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The 15 Best Paladares in Havana

Ranked, reviewed, and eaten at — many times over

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Havana's paladar scene is unlike any other dining culture on earth. These private family restaurants, born out of economic necessity and nurtured by passion, now represent some of the most exciting eating in the entire Caribbean. From century-old colonial mansions to industrial art spaces, from rooftop bars with city views to grandmother's recipes served on mismatched china — this is our definitive guide to the 15 best places to eat in Havana. We've visited every one of them. Multiple times. This is what we found.

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The Definitive 15

1
Centro Habana $$$$ Calle Concordia 418, entre Gervasio y Escobar

La Guarida

Cuba's most famous paladar needs no introduction, but it deserves one anyway. Climb the crumbling marble staircase of this Centro Habana tenement — the same building that starred in Tomás Gutiérrez Alea's masterpiece Fresa y Chocolate — and you enter another world. Film posters and memorabilia line the walls. Vintage chandeliers drip from peeling ceilings. The dining rooms feel like sets from a dream about Havana's vanished glamour. La Guarida earned Cuba's first mention in the Michelin Guide for good reason: the kitchen is genuinely extraordinary. Chef Enrique Núñez twists classic Cuban flavours with European technique — the ropa vieja is shredded with precision and sauced with a depth no state restaurant could approach. The rooftop bar, accessible by a second staircase, serves the best cocktails in the city and views that will rearrange your understanding of Havana's scale. Book weeks in advance. Dress well. Come early for drinks upstairs, then descend for the meal of your Cuban trip.

What to Order

Ropa vieja with plantain chips · Lobster bisque with cognac cream · The chocolate fondant with sea salt. For cocktails: La Guarida's signature rum old fashioned with aged Havana Club 7.

2
Old Havana $$ Calle Brasil (Teniente Rey) 457, La Habana Vieja

El Chanchullero

El Chanchullero is the anti-La Guarida — and that's exactly why it's indispensable. Where Cuba's most famous paladar dazzles with chandeliers and film glamour, El Chanchullero doubles down on raw, revolutionary Havana. The walls are plastered with political posters, Che Guevara portraits, faded newspaper clippings, and the accumulated detritus of a city's long, complicated history. It smells of pork crackling and cold beer. The tables are close together, the music is loud, and the staff move with the casual efficiency of people who know their place is already perfect. The pork sandwich here — slow-roasted lechón piled onto crusty bread with pickles and mustard — is a legitimate revelation. It costs next to nothing. So does a sweating bottle of Cristal, which you should order immediately upon sitting down. This is where Havana's art students, visiting journalists, and savvy backpackers all converge. The vibe is electric from noon to midnight. No reservations, no dress code, no fuss. Just come.

What to Order

Roast pork sandwich (the absolute must) · Chicharrones · Cold Cristal beer — multiple · Congri rice on the side.

3
Centro Habana $$$ Calle San Rafael 469, entre Lealtad y Campanario

San Cristóbal

When Barack Obama chose San Cristóbal for his historic 2016 dinner during the first US presidential visit to Cuba in 88 years, owner Carlos Cristóbal Márquez didn't flinch. He cooked the same food he always cooks. That tells you everything about this extraordinary paladar. The dining room is a cabinet of Cuban curiosities: vintage photographs of Havana's golden age jostle with Catholic saints, African orishas, boxing memorabilia, and the kind of personal religious iconography that takes decades to accumulate. Carlos is a collector, and the restaurant is his greatest collection. The food matches the setting — deeply rooted in Cuban tradition but executed with a pride and precision that few restaurants in the country can match. The black bean soup is legendarily good: thick, smoky, threaded with cumin and served with pickled onion. The rabo encendido (oxtail stew) is slow-braised until the meat falls from the bone. San Cristóbal operates on a reservation system and fills up weeks in advance, so plan ahead. The Obama table is still pointed out with pride.

What to Order

Black bean soup with pickled onion · Rabo encendido (oxtail) · Fried plantains three ways · Flan de queso for dessert.

