Restaurant in São Paulo, Brazil
A Casa do Porco
1,725Pearl PointsTop-50 pork restaurant, $$ price tag.

About A Casa do Porco
A Casa do Porco is the most decorated value-for-money restaurant in São Paulo — a World's 50 Best Top 100 entry and Michelin Bib Gourmand at $$ pricing. Chef Jefferson Rueda's pork-focused menu rotates seasonally and runs both tasting and à la carte formats. Book weeks in advance; walk-ins are not realistic.
The Verdict
A Casa do Porco ranked #83 in the World's 50 Best Restaurants in 2025 — down from a peak of #7 in 2022, but still among the most decorated value propositions in South America. At $$ pricing, it sits two full price tiers below comparably awarded São Paulo restaurants. If you've been once and left thinking the pork-focused tasting menu was a novelty, go back for the à la carte: that's where the cooking shows more range. Booking is near-impossible without planning weeks ahead, but the reward-to-cost ratio in this category is hard to match anywhere in Brazil.
About A Casa do Porco
Chef Jefferson Rueda built A Casa do Porco around a single animal and an unusually democratic philosophy for a restaurant of this calibre. The República address puts it in the working heart of central São Paulo, not in the polished dining corridors of Jardins or Itaim Bibi where you'd expect to find a World's 50 Best entrant. The room itself signals this immediately: the décor is quirky and deliberately unpretentious, a counterpoint to the technical precision on the plate. This is a restaurant that wants you to feel like you walked into something, not that you were admitted to something.
The menu is structured around pork in every form — snout to tail, cured, roasted, raw, rendered , with both a tasting menu and a full à la carte available. The tasting menu follows a seasonal rotation, meaning the kitchen's interpretation of the pig shifts across the year as different cuts, preparations, and accompanying produce come in and out of availability. If you visited during São Paulo's cooler dry season (roughly June to September), you likely encountered richer, more braised preparations. The warmer, wetter months tend to bring lighter cures and fresher accompaniments into the menu's orbit. For a return visit, timing around the seasonal shift is worth factoring in: the tasting menu in the May-to-July window tends to lean into the kitchen's strengths with slow-cooked and preserved preparations.
The awards record tells you this kitchen operates at a level well above what the price point suggests. La Liste awarded it 94 points in 2026. Opinionated About Dining placed it #14 in South America in 2025. The Michelin Bib Gourmand designation , specifically given to restaurants offering high quality at moderate prices , is the most practically useful credential here: it confirms that the value gap between what you pay and what you receive is real, not just relative to an inflated baseline.
For a return visitor, the question is less "is it worth going back" and more "what do I order differently." If the tasting menu was your first experience, the à la carte gives you more control over which parts of the pig take centre stage. The bar programme deserves attention too: the drinks list has been developed to work with pork fat and cured flavours in ways that a standard wine list doesn't prioritise. Arrive early in the service if you want a seat without the full noise of a packed room , the space fills quickly and the atmosphere shifts noticeably once capacity is reached.
São Paulo's dining scene has several reference points for serious regional Brazilian cooking , D.O.M., Maní, Tuju , but none of them offer the combination of global recognition and accessible pricing that A Casa do Porco does. Beyond São Paulo, the closest parallel in terms of seasonal pork-focused regional cooking might be found at Lasai in Rio de Janeiro or Manu in Curitiba, both of which take a similarly produce-led approach to Brazilian ingredients. For a broader picture of where A Casa do Porco sits in Brazil's wider dining geography, see restaurants in Salvador, Campos do Jordão, and Itacaré for regional comparisons. At the global level, A Casa do Porco operates in the same conversation as Atomix in New York for culturally specific tasting menu cooking, though at a fraction of the price.
Practical Details
Reservations: Near-impossible without advance planning , book as far ahead as the system allows, typically several weeks minimum. Walk-ins are not a realistic option for dinner. Hours: Monday to Saturday 12–11 pm; Sunday 12–5 pm. Budget: $$ , one of the most affordable globally ranked restaurants you'll find anywhere. Address: R. Araújo, 124, República, São Paulo. Dress: No formal dress code signalled , the room is deliberately casual for its calibre. Group size: The format works for two to four; larger groups should confirm table configuration when booking.
Ratings at a Glance
- World's 50 Best Restaurants: #83 (2025); peaked at #7 (2022)
- La Liste: 94/100 (2026)
- Michelin: Bib Gourmand (2025)
- Opinionated About Dining , South America: #14 (2025)
- Google Reviews: 4.4 / 5 (14,544 reviews)
When to Go
The tasting menu rotates seasonally, so a return visit has a different logic than a first visit. The May-to-September dry season is when the kitchen tends toward preparations that suit slow cooking and cured profiles. If you're planning a first visit, any time of year delivers the core experience , but if you're deciding between two possible trip windows, the cooler months give you the menu at what most regulars consider its most coherent. Sunday closing at 5 pm is worth noting if you're planning a long lunch: arrive by 1 pm to avoid being rushed. For the full São Paulo dining context, see our São Paulo restaurants guide, hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is A Casa do Porco worth the price?
