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    Restaurant in Axpe, Spain

    Txispa

    1,255pts

    Book early. The 50 Best ranking is earned.

    Txispa, Restaurant in Axpe

    About Txispa

    Ranked #85 in the World's 50 Best Restaurants in 2025 and holding a Michelin star, Txispa is one of Europe's most credentialed small restaurants — a single-sitting lunch operation in the Atxondo Valley where chef Tetsuro Maeda applies Japanese technique to a Basque asador framework. Book months ahead; near-impossible to secure at short notice. At €€€€, justified for serious diners who prioritise precision over convenience.

    Verdict: Book Txispa if you can get a table — and plan to come back

    Ranked #85 in the World's 50 Best Restaurants in 2025 and holding a Michelin star, Txispa is one of the most credentialed small restaurants in Europe — and one of the hardest to reach. It sits in Axpe, a village in the Atxondo Valley in Bizkaia, accessed by winding mountain roads that most visitors specifically travel to drive. At €€€€, the price is real, but the combination of credentials, setting, and the specific cooking approach makes this a justified spend for anyone serious about the Spanish Basque-Japanese crossover. The booking difficulty is near impossible at normal windows , plan months ahead.

    Portrait

    The number that tells you most about Txispa is not its World's 50 Best ranking or its Michelin star , it is the seating window. Tuesday through Sunday, service runs from 1 PM to 6:30 PM only, a single lunchtime sitting that shapes everything about the experience. You arrive punctual because every dish is explained in detail, and the meal is structured around that explanation. Walk in late and you interrupt the rhythm of a room built around precision.

    What you see first is the building itself: a renovated century-old farmhouse in one of the quietest corners of Bizkaia, where the Atxondo Valley frames the dining room through the windows. The visual register here is deliberate plainness , stone, wood, open grill visible from the kitchen pass , and that plainness is the point. Chef Tetsuro Maeda has taken a working Basque asador structure and applied the restraint of Japanese technique to it. The result is a kitchen where fire and fermentation do the heavy lifting, and where the single surprise tasting menu changes as the season and the kitchen garden dictate.

    If you are visiting for the first time, arrive knowing that Txispa runs no à la carte option. The surprise menu is the only format. Dishes documented from public records include kabayaki eel, oyster with goat's milk butter, kingfish with pak choi, aged T-bone steak, and a cherry blossom flan made using cherries from the restaurant's own trees. These are examples, not guarantees , the menu evolves constantly, built around what the garden and the season provide. The appetiser sequence begins in the kitchen, where the open grill is visible and the cooking process is part of the service. The dining room comes next, and that transition is structured as a deliberate escalation.

    For a returning visitor, the multi-visit logic is more interesting than at most tasting-menu restaurants. Because the menu is seasonal and surprise-based, two visits six months apart will deliver a substantially different set of dishes. The Basque-Japanese framework stays consistent , fire, fermentation, exceptional primary ingredients, minimal intervention , but the specific expression of that framework shifts. A spring visit will surface the cherry and vegetable garden produce at its peak. An autumn return brings the valley's game and root vegetables into the menu. If you ate here in 2024 (when Txispa ranked #105 in the Opinionated About Dining European list before climbing to #88 in 2025), the kitchen's evolution since is reason enough to return.

    The practical logistics for a second visit are identical to the first: book as early as possible, confirm punctuality, and plan around the lunchtime-only structure. The village of Axpe has limited options for extending a day trip into an overnight stay, but the surrounding Basque Country offers context. Azurmendi in Larrabetzu and Arzak in San Sebastián are both within reasonable driving distance and operate at comparable price tiers, making a multi-restaurant trip through Bizkaia and Gipuzkoa a practical structure for serious diners. For broader Basque planning, see our full Axpe restaurants guide, our Axpe hotels guide, and our Axpe experiences guide.

    Txispa's Google rating sits at 4.5 across 127 reviews , a strong signal for a restaurant this remote and this expensive, where dissatisfied diners would have every reason to be vocal. The rating suggests the room consistently meets the expectations set by its awards profile.

