Restaurant in Budapest, Hungary
Textúra
390Pearl PointsCreative cooking, relaxed format, easy to book.

About Textúra
A design-led modern brasserie in Budapest's 5th district with a Michelin Plate, an OAD global ranking, and one of the city's deeper Hungarian wine lists. Easier to book than the starred rooms nearby, with all-day hours and bar seating that make it a practical choice for solo diners and couples who want creative seasonal cooking without the formality of a tasting-menu format.
Verdict
Textúra is not the kind of place you stumble into by accident, but too many visitors to Budapest's 5th district treat it as a fallback option when its sister restaurant, Borkonyha Winekitchen, is fully booked. That framing undersells it. Textúra is a design-led modern brasserie with a seasonally driven kitchen, genuine Hungarian wine depth, and a room that earns its reputation on its own terms. If you want creative cooking at the €€€ price tier without the booking anxiety of Budapest's Michelin-starred circuit, this is a strong answer.
The Space
The room at Textúra corrects another common assumption: that a brasserie format means a noisy, anonymous dining room. The interior is anchored by a living wall of moss and a central wooden structure that functions as both a visual centrepiece and an acoustic softener. The result is a space that reads as design-forward without being cold. Natural materials and considered lighting pull the room toward intimacy, which matters when you're sitting close to neighbouring tables at peak hours. If you're eating solo or as a pair, the spatial arrangement rewards you: the layout distributes attention evenly rather than funnelling the leading seats toward large groups.
The counter and bar seating at Textúra deserves specific mention for the explorer-type diner. Sitting at or near the bar puts you closer to the operational energy of the kitchen pass and gives you a better vantage on the room's rhythm. For solo diners or couples who want to eat without ceremony, this is the seat to request. The seasonal menu reads differently from that position: you're watching dishes leave rather than waiting for them to arrive, and the pacing feels more collaborative. It's not a chef's counter in the strict omakase sense, but it carries some of that directness.
Food and Wine
Textúra holds a Michelin Plate (2024), which signals kitchen consistency and competence without the pressure-pricing of a starred room. The OAD (Opinionated About Dining) rankings are worth noting for context: the restaurant climbed from Recommended (2023) to Ranked #384 (2024) to #481 (2025) in OAD's global list, a trajectory that reflects a kitchen finding its register rather than resting on it. The cooking is described as ambitious and creative, with seasonal produce driving the menu's structure. Without verified current menu details, ordering specifics are leading confirmed on arrival or via the booking channel, but the seasonal framing means the menu shifts with the calendar. Right now, late-season Hungarian produce is likely shaping the kitchen's direction.
The wine list carries particular weight here. Hungarian wines appear with genuine depth rather than token representation, which is rarer than it should be in Budapest's modern dining rooms. For wine-focused diners, this is a practical differentiator: you can eat well and drink interesting domestic bottles without cross-referencing a separate wine bar visit. See also our full Budapest wineries guide if you want to extend the regional wine thread beyond dinner.
Booking and Logistics
Textúra sits at Sas utca 6, 1051 Budapest, in the 5th district, within easy walking distance of the central Pest grid. Booking difficulty is rated Easy, which means you do not need to plan weeks in advance the way you would for Costes or Stand. The restaurant is closed on Mondays and operates Tuesday through Sunday, 11am to 10pm. The broad operating window is genuinely useful: if your schedule in Budapest is tight, the all-day format gives you options that a dinner-only room cannot.
Google reviews sit at 4.7 across 1,480 ratings, which at that volume represents consistent delivery rather than a lucky streak. No phone number or direct booking URL is listed in the venue record, so approach via walk-in or check current availability through the restaurant's own channels on arrival. Given the Easy booking difficulty, this is not a material obstacle.
Practical Comparison
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Key Differentiator |
|---|---|---|---|
| Textúra | €€€ | Easy | Design-led brasserie, deep Hungarian wine list |
| Borkonyha Winekitchen | €€€ | Moderate | Michelin-starred sister venue, wine-forward |
| Babel | €€€€ | Harder | High-concept modern Hungarian, tasting menu format |
| Stand | €€€€ | Harder | Michelin-starred, chef-driven, formal pacing |
| VIRTU | €€€ | Easy | Neighbourhood modern kitchen, more casual format |
Who Should Book
Textúra works leading for diners who want creative modern cooking without the formality or price ceiling of Budapest's starred rooms. The all-day format makes it practical for lunch or an early dinner. Solo diners and couples benefit most from the bar seating option. Wine-focused travellers will find the Hungarian list worth exploring. For a broader view of where this fits in the city's dining options, see our full Budapest restaurants guide.
