Restaurant in Athens, Greece
Athens' strongest case for €€€ fine dining.

Hytra holds a Michelin star and ranks in Opinionated About Dining's top 300 European restaurants, delivering modern Greek cooking — including the fully plant-based Think Green menu — at €€€ pricing. It's the strongest value proposition in Athens' serious dining tier, with a bar program worth staying late for. Book 3–4 weeks out minimum; terrace seating fills first.
Hytra is Athens' most complete argument for booking a Michelin-starred dinner at €€€ pricing. A 1-star hold since 2024 and ranked #282 in Opinionated About Dining's Leading Restaurants in Europe for 2025, it delivers modern Greek cooking with genuine technical ambition — and a plant-forward tasting menu (Think Green) that gives it a dimension few peers in the city can match. Book here if you want the credentials of Athens' fine-dining tier without the €€€€ outlay of Botrini's or Spondi. Booking is hard — plan at least three to four weeks ahead.
Hytra opens Tuesday through Sunday, evenings only, from 7 pm to 2 am. That's a deliberate choice: this is a dinner-and-drinks destination, not a lunch stop. The terrace is the room to request , described by We're Smart (the plant-based food guide that reviewed it) as modern and beautiful, it sets the spatial tone for what follows. This is not a hushed, chandelier-lit temple of fine dining. The format is contemporary: open-feeling, designed with purpose, and comfortable letting the evening run long into cocktails.
The kitchen, led by chef George Felemegkas, works in two registers. The first is the Think Green menu , a fully plant-based tasting format that We're Smart specifically flags as strong, if not quite in overdrive territory for pure-plant obsessives. The second is a more technically ambitious direction where Felemegkas moves into territory that produces, in the words of the same guide, "surprising results." Both registers sit within modern Greek cooking: the ingredients and cultural reference points are local, the technique is international. For a food-focused traveller, that combination is exactly what Athens at its leading looks like right now.
The bar program is taken seriously here. We're Smart specifically calls out the cocktails as not just present but worth your time , "" in their framing. If you're building a multi-visit strategy for Hytra, use one of those visits primarily as a bar-first evening: arrive early, spend time at the bar before moving to the table, and let the drinks program earn its own attention. It's a more relaxed way to experience the room on a second trip once you've already done the full tasting format.
Hytra rewards more than one visit, and it's worth thinking deliberately about how to structure them. On a first visit, commit to the full dinner format , whichever tasting menu direction suits your group (Think Green if plant-forward is a priority; the more technically ambitious menu if you want to see what Felemegkas does when he pushes). The terrace is the priority seating request; if you miss it on visit one, it's reason enough to return. On a second visit, arrive closer to 7 pm, spend meaningful time at the bar, and consider a shorter or à la carte format if available. The late closing time (2 am) means there's no rush , the kitchen and bar coexist as a programme, not a sequence. A third visit justifies itself if you want to track how the menu evolves with the season; as a restaurant that holds its Michelin star year-on-year, the kitchen isn't standing still.
For the broader Athens context: Hytra sits at the more accessible end of the city's serious dining tier on price, but it is not an easy-in restaurant. The Google rating of 4.4 across 2,081 reviews points to consistent delivery at scale, which matters for a room that trades in this kind of ambition. Compare that to some of Athens' quieter, less-reviewed fine-dining rooms , Aleria in Metaxourgeio being the closest equivalent at the same price tier , and Hytra is the more technically forward of the two, at the cost of being harder to book.
For planning purposes: Tuesday and Wednesday evenings are your leading shot at a table with shorter lead time. Friday and Saturday are the hardest nights to secure, particularly for terrace seating. The restaurant does not open on Mondays. There is no lunch service. If you are in Athens for only one night and serious dining is the objective, Hytra is the strongest single recommendation at this price point , but have a fallback ready, because the booking difficulty is real.
If you're exploring Greece more widely, the standard for destination fine dining elsewhere in the country looks like Etrusco in Kato Korakiana on Corfu or Koukoumavlos in Fira on Santorini. Athens has a denser concentration of serious kitchens per square kilometre than either island location , see also Delta, Hervé, and Patio for modern-cuisine options across different price points. Our full Athens restaurants guide covers the complete picture.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hytra | Modern Greek, Modern Cuisine | €€€ | The Hytra experience can be all pure plant if you want: Think Green is the name of the menu. The beautiful terrace looks modern, ditto the Greek cuisine with a twist. Sometimes chef George Felemegkas also dares to go on the technical tour, giving surprising results. For We're Smart looking for the power of pure plant, overdrive is not really necessary. Cocktails are unmissable in a contemporary restaurant that wants to be with the flow, so here too. Be sure to take some time to indulge in the bar as well. The whole experience sits well, the place, the creations and the drinks to go with it. We will definitely be back.; Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Europe Ranked #282 (2025); Michelin 1 Star (2025); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Europe Ranked #256 (2024); Michelin 1 Star (2024); Opinionated About Dining Top New Restaurants in Europe Recommended (2023) | Hard | — |
| Botrini's | Contemporary Greek, Mediterranean Cuisine | €€€€ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Spondi | Contemporary Greek, French | €€€€ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Tudor Hall | Contemporary | €€€€ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Aleria | Greek | €€€ | Unknown | — | |
| Nolan | Fusion | € | Unknown | — |
Comparing your options in Athens for this tier.
Spondi is the closest comparison — another Michelin-starred option in Athens with a longer track record and a more formal European feel. Aleria offers modern Greek cooking at a slightly lower price point if €€€ feels like a stretch. Botrini's leans into Mediterranean-Greek crossover and suits guests who want personality over precision. Nolan is the right call if you prefer a Japanese-Greek fusion format rather than a tasting-menu commitment. Tudor Hall works better for a view-led occasion dinner than a food-first booking.
Hytra's modern terrace and contemporary interior suggest put-together rather than formal — think polished casual with no trainers or beachwear. There is no published dress code in the venue record, but a Michelin 1-star evening destination operating until 2 am warrants dressing with intention. Avoid overly casual resort wear; the room and the €€€ price point set expectations.
Hytra opens evenings only, Tuesday through Sunday from 7 pm, so plan accordingly — there is no lunch service. The Think Green menu makes a full plant-based tasting experience a genuine option, not an afterthought, which is worth knowing before you order. Cocktails are a deliberate part of the experience here, so factor the bar into your evening rather than rushing out after dinner. At €€€ with a Michelin star and an OAD Top 300 Europe ranking, the format rewards commitment to the full dinner-and-drinks arc.
The contemporary setting and bar programme at Hytra make solo visits more viable than at starchier fine-dining rooms. Arriving at the bar before or after dinner is a practical anchor for solo guests. That said, the venue data does not confirm a dedicated counter or chef's table, so contact ahead to ask about solo seating options — particularly if you want a tasting menu format rather than à la carte.
Dinner is the only option — Hytra operates from 7 pm to 2 am, Tuesday through Sunday, with no lunch service. The late closing and cocktail programme are part of what makes it a full evening destination rather than a quick meal. If you are looking for a Michelin-starred Athens lunch, Spondi or Aleria are better starting points.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.