4
Vedado $$$ Calle 26 entre 11 y 13, Fábrica de Arte Cubano

El Cocinero

Built inside the converted industrial chimney stack of a former cooking oil factory, El Cocinero is the crown jewel of Havana's most exciting cultural complex: the Fábrica de Arte Cubano. The restaurant occupies multiple levels of the raw brick structure, connected by steel staircases and opening onto terraces where you can watch Havana's young creative class come and go below. The aesthetic is unapologetically industrial — exposed brick, iron beams, Edison bulbs — but the food is anything but rough. El Cocinero's kitchen produces elevated Cuban cuisine with genuine finesse: ceviche with coconut milk and habanero, suckling pig with citrus mojo, seafood risotto that would hold its own in any European capital. Come for dinner around 8pm, eat slowly, then walk next door to the Fábrica's galleries and music performances. Friday and Saturday nights are transcendent. El Cocinero has become the social hub of a new Havana — younger, more creative, more international — but the food alone justifies the visit.

What to Order

Coconut ceviche with habanero · Suckling pig with mojo verde · Yuca frita with aioli · The house mojito with fresh herbs from the kitchen garden.

5
Vedado $$$$ Calle 5ta #511 entre Paseo y 2, Vedado

Atelier

Atelier is what happens when a Cuban artist transforms their home into a dining experience. The rooms spill with paintings, sculptures, ceramics, and found objects — the work of owner Niuris Higueras and her circle of Havana's most celebrated visual artists. Every surface is a gallery wall; every meal is eaten surrounded by art that is actually for sale. The building itself is a beautiful República-era townhouse in the leafy part of Vedado, and the rooftop terrace is one of the finest dining spots in all of Cuba — on clear evenings you can see the Malecón and, beyond it, the darkening straits toward Florida. The menu skews toward contemporary Cuban-fusion: local fish prepared with French technique, pork with Asian-inflected glazes, desserts that could hold their own in a Havana of the imagination rather than reality. Atelier attracts diplomats, artists, and the kind of travellers who research carefully. Reservations are essential and worth every effort to secure.

What to Order

Catch-of-the-day ceviche · Duck breast with tamarind glaze · The artist's tasting menu (when available) · Guayaba cheesecake with rum caramel.

6
Miramar $$$$ Calle 30 #865 entre 26 y 41, Miramar

La Casa

Miramar was once Havana's wealthiest suburb, and La Casa is its most regal restaurant — set inside a grand colonial mansion that has somehow retained all its original architectural splendour through decades of revolution and reinvention. The property is enormous: multiple private dining rooms for intimate dinners, a lush tropical garden where you can eat beneath the stars, and a reception area that feels more like an embassy than a restaurant. This is the classic Miramar experience: white tablecloths, attentive service, an extensive wine list, and lobster preparations that represent the apex of Cuban coastal cuisine. The chefs here understand that Cuban lobster — the spiny Caribbean variety — is one of the world's great luxury ingredients, and they treat it accordingly. Grilled with garlic butter, served in a rich bisque, prepared thermidor-style with aged cheese — the lobster at La Casa has made grown adults weep with happiness. Bring your best clothes and your most significant credit card. Worth every peso.

What to Order

Lobster thermidor · Whole grilled lobster with garlic butter · Shrimp in coconut sauce · The grand dessert trolley — order everything.

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7
Old Havana $$$ Calle O'Reilly 304, La Habana Vieja

O'Reilly 304

The name is the address, and the address tells you everything: one of Old Havana's most storied streets, inside a colonial building whose bones go back centuries. O'Reilly 304 operates on two levels — the main dining room and a series of intimate window perches on the upper floor where you sit close to the street and watch Havana life unfold below while eating some of the city's most creative small plates. The kitchen here is genuinely adventurous by Cuban standards: think tuna tataki with pickled cucumber, cauliflower fritters with smoked aioli, and a ropa vieja spring roll that sounds like fusion gimmickry but tastes like inspired genius. The wine list is short but well-chosen, the cocktail menu is inventive, and the staff are young, knowledgeable, and clearly excited about what they're serving. O'Reilly 304 represents the new wave of Havana dining — chefs who grew up watching international cooking shows and have now synthesised those influences with deep Cuban roots. It shouldn't work as well as it does. It absolutely works.

What to Order

Ropa vieja spring rolls · Tuna tataki · Pork belly with malanga purée · The house pineapple mojito with fresh mint.

