Chain Bridge over a river with a city in the background

Whenever you treat yourself or toast a celebration, it’s all fun and games until the bill is placed on your table. You take the gulp, a big deep breath and then close your eyes as you slide your trusty 16 digit plastic card across the table.

But when it’s worth it, it’s worth it. In Budapest, none of the above is true, except the fact that it’s always worth it. With fine dining meals under $10 per person, this is one of the best cities in Europe to explore exquisite Michelin Starred tastes without the bite.

Praising a European city for fork licking fine dining is practically a redundant thought. Every city in Europe excels in fine dining, and places like San Sebastian offer a greater concentration of Michelin stars than any other region on the map. And then, of course, there’s Paris, Madrid, London, Brussels, Milan, Nice, Rome, Vienna and yeah – you get the point.

But there’s one fundamental difference between fine dining in these major capitols and the bites found in Budapest: it’s cheap here, like legitimately cheap. How cheap? Like under $10 for lunch at a spot with a Michelin star, or at least a Bib Gourmand, including a drink – an alcoholic one.

a plate of food on a table
A dish from Textura, a bib gourmand restaurant in Budapest.

As I sat down at Stand 25, inside a lovely market in Zone 1, I had somewhat low expectations, high hopes and a major appetite.

Within minutes, an eggplant tartare was placed in front of me, at a whopping cost of 1000 Hungarian Forint (HUF). For record keeping purposes, that’s about $3.4, or £2.8.

I then went for the restaurant special, a plate of layered potatoes with sausages and mixed pickles. As odd as it may sound, it was lick the plate good. For this lunchtime main course, I was hit with another wallet beating price of 1200 HUF. Again, that’s just over $4 USD, and under £3.50.

I was on vacation, so yeah, I had a glass of Rosé with lunch. At a price of 700 HUF per glass, it brought my two course lunchtime fine dining meal total to a whopping $10, or £8 for those clinging onto the Great British Pound.

a large building with many shops and a large ceiling

The unassuming restaurant, which hovers between a single Michelin Star and a Bib Gourmand award is just one of many in the city ushering in a new era of fine dining in a country known as a place that offers anything but.

When people say Budapest, or Hungary at large, they think heavy plates of mush with a focus on slow cooked meats in heavy sauces, with plenty of starch to go alongside.

But the humble culinary beginnings from the communist era, where meals were made just to sustain workers is over, and after decades of being laughed out of fine dining conversations, a younger generation of chefs is stewarding the country towards an incredible culinary future.

By most accounts, the phenomenon started in the last seven years as world tourism numbers began to grow and by all accounts it’s taking off like a rocket ship.

Make no mistake, this is the time to visit, the time before bib gourmands turn into Michelin stars, and before blogs ruin the secret. Wait…

a plate of food on a gray surface

These chefs are championing local ingredients and putting lighter, brighter spins on classic European cuisine. Think fresh, mineral driven wines from Lake Balaton, fresh produce from abundant hills and unique meat and game from venison to river trout, water buffalo and bountiful duck. They’re famous for it.

Sure, it’s no secret that lunch can be the best time for fine dining steals, but it’s not as if the city hits you over the head at dinner either.

At stunning spots such as Textura, or Borkonya, a bonafide main course will run between $10-15, or $20 for the extra special stuff. It’s hard to put into perspective just how special the price to quality ratio is here. Other spots worth a gander? Stand25, St. Andrea, Mak and Bock Bistro will all do you proud.

a street with colorful buildings

Even Onyx, the lone two Michelin starred place in the city, offers dinner degustation menus around $100 per person during dinner service, and for six courses of mind blowing food that’s expensive no doubt, but also an outrageous value for two star dining, especially in Europe.

It’s not to say this is as cheap as a kebab shop, but then again this isn’t kebab food, and compared to tasting menus fetching more than $500 per person across Western Europe, you can’t help but feel as if you’re robbing the place.

If food is half the holiday and fine dining is the goal, you’d be doing yourself a disservice to miss out on this buzzing European city on the rise. With this kind of buzz and this much Michelin attention, I’d think these prices won’t last forever, nor will the ability to walk in! Köszönöm, Budapest.

Gilbert Ott

Gilbert Ott is an ever curious traveler and one of the world's leading travel experts. His adventures take him all over the globe, often spanning over 200,000 miles a year and his travel exploits are regularly...

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12 Comments

  1. Gilbert please can you save us from this politely said UTTER nonsense like this? “But the humble culinary beginnings from the communist era, where only two meals were served per day to hard working people.” Thanks Otherwise always enjoy your reviews.

  2. 2 meals per day? My parents and grandparents lived through Communism in Eastern Europe and this was not the case. Breakfast, lunch, dinner and everything in between, before and after were always served, even if in cases it was humble.

  3. Yes I agree with the others. I grew up in communist Budapest, we always had breakfast, lunch and dinner. Between breakfast and lunch we had a snack, called “tizorai” which was at 10 o’clock, and an “uzsonna” which is an afternoon snack.

  4. The dishes made by my wife are far better than those utter shite Western homemade crap. She learned how to cook from her Grandma. My dear God…can’t beat that. Try real Hungarian food like the layered potatoes with sausages You mentioned or soup served in homemade bread. One for sure: me and my brother’s never had shortages of delicious real ORGANIC(HOMEMADE) food.

  5. That picture of the “dish from Textura”: it looks like stuff you might find when sitting under a tree. No thanks. I sure don’t need to virtue-signal by way of my food, so no thanks.

  6. Had a great few days in Budapest last year. Great compact city, easy to get around in saw the orchestra and amazing food. Went to stand 25 on your suggestion when this was first published, and was not disappointed!! Hot baths and saunas were great (except realising the couple next to me were partaking in some quite vigorous and obvious frottage). Great walks around the city and interesting architecture. Deffo recommend it, making plans to go back this year!!

  7. Budapest is expensive for food and wine. Border towns are very cheap but not Budapest.
    Been in Budapest 7 times and I find Prague much cheaper, cleaner, better architecture, better bars, beer is far cheaper…..and superb,

    1. Let’s get some relativity into this comment. Budapest may be cheaper than rural Hungarian town, but it’s certainly not expensive by any international standard, for travelers coming from the US, UK, most of western Europe and virtually all other corners of the globe. I’d disagree about Prague being cheaper, I find it’s a more tourist trafficked city these days, but that’s for debate.

  8. Visited Budapest a few years back, for about 3 days. WONDERFUL city. Really admired the architecture. Had lunch in a little cafeteria on the “Buda” side, where the locals seemed to gather. Entrance was in a little arch way, about 1/2 way up the hill. Can’t recall the name. Neither of us could translate the cards on the food trays, so just pointed at what we wanted, but for less than $10 USD, for 2, it was GREAT. We’re NOT gourmets, so didn’t bother looking for “*”‘ed restaurants. Had a GREAT meal.

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