    If the Basque-Japanese crossover format interests you beyond Txispa, Mugaritz in Errenteria is the natural regional peer for conceptual ambition, while Atomix in New York City covers similar Korean-Japanese tasting-menu territory at a different price geography. For the specific combination of fire technique and Japanese precision, though, Txispa is currently the clearest expression of that approach in the World's 50 Best list.

    One practical note on the local area: Axpe is genuinely remote. Build at least 90 minutes of travel time from Bilbao into your planning. There is no public transport option that makes the journey convenient, and the road into the valley rewards a careful driver rather than a fast one. Check our Axpe bars guide and our Axpe wineries guide if you are building a full day in the valley.

    For a neighbouring Axpe option on a different budget or booking window, Mendi Goikoa Bekoa is the local Basque alternative worth considering.

    Ratings & Recognition

    • World's 50 Best Restaurants: #85 (2025)
    • Opinionated About Dining , Leading Restaurants in Europe: #88 (2025), #105 (2024)
    • Michelin: 1 Star (2024)
    • Google: 4.5 / 5 (127 reviews)

    Booking & Practical Details

    Booking difficulty at Txispa is near impossible at short notice. The restaurant is a single-sitting lunch operation running 1 PM to 6:30 PM Tuesday through Sunday, closed Mondays. Reservations should be pursued months in advance. No walk-in option is realistic given the volume of demand relative to the restaurant's size and the remote location. Punctuality is not optional , the kitchen times each dish to the arrival sequence and explains every course in detail. Late arrivals disrupt both the kitchen and other diners. No phone or website is listed in available records; booking access will require direct research into current reservation channels.

    How It Compares

    Compare Txispa

    The Complete Picture: Txispa and Peers
    VenueCuisineAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    TxispaSpanish/Japanese, CreativeTxispa Restaurant, located on the slopes of the Atxondo Valley (Bizkaia), offers a unique gastronomic journey where you will discover the excellence of Basque-Japanese cuisine. The food is prepared wi...; Occasionally, simplicity is the greatest of treasures! Here, the experiment of combining the time-honoured techniques of Japanese cuisine with the barbecue techniques of a typical Basque “asador” has really paid off. Japanese chef Tetsuro Maeda, who has renovated a century-old house in a small village so quiet it’s almost possible to hear the silence around you, has taken simplicity as his leitmotiv, basing his cooking around exceptional ingredients (many from his own vegetable garden) to create dishes that reveal new and surprising nuances. Recipes that appear on the single surprise menu (kabayaki eel, oyster with goat’s milk butter, king fish with pak choi, aged T-bone steak, cherry blossom flan made from the restaurant’s own cherries, etc) are based around the best possible seasonal ingredients and are constantly evolving. The experience begins with appetisers in the kitchen, where guests can admire the open grill, and reaches its climax in the attractive dining room. They expect you to be punctual as every dish is explained in great detail.; Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Europe Ranked #88 (2025); World's 50 Best Restaurants #85 (2025); Chef: Tetsuro Maeda document.addEventListener("DOMContentLoaded", function() { var el = document.getElementById("Achievements_chefs"); if (el && el.parentNode) { el.parentNode.removeChild(el); } });; Occasionally, simplicity is the greatest of treasures! Here, the experiment of combining the time-honoured techniques of Japanese cuisine with the barbecue techniques of a typical Basque “asador” has really paid off. Japanese chef Tetsuro Maeda, who has renovated a century-old house in a small village so quiet it’s almost possible to hear the silence around you, has taken simplicity as his leitmotiv, basing his cooking around exceptional ingredients (many from his own vegetable garden) to create dishes that reveal new and surprising nuances. Recipes that appear on the single surprise menu (kabayaki eel, oyster with goat’s milk butter, king fish with pak choi, aged T-bone steak, cherry blossom flan made from the restaurant’s own cherries, etc) are based around the best possible seasonal ingredients and are constantly evolving. The experience begins with appetisers in the kitchen, where guests can admire the open grill, and reaches its climax in the attractive dining room. They expect you to be punctual as every dish is explained in great detail.; Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Europe Ranked #105 (2024); Michelin 1 Star (2024)Near Impossible
    AponienteProgressive - Seafood, CreativeMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    ArzakModern Basque, CreativeMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    AzurmendiProgressive, CreativeMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Cocina Hermanos TorresCreativeMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    DiverXOProgressive - Asian, CreativeMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown

    Comparing your options in Axpe for this tier.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What are alternatives to Txispa in Axpe?

