Restaurant in Bergen, Norway
Bergen's hardest table. Book early.

Gaptrast earned its Michelin Star in 2025 under chef Martin Gehrlein and is now Bergen's hardest table to secure at the €€€€ price tier. The intimate room at Baneveien 16 suits special occasions and focused tasting-menu dinners. Book six to twelve weeks out — post-star demand makes this a plan-ahead reservation, not a spontaneous option.
The misconception about Gaptrast is that it's simply a new addition to Bergen's dining scene — a place you can try whenever you happen to be in town. It isn't. Since earning a Michelin Star in 2025, Gaptrast under chef Martin Gehrlein has moved into a different category of difficulty, one that requires planning well in advance rather than a spontaneous booking. If you're building a trip to western Norway around a serious meal, this is now the table that anchors the itinerary — not an afterthought.
Gaptrast sits at Baneveien 16, a residential-adjacent address in Bergen that signals something deliberate about the venue's character. This is not a large-format dining room built for volume. The physical setup at Gaptrast is compact, close, and calibrated for focus , the kind of room where the cooking is the event and the architecture keeps distractions minimal. For a special occasion or a date where the meal itself needs to carry the evening, that spatial intimacy works in your favour. The room is small enough that every seat feels considered, not just technically occupied. That scale also means the kitchen operates at a precision that larger rooms rarely sustain.
Bergen's broader food scene skews toward maritime informality, which makes a room this focused feel like a genuine shift in register. If you've been to Lysverket and found the room energetic but occasionally diffuse, Gaptrast operates at the opposite end of that dial. The physical experience is quieter, more concentrated, and better suited to the kind of evening you're planning to remember.
Gehrlein's approach is categorised as Modern Cuisine, which in Bergen's context means cooking that uses Norwegian produce as the base material without being constrained by strict regional tradition. The Michelin recognition in 2025 is the clearest signal available about the kitchen's technical level. For context, Norway's Michelin-starred tier is competitive , Maaemo in Oslo, RE-NAA in Stavanger, and Speilsalen in Trondheim represent the broader national standard this kitchen now sits alongside. Earning a star in Bergen specifically is notable given that the city has historically been overshadowed by Oslo at the leading of the Norwegian dining hierarchy.
The €€€€ price tier positions Gaptrast clearly in the splurge category, comparable to Omakase by Sergey Pak and Lysverket at the same tier in Bergen. At this price point, you should expect a tasting menu format, multi-course progression, and kitchen-side pacing rather than à la carte flexibility. That's the right format for a celebration or business meal where control over the evening matters.
Post-Michelin booking difficulty at Gaptrast should be treated as hard. The restaurant holds a Google rating of 5 out of 5 from 24 reviews, a signal that the current audience skews heavily toward diners who have specifically sought out the experience rather than casual walk-ins. That combination , new star, strong early ratings, small physical capacity , creates a reservation window that demands serious lead time.
For weekend tables, book six to eight weeks out at minimum. For specific dates tied to travel itineraries, consider booking as far as ten to twelve weeks ahead, particularly if you're planning around key dates like anniversaries or business visit windows. Thursday and early Friday slots tend to open before weekend prime time and are worth targeting if your schedule allows flexibility. This is not a restaurant where checking availability a week out will yield satisfying options.
There is no booking method listed in the current data. Check directly via the official website once available, or try Bergen hotel concierge contacts if you're staying in the city. Bergen's leading hotels are listed in our full Bergen hotels guide, and concierge services at the better properties have existing relationships with Michelin-level kitchens.
The editorial angle here is worth addressing directly: Gaptrast is not a late-night venue in the conventional sense. A multi-course tasting menu at a Michelin-starred kitchen runs on the kitchen's schedule, typically seating by 6:30 or 7:00 PM and running through to late evening. If you're looking for somewhere to continue an evening in Bergen after dinner, the city's bar scene , covered in our full Bergen bars guide , is a better reference point. What Gaptrast does offer after standard early-evening hours is the kind of extended, paced dinner that occupies three or more hours by design. The meal IS the late evening. Plan accordingly and don't book expecting to leave in ninety minutes.