8
Old Havana $$ Calle Obrapia 60, La Habana Vieja

Mama Inés

Named for the legendary Afro-Cuban cook who appears in one of Cuba's most beloved folk songs — "La Negra Tomasa" — Mama Inés is a paladar dedicated to the soul of Cuban cooking rather than its contemporary reinvention. The dining room is warm and lived-in, decorated with images of the Orishas, bottles of rum in various states of depletion, and the kind of cheerful chaos that signals a kitchen run by someone who genuinely loves to feed people. The menu is an education in the African roots of Cuban cuisine: thick black bean soup that your grandmother would recognise, white rice cooked to perfection, pork braised until it surrenders completely, plantains fried in the manner that God intended. Nothing here costs more than it should. Everything tastes better than you expect. Mama Inés attracts a loyal following of travellers who return to Havana year after year — and who return to this specific table, because once you've eaten here you understand that this is what Cuban food actually is, stripped of pretension and served with love.

What to Order

Black bean soup · Ropa vieja with rice and plantains · Roast pork with yuca · Croquetas de jamón to start. Order the full feast: congri, maduros, and a cold Bucanero.

9
Vedado $$$ Malecón 161, entre K y L, Vedado

El Litoral

There is exactly one thing you need to know about El Litoral before booking: it sits directly on the Malecón, Havana's legendary seaside boulevard, with floor-to-ceiling windows that frame the ocean like a constantly changing painting. Come at sunset. Arrive early enough to claim a window table. Order a mojito immediately. Watch the light turn the Straits of Florida gold and then deep purple. Somewhere in there, remember to look at the menu. Fortunately, the food at El Litoral fully justifies the pilgrimage beyond its extraordinary setting. The kitchen is seafood-focused and benefits enormously from the proximity to the ocean: fish landed that morning, shrimp still tasting of brine, lobster prepared with the simplicity that only true freshness allows. The grilled red snapper with garlic and lime is among the finest things you can eat in Havana. The camarones al ajillo — shrimp in sizzling garlic butter — arrives in a clay pot and disappears in minutes. Book a window table. Arrive at sunset. Do not rush.

What to Order

Grilled red snapper with garlic and lime · Camarones al ajillo in clay pot · Lobster with butter and herbs · The signature Malecón sunset cocktail — ask the bartender to make it.

10
Miramar $$$$ Calle 46 #305 entre 3ra y 5ta, Miramar

La Fontana

La Fontana has the kind of elegant courtyard that makes you want to move to Havana permanently. A fountain (the fontana in question) provides the ambient soundtrack; bougainvillea drapes the surrounding walls in violent pink; the tables are set with crisp linen and proper glassware. This is Miramar at its most refined, and the kitchen — which takes its wine list seriously enough to have an actual sommelier — is one of the few in Cuba that can match its setting. The lobster preparations here rival anything at La Casa or La Guarida: the thermidor is a masterpiece of restraint, the grilled whole lobster with herb butter requires no improvement, and the lobster bisque is so rich it constitutes an entire meal. La Fontana attracts the diplomatic corps, senior Cuban government officials entertaining foreign guests, and the kind of discerning travellers who plan their Cuban trip around restaurant reservations. The wine list is the most ambitious in Havana. The service is impeccable without being stiff. La Fontana is proof that Cuban dining has matured into something genuinely world-class.

What to Order

Lobster bisque · Grilled whole lobster with herb butter · The sommelier's wine pairing menu · Crème brûlée with guayaba.

11
Vedado $$$ Calle Línea 753, entre Paseo y A, Vedado

Decameron

Decameron occupies a quiet corner of Vedado with the confidence of a restaurant that knows exactly what it is and has no interest in being anything else. The Belgian-influenced ownership has brought to Cuba something genuinely rare: understated sophistication. The garden dining room — a canopy of tropical plants above white-clothed tables — is one of Havana's most serene eating environments. There is no music here; the only soundtrack is conversation and the distant hum of the neighbourhood. This suits Decameron's food perfectly. The kitchen excels with fish in ways that seem almost European in their precision: sole meunière prepared with genuine butter (a rarity in Cuba), sea bass with lemon beurre blanc, dorado with capers and fresh herbs. Belgian influence appears in the occasional surprising technique — a beer-braised preparation here, a mussel dish there — that reminds you this paladar exists at a cultural intersection. The wine list is excellent. The pace is unhurried. Decameron is the restaurant you choose when you want to actually talk to your companion over dinner rather than shout over a band.

What to Order

Sea bass with beurre blanc · Belgian-style mussels (when available) · Endive salad with Roquefort · The chocolate mousse — deeply Belgian, deeply good.