If you're travelling beyond Budapest, the same kitchen sensibility appears in different registers at Platán Gourmet in Tata, Pajta in Őriszentpéter, and Sauska 48 in Villány, all of which share the regional produce and wine focus that defines the better end of Hungarian modern cooking. For wine-region dining specifically, Petrányi Csopak in Csopak and Hosszú Tányér in Hosszúhetény are worth noting. Regional fish cooking is covered well at Old Kőrössy Fish Restaurant in Szegedin.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I order at Textúra?
The kitchen runs a seasonally led menu with ambitious, creative dishes, so the best approach is to follow what's current rather than chasing a fixed signature. The wine list is worth attention: it draws on Hungarian producers and is one of the stronger domestic-focused lists in the 5th district. If you're visiting from Borkonyha Winekitchen next door, expect a different register here — more design-led and brasserie in format, less wine-bar in feel.
How far ahead should I book Textúra?
Booking difficulty is rated easy by most accounts, and the all-day format (11am–10pm, Tuesday through Sunday) gives you more scheduling flexibility than Budapest's tighter tasting-menu rooms. A few days' notice is usually sufficient, though Friday and Saturday evenings fill faster. Walk-ins are worth trying at lunch mid-week.
What should I wear to Textúra?
The room is design-led with a relaxed atmosphere — a living moss wall and a central wooden structure set the tone. Smart casual fits: no jacket required, but the interior rewards an effort. This is not a jeans-and-sneakers-at-the-bar situation, but it's also not the formality level of a starred room.
Is lunch or dinner better at Textúra?
Lunch is the stronger practical case: the room is calmer, booking is easier, and the all-day format means you're not competing with evening demand. Dinner suits a longer visit with more time on the wine list. For a first visit, lunch on a weekday is the lowest-friction option.
Can I eat at the bar at Textúra?
The venue database doesn't confirm a dedicated bar-dining setup, so treat this as unverified. The brasserie format suggests counter or bar seating may exist, but check the venue's official channels via their Sas utca 6 address before assuming that option is available.
Is Textúra good for solo dining?
Yes. The relaxed brasserie atmosphere and all-day format make solo visits practical — you're not locked into a multi-hour tasting menu, and the room doesn't have the pressure feel of a formal starred restaurant. The OAD ranking and Michelin Plate credentials (2024) mean the cooking holds up even if you're only ordering two courses.
Can Textúra accommodate groups?
The brasserie format is more group-friendly than a counter-only or tasting-menu room, but specific private dining or large-table arrangements aren't confirmed in the available data. For groups of six or more, check the venue's official channels to confirm layout options before booking.
Location
Budapest, Sas u 6, 1051 Hungary
Budapest, Hungary
Compare Textúra
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Textúra | €€€ | Easy | — |
| Babel | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Borkonyha Winekitchen | €€€ | Unknown | — |
| Stand25 Bisztró | €€ | Unknown | — |
| Rumour by Rácz Jenő | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Goli | €€ | Unknown | — |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Also Consider
- Babel — €€€€ · Modern Cuisine, €€€€
- Borkonyha Winekitchen — €€€ · Modern Cuisine, €€€
- Stand25 Bisztró — €€ · Traditional Cuisine, €€
- Rumour by Rácz Jenő — €€€€ · Creative, €€€€
- Goli — €€ · Middle Eastern, €€
At the €€€ tier in Budapest, Textúra's closest direct comparison is Borkonyha Winekitchen, its sister restaurant set almost opposite it on Sas utca. Borkonyha holds a Michelin star and is harder to book, particularly at weekends. If your priority is a starred room and you're willing to plan further ahead, Borkonyha is the stronger credential. If you want comparable cooking ambition with easier access and a more relaxed atmosphere, Textúra is the practical choice at the same price tier.
Step up to €€€€ and the options shift considerably. Babel and Rumour by Rácz Jenő both operate at that higher price ceiling with more formal, concept-driven formats. Babel suits diners who want high-concept modern Hungarian with tasting-menu structure; Rumour suits those who want a creative, chef-personality-forward experience. Neither is as accessible as Textúra for a last-minute booking. For the value-conscious diner who still wants quality and creativity, Textúra at €€€ delivers more than the price tier suggests.
At the lower end of the market, Stand25 Bisztró (€€, traditional cuisine) and Goli (€€, Middle Eastern) serve different purposes: Stand25 for Hungarian comfort cooking at accessible prices, Goli for something outside the central European register entirely. Neither competes directly with Textúra's design-led modern format. If the combination of creative seasonal cooking, Hungarian wine depth, and a room worth sitting in is what you're after, Textúra is the clearest answer at the €€€ level in central Budapest.
Hours
- Monday
- Closed
- Tuesday
- 11 am–10 pm
- Wednesday
- 11 am–10 pm
- Thursday
- 11 am–10 pm
- Friday
- 11 am–10 pm
- Saturday
- 11 am–10 pm
- Sunday
- 11 am–10 pm
Recognized By
Explore Budapest
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