    There are no direct alternatives in Axpe itself — Txispa is the sole destination restaurant in the village. The closest credentialed options require a drive: Azurmendi (three Michelin stars, near Bilbao) is the obvious escalation in prestige and price, while Arzak in San Sebastián offers a different take on creative Basque cuisine with deeper institutional history. If you cannot get a Txispa table, Azurmendi is the most logical fallback for serious food travel in the region.

    Is Txispa worth the price?

    At €€€€ and ranked #85 in the World's 50 Best Restaurants in 2025 with a Michelin star, Txispa is priced at the level its credentials justify. The format — a single surprise menu built around seasonal ingredients, many from the restaurant's own garden, served in a restored century-old farmhouse — is designed around high ingredient quality rather than theatrical production. If you are travelling specifically for the meal and value restraint over spectacle, the price holds up. If you want elaborate multi-course showmanship, DiverXO in Madrid is a different proposition at a similar spend.

    What should a first-timer know about Txispa?

    Txispa runs a single lunch sitting, Tuesday through Sunday, 1 PM to 6:30 PM — closed Mondays. The restaurant expects punctuality and each dish is explained in detail, so this is not a place to rush. The experience starts with appetisers in the kitchen by the open grill before moving to the dining room. Axpe (officially Apatamonasterio) is a small village in the Atxondo Valley in Bizkaia; you will need a car or a planned transfer to get there.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Txispa?

    Yes, for the right diner. Txispa offers a single surprise menu — no à la carte — built around Basque grilling technique and Japanese culinary method, using seasonal ingredients including produce from the restaurant's own garden. Documented dishes include kabayaki eel, oyster with goat's milk butter, aged T-bone steak, and cherry blossom flan made from the restaurant's own cherries. The menu evolves constantly, which means repeat visits reward rather than repeat. If a fixed surprise menu is not your format, this is not the right restaurant.

    What should I order at Txispa?

    There is no ordering at Txispa — the kitchen serves a single surprise tasting menu. The menu changes with the seasons and is built around availability, so the dishes you eat will depend entirely on when you visit. Past menus have included kabayaki eel, oyster with goat's milk butter, king fish with pak choi, aged T-bone steak, and cherry blossom flan using cherries grown on site. The one decision you make is whether to be there at all.

    Can Txispa accommodate groups?

    There is no group-size data confirmed in Txispa's public record, but the restaurant operates from a renovated century-old farmhouse in a very small village with a reputation for intimate, detailed service — every dish is explained at the table. This is not a format that suits large parties or celebratory group dining in the conventional sense. If you are booking for more than four, check the venue's official channels to confirm capacity before planning around it.

    Is Txispa good for a special occasion?

    Yes, conditionally. Txispa's combination of a Michelin star, a World's 50 Best #85 ranking, a remote farmhouse setting, and a kitchen-to-table lunch format makes it a strong choice for a considered, food-focused occasion. The setting in the Atxondo Valley is deliberately quiet and unhurried. It is less suited to occasions that require flexibility — late dinners, large groups, or off-menu requests — because the format is fixed. Plan the occasion around the restaurant, not the other way around.

    Hours

    Monday
    closed
    Tuesday
    1 PM-6:30 PM
    Wednesday
    1 PM-6:30 PM
    Thursday
    1 PM-6:30 PM
    Friday
    1 PM-6:30 PM
    Saturday
    1 PM-6:30 PM
    Sunday
    1 PM-6:30 PM

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