, Columbia is the call. For a focused pasta dinner with a genuine beverage program at a price that makes repeat visits realistic, Olivia is the answer.

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