12
Centro Habana $$ Paseo de Martí (Prado) 563, frente al Capitolio

Los Nardos

Los Nardos sits opposite the Gran Teatro and the restored Capitolio building, which means you eat with one of Havana's grandest architectural ensembles visible through the window. The location alone would justify a visit, but Los Nardos has survived and thrived for years because its value proposition is almost absurdly good: enormous portions of well-executed Cuban classics at prices that feel like a pleasant anachronism. The dining room is a beautiful space — high ceilings, tiled floors, the bones of a building that knew better days and is quietly confident about their return. The menu reads as a greatest hits of Cuban cooking: whole roast chicken with mojo, pork chops with garlic, the inevitable ropa vieja, rice and beans in multiple configurations. Everything arrives in quantities that challenge even the hungriest traveller. Los Nardos represents what Cubans mean when they talk about "affordable luxury" — not cheap food made to look expensive, but genuinely good food made available to everyone. Book ahead or arrive when it opens.

What to Order

Whole roast chicken with mojo · Pork chop with garlic rice · Ropa vieja with congri · The flan de huevo — simple, perfect, enormous.

13
Old Havana $$ Calle Amargura 358, La Habana Vieja

El Café

El Café occupies a brilliant niche: it's the coffee shop where Havana's hipster intelligentsia work through the morning, a lunch spot that serves genuinely good sandwiches and salads, and then — when the sun goes down and the candles come out — one of Old Havana's most intimate and atmospheric dinner venues. The transformation is remarkable. What was bright and buzzing becomes warm and conspiratorial. The chalkboard menu evolves with what's good and available. The cocktail list, always inventive, becomes the focus of serious attention. El Café makes cocktails that would stand out in Havana's best bars: smoked rum drinks, rum-based twists on classics, things with fresh herbs and unexpected bitters that make you reconsider everything you thought you knew about Cuban rum. The kitchen produces creative Cuban fare without being gimmicky: well-executed classics elevated by fresh ingredients and genuine technique. El Café is the kind of place you find on day two and return to every subsequent evening. It feels like a discovery, even when the entire city knows about it.

What to Order

The smoked rum cocktail du jour · Pulled pork sandwich at lunch · Evening tasting plates — whatever's on the board · Cuban espresso at any hour.

14
Old Havana $$ Callejón del Chorro 60C, Plaza de la Catedral

Doña Eutimia

Tucked into the Callejón del Chorro — a narrow colonial alley leading off the Plaza de la Catedral — Doña Eutimia is the kind of restaurant that serious food travellers dream of finding: a small, family-run spot where the recipes have been passed down through generations and the food tastes exactly like someone's grandmother made it, because someone's grandmother did. The ropa vieja here is regularly cited as the best in Havana, which in a city obsessed with this dish is a serious claim. The shredded beef is braised for hours with tomatoes, peppers, onion, cumin, and bay leaf until it achieves a texture both tender and substantial, a flavour that is simultaneously deeply familiar and endlessly complex. The restaurant is tiny — perhaps 30 covers — and fills up immediately. No reservations by phone; the system is informal and Cuban. Arrive early, accept that you may wait, and use the time to explore the magnificent Plaza de la Catedral next door. The wait is part of the experience. The meal is worth everything.

What to Order

Ropa vieja — mandatory, the best in Havana · Picadillo (Cuban ground beef with olives and raisins) · Black bean soup · Natilla (Cuban custard) to finish.

15
Old Havana $$$ Calle O'Reilly 304, azotea, La Habana Vieja

304 O'Reilly Rooftop

The rooftop extension of the acclaimed O'Reilly 304 paladar below, this open-air bar and dining terrace has become one of Havana's must-visit spots at the golden hour before sunset. The views across the terracotta rooftops of La Habana Vieja — a UNESCO World Heritage Site — toward the bay and the fortresses of La Cabaña are among the most spectacular urban vistas in the Caribbean. The bar programme is the primary draw: classic Cuban cocktails — mojitos, daiquiris, Cuba libres — prepared with proper aged rum, fresh lime, and genuine cane sugar syrup, the kind of versions that make you wonder why you ever bothered with tourist bar versions. There is also a focused menu of snacks and small plates — croquetas, fried yuca, tostones with various toppings — designed to accompany extended cocktail sessions rather than replace dinner. Come at 6pm. Stay for two hours. Watch the sun fall into the city. Order one more daiquiri. This is what magic hour means in Cuba.

What to Order

Classic daiquiri with Havana Club 3 · Papa Hemingway special (grapefruit daiquiri) · Tostones with black bean dip · Croquetas de jamón — excellent with cocktails.

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