Yes — this is one of the clearest value cases in the World's 50 Best list. At $$ pricing, A Casa do Porco punches well above its price bracket: it holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand (2025) and ranked #83 globally. For a restaurant with this credential stack, paying $$ per head is a genuine anomaly. The catch is availability, not cost.
What are alternatives to A Casa do Porco in São Paulo?
D.O.M. is the prestige escalation — Alex Atala's flagship runs at a higher price point and focuses on Amazonian ingredients rather than pork. Maní offers a similarly creative Brazilian register at a comparable tier. Evvai is worth considering if you want a more European-inflected tasting menu format. None of them match A Casa do Porco's value-to-accolade ratio at $$ pricing.
Is A Casa do Porco good for a special occasion?
It works well for a celebratory dinner, but the setting is quirkily decorated and democratic by design — this is not a hushed, formal room. If your group wants high-energy and a strong shared menu to anchor the evening, it fits. For a quieter, more ceremonial occasion, D.O.M. or Evvai may suit better. Book as far ahead as the system allows; availability is the limiting factor regardless of occasion.
Is the tasting menu worth it at A Casa do Porco?
For first-time visitors, yes — the tasting menu is the format the kitchen is built around, covering the full range of Jefferson Rueda's whole-animal pork approach. The menu rotates seasonally, which also gives return visitors a reason to come back. An à la carte option exists if you prefer to eat selectively rather than commit to the full format.
Does A Casa do Porco handle dietary restrictions?
The restaurant's entire identity is built on pork, so this is a meaningful constraint to flag before booking. The venue describes itself as offering something for everyone, but non-pork eaters will face limited options — this is not primarily a flexible dietary-restriction destination. If pork is off the table entirely, Maní or Corrutela are more accommodating São Paulo alternatives.
Location
R. Araújo, 124 - República, São Paulo - SP, 01220-020, Brazil
São Paulo, Brazil
Compare A Casa do Porco
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| A Casa do Porco | Regional Brazilian, Brazilian | $$ | Near Impossible |
| D.O.M. | Modern Brazilian, Creative | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Evvai | Contemporary Italian, Modern Cuisine | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Maní | Brazilian - International, Creative | $$$ | Unknown |
| Jun Sakamoto | Sushi, Japanese | $$$ | Unknown |
| Corrutela | Brazilian, Seasonal Cuisine | $$ | Unknown |
A quick look at how A Casa do Porco measures up.
Also Consider
- D.O.M., Modern Brazilian, Creative, $$$$
- Evvai, Contemporary Italian, Modern Cuisine, $$$$
- Maní, Brazilian - International, Creative, $$$
- Jun Sakamoto, Sushi, Japanese, $$$
- Corrutela, Brazilian, Seasonal Cuisine, $$
At $$ pricing, A Casa do Porco sits in a different financial category to most of its São Paulo peers. D.O.M. charges at the $$$$ level for Alex Atala's tasting menu, more formal, more expensive, and with a different kind of culinary ambition (Amazonian ingredients, molecular technique). If you want a structured special-occasion dinner with full table service and a quieter room, D.O.M. makes sense. If you want globally ranked cooking at a price that doesn't require a budget conversation, A Casa do Porco is the stronger pick.
Maní at $$$ is the closest competitor in terms of tone: creative, Brazilian-focused, and with a following among serious São Paulo diners. It's easier to book than A Casa do Porco and offers a less thematically narrow menu, which makes it a better choice if your group has mixed preferences or you'd rather not commit to a pork-led format. Evvai at $$$$ is São Paulo's best contemporary Italian option and operates in a completely different register, worth booking separately, not as a substitute. For seasonal Brazilian cooking at $$ with a more neighbourhood feel, Tuju is worth considering, though it doesn't carry the same recognition weight.
The practical booking reality separates A Casa do Porco from most of its peers. Securing a table requires weeks of advance planning regardless of group size, this is not a restaurant you add to a trip at short notice. If your São Paulo visit is already confirmed and you have flexibility on dates, build the booking around A Casa do Porco's availability rather than the other way around. For diners who prefer to plan more loosely, Maní and Tuju are significantly easier to access. Jun Sakamoto at $$$ is the right call if someone in the group prefers Japanese over Brazilian, and it operates at a comparable level of technical seriousness.
Hours
- Monday
- 12–11 pm
- Tuesday
- 12–11 pm
- Wednesday
- 12–11 pm
- Thursday
- 12–11 pm
- Friday
- 12–11 pm
- Saturday
- 12–11 pm
- Sunday
- 12–5 pm
Recognized By
Explore São Paulo
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