From Michelin stars to restaurants dedicated entirely to meatballs, you'll be spoilt for choice in Stockholm
Written by Madeleine Hyde & Maddy Savage
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It can get a little cold in Stockholm, but its restaurants? They’re hot. The Swedish capital has long been a haven for those with curious appetites, and the city’s ever-increasing diversity has made space for new restaurants and pop ups everywhere you turn. Now, the city is rich with both trendy and traditional spots – you just have to know where to look.
Here you’ll find Michelin-starred New Nordic spots, Middle Eastern gems, seafood and veggie neighbourhood joints. Oh, and you’re in Sweden. You have to sample the meatballs (even if you claim you’ve already tried them in IKEA). Here are the best restaurants in Stockholm right now.
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This guide was updated by Maddy Savage, a writer based in Stockholm. At Time Out, all of our travel guides are written by local writers who know their cities inside out. For more about how we curate, see our editorial guidelines.
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Best restaurants in Stockholm
- Restaurants
- Scandinavian
price 3 of 4
An open fire is the focus at Michelin-starred Ekstedt, a master purveyor of New Nordic cuisine, where everything is cooked without gas, electricity or microwaves. Ekstedt’s a haven for Scandi design fans, with compact wooden tables, a rustic stone bar and exposed tungsten lights dangling from a mesh ceiling. In February 2023, Ekstedt got an expansion, which was apparently primarily to expand the restaurant's wine list. So you're visiting at a good time.
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- Restaurants
- Swedish
price 4 of 4
One of Sweden’s most celebrated restaurants, Frantzen’s recent offerings have included Swedish pork marinated for a week in soy and mirin, smoked for 24 hours and hung to dry for 100 days, and a Rubik’s cube-inspired dessert with rows of colour-popping garlic and lemon peel, arctic bramble, brown cheese and liquorice. An equally opulent interior, calm music (from the moment you step in the elevator) and impeccable service seal the deal. Unsurprisingly, all this comes at a price.
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- Restaurants
- Swedish
price 2 of 4
The most famous food in the Nordics is brought up-to-date at this edgy yet homey restaurant which has built its entire menu around the humble meatball. If this is your first Swedish meatballs experience (Ikea doesn’t count), go for the classic beef balls served with buttery mash, lingonberry jam and a creamy broth. More adventurous variations include rooster, reindeer and salmon. There are vegan and vegetarian options too.
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- Restaurants
- Contemporary Global
price 2 of 4
The tasting menu here comprises a selection of decadent, globally-inspired small plates. It begins with a scoop of caviar dolloped straight onto your hand, alongside a shot of vodka. The interior couldn’t be more opposed to fine dining; the walls are crumbling, and there’s a smoke machine filling the room with a nostalgic mist and Lego to play with between courses.
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- Restaurants
- Contemporary European
price 2 of 4
There are just five main courses to choose from at Häktet, a trendy, ultra-modern restaurant inside a former 18th-century jail for petty criminals who couldn’t afford to pay their bail. Think classic European flavours with a contemporary twist, witha menu that typically changes several times a year to make the most of seasonal ingredients.
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- Restaurants
- Swedish
price 2 of 4
Exposed red brickwork, low-hanging metal lampshades and daily specials scrawled on paper posters set the tone for thisneighbourhood restaurant in the Vasastan district with a Michelin star. There’s a short seasonal menu with a strong focus on Nordic root vegetables, fish and seafood, like lobster with celery and ginger, slow-cooked pork accompanied by cauliflower, or chanterelle mushrooms with elder and buttered turbot.
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In just a few short years, Indian Street Food has morphed from a buzzing street food truck into three popular restaurants in central Stockholm. Both of their Vasastan branches are open until late – and you’ll find the exquisite likes of mild and creamy curries, samosa wraps with mango dips and naan bread with Västerbotten cheese from northern Sweden. There’s also a co*cktail and craft beer menu that stays local and affordable, while the décor and atmosphere feel much fancier than the prices.
Fast becoming a staple on Södermalm’s street food scene, Falloumi has made the Skanstull area a hotspot for Arabic and Mediterranean cuisine. Falafel and halloumi are the stars here, made brighter by their tahini yoghurt and chilli sauces and served in a wrap, pitta or bowl. The vibrant interior adds extra spice, with laundry lines strewn across the ceiling that help convince you you’re dining somewhere altogether much warmer.
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- Restaurants
- Contemporary European
price 1 of 4
Rosendals Trädgård rustles up daily lunch deals from fresh veg, herbs and flowers plucked directly from its enormous biodynamic allotments. The bread, pies and pastries are baked in a wood-burning oven next door. Guests here get the chance to dine in a light-filled greenhouse orout on the spacious outdoor terrace, surrounded by trees, creepers and flower beds.
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- Restaurants
- Italian
price 2 of 4
The pizzas are the stars of this savoury menu, piled high with fresh ingredients that change with the seasons, but there’s a wide range of pasta, meat and fish dishes too. There are extensive breakfast and lunch menus, a separate gelateria and a top-notch bakery-cum-coffee shop by the entrance – not to mention the graffiti-scrawled co*cktail bar, Växthusen, at the back. There are set menus to share in the evening, making the high-end experience more affordable.
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- Restaurants
- Japanese
price 3 of 4
The first Asian restaurant in Sweden to get a Michelin star, this intimate sushi bar’s head chef, Carl Ishizaki, spent two decades perfecting hisinventive takeson some of Japan’s most classic recipes before investing in his own tiny 20-seat venue. Here customers experience 15 of his signature dishes in one sitting via a seasonal tasting menu, scribbled on a giant chalkboard, in a relaxed, friendly atmosphere.
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