For Norwegian destination dining that occupies a full evening similarly, Under in Lindesnes and MiraBelle by Ørjan Johannessen in Bekkjarvik operate on comparable experiential logic: the meal is the destination, not the preamble. Gaptrast fits that category for Bergen specifically.
Gaptrast is the right call for a special occasion dinner in Bergen where the quality signal matters and the €€€€ price tier is acceptable. Anniversary dinners, milestone birthdays, and business meals requiring a serious table all land well here. Solo diners interested in tasting menus at Michelin level will find the intimate room format hospitable to solo attendance, though seating logistics at a compact venue are worth confirming at booking. For a wider overview of Bergen's dining options across all price points, see our full Bergen restaurants guide.
Internationally, the closest comparators for Gehrlein's Modern Cuisine approach at this price tier include Frantzén in Stockholm for Scandinavian fine dining context and Maison Lameloise in Chagny for European one-star-and-above benchmarking. For Norway's broader fine dining picture, Glime Restaurant in Hardanger Fjord and Fjellskål in Bergen round out the regional context. For accessible Bergen dining without the tasting-menu commitment, Allmuen Bistro is a practical lower-pressure alternative.
Also worth exploring: our Bergen experiences guide and our Bergen wineries guide for building a fuller itinerary around the meal.
Quick reference: Michelin 1 Star (2025) | €€€€ | Modern Cuisine | Bergen | Chef: Martin Gehrlein | Book 6–12 weeks out | Hard booking difficulty.
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Gaptrast | €€€€ | — |
| Lysverket | €€€€ | — |
| Omakase by Sergey Pak | €€€€ | — |
| BARE Restaurant | — | |
| Moon | €€ | — |
| LadyPapa | — |
What to weigh when choosing between Gaptrast and alternatives.
Possible, but not the natural fit. Gaptrast is an intimate venue with a tasting menu format at €€€€, which leans toward couples and small groups celebrating something. Solo diners can make it work if the counter or bar seating exists, but confirm directly before booking — the restaurant does not publish seating details publicly. If solo dining flexibility is a priority, Omakase by Sergey Pak may offer a more counter-friendly format.
Yes, and it's one of the strongest cases for it in Bergen. A 2025 Michelin star gives the evening a verifiable quality signal, and the €€€€ price tier matches the occasion. The intimate setting at Baneveien 16 keeps the atmosphere from feeling like a hotel dining room. Book well in advance — post-Michelin demand makes last-minute availability unlikely.
At €€€€ with a 2025 Michelin star under chef Martin Gehrlein, the price is justified if a multi-course modern cuisine experience is what you're after. For comparison, Lysverket in Bergen operates in a similar premium tier but with a broader menu format. Gaptrast earns its pricing if you want the tasting menu format specifically — if you'd rather order à la carte, it may not be the right match.
The tasting menu is the point of Gaptrast. Chef Martin Gehrlein's modern cuisine approach is built around that format, and the 2025 Michelin star validates the execution. If you're committed to the format and the €€€€ spend, it delivers. If a tasting menu isn't your preference, BARE Restaurant or Moon offer Bergen dining experiences with different formats that may suit you better.
Gaptrast runs a tasting menu format, so ordering in the à la carte sense doesn't apply here. The kitchen decides the progression. Specific dishes and seasonal details are not published in advance, which is standard for Michelin-level tasting menus. Trust the format or don't book — this is not a venue where you select individual courses from a printed menu.
Book at least four to six weeks out, and extend that further if your dates are fixed around a weekend or public holiday. Gaptrast earned its Michelin star in 2025, and demand accelerated sharply after that recognition. Bergen's dining scene is not as large as Oslo's, which means fewer tables competing for the same pool of serious diners — availability at this level moves fast.
Lysverket is the most direct comparison — established, high-end, and operating in a similar price bracket with a broader format. BARE Restaurant and Moon are worth considering if you want a modern Bergen experience with less booking pressure. Omakase by Sergey Pak suits those who want a counter-format, chef-led meal. LadyPapa sits at a more casual register and is not a like-for-like alternative but works if the €€€€ spend at Gaptrast isn't the right call.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.