Restaurant in Madrid, Spain
Bistronómika
390ptsDaily catch, no menu, book ahead.

About Bistronómika
Bistronómika in Madrid's Retiro neighbourhood runs a No Carta seafood menu built entirely around the daily catch, grilled over open fire with minimal intervention. A Michelin Plate and climbing Opinionated About Dining rankings mark it as one of the city's better-value seafood options at €€€, with kitchen service running until midnight Tuesday through Saturday.
The catch is displayed daily — and it disappears fast
Bistronómika operates on a No Carta model: there is no menu to choose from, only what came in that morning. That constraint is also the point. If you want to eat the freshest fish available in the Retiro district on a given Tuesday night, this is where you go. The format does limit flexibility, so if dietary restriction or picky eating is a factor in your group, read the FAQ below before booking. For everyone else, this is one of the more compelling reasons to eat in Madrid's €€€ tier rather than spending up to €€€€ at the city's tasting-menu institutions.
What Bistronómika actually is
Part of the Bulevar de Ibiza gastronomic project (Bulbiza), Bistronómika sits on Calle de Ibiza, 44 in the Retiro neighbourhood. Chef Carlos Del Portillo runs a kitchen built around minimum-intervention seafood, predominantly grilled over open fire. The daily catch is displayed in full view, which functions both as theatre and as the actual menu briefing for the evening. The format rewards trust: you are essentially agreeing to eat whatever the sea provided that day, cooked simply and well.
The Gilda kebab-style appetiser with red Mediterranean tuna is the dish most consistently cited in the venue's own framing, and it's a reasonable shorthand for the kitchen's philosophy: precise sourcing, restrained technique, strong flavour. That said, the No Carta format means the specific menu changes daily, so do not arrive with fixed dish expectations.
How the room feels in the evening
Bistronómika carries the energy of a neighbourhood restaurant that has been recognised without becoming self-conscious about it. A Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025, combined with consecutive Opinionated About Dining rankings (Recommended in 2023, #691 in 2024, climbing to #536 in 2025), indicates a kitchen on a consistent upward trajectory rather than one coasting on an early reputation. The OAD ranking movement is the more useful data point here: it reflects critic and peer feedback rather than a single institutional judgment, and three consecutive years of improvement suggests the quality is not accidental.
The atmosphere in the evening leans convivial rather than hushed. This is not a formal tasting-menu room with theatric plating pauses. Expect an engaged dining room, some ambient noise from neighbouring tables, and a pace that reflects the market-driven format. If you want quiet and controlled, the comparison section below will point you elsewhere. If you want a room that feels alive and anchored to what is genuinely in season, Bistronómika delivers that.
Late-night and the Madrid dinner window
One of Bistronómika's practical advantages in Madrid's dining calendar is its kitchen hours. Tuesday through Saturday, service runs until midnight. In a city where dinner rarely starts before 9 pm and where the gap between your last meeting and your table is a familiar logistical problem, a kitchen that absorbs a 10:30 pm arrival without protest is worth noting. Sunday service closes at the lunch window (last entry around the 1:30–5 pm slot), and the restaurant is closed entirely on Mondays, so plan accordingly if your visit falls on a weekend evening.
For special occasions, the late service window matters more than it might seem. Birthdays, anniversaries, or a meaningful dinner after a long travel day all benefit from a kitchen that is still at full capacity when Madrid's evening properly gets going. The No Carta format also adds a low-key element of surprise that works well for celebration meals where you want the dinner to feel like an event without committing to a three-hour tasting marathon.
Value and booking context
At €€€, Bistronómika sits a clear tier below Madrid's €€€€ fine-dining circuit. The OAD recognition puts it in the company of venues that punch above their price point, and the Google rating of 4.1 across 500 reviews is solid for a restaurant with this level of critical attention (highly decorated rooms often accumulate more polarised scores from diners who came with inflated expectations). Booking is rated Easy, which is one of Bistronómika's genuine advantages over comparably recognised Madrid seafood options. You do not need to plan weeks in advance, though booking a few days ahead for Friday and Saturday evening is sensible given the late-night demand in this neighbourhood.
For context on Spain's wider seafood dining scene, Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María operates at a completely different register (three Michelin stars, full tasting format), as does Alici on the Amalfi Coast if you are travelling more broadly. Within Madrid's restaurant ecosystem, the relevant question is whether you want the city's fine-dining ambition or its leading available produce cooked without ceremony. Bistronómika is the latter, and it does it better than most in its price band.
How It Compares
Practical details
Bistronómika is at C. de Ibiza, 44, Retiro, 28009 Madrid. Open Tuesday through Saturday for both lunch (1:30–5 pm) and dinner (8:30 pm–midnight); Sunday lunch only (1:30–5 pm); closed Monday. Price range €€€. No fixed menu — daily catch format. Booking is easy relative to Madrid's fine-dining peers.
Quick reference: Retiro, €€€, No Carta, open until midnight Tue–Sat, closed Monday, easy to book.
For more on eating and drinking in the city, see our full Madrid restaurants guide, our full Madrid bars guide, our full Madrid hotels guide, our full Madrid wineries guide, and our full Madrid experiences guide.
Compare Bistronómika
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bistronómika | €€€ | Easy | — |
| DiverXO | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Coque | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Deessa | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Paco Roncero | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Smoked Room | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I eat at the bar at Bistronómika?
The venue data does not confirm bar seating specifically, so booking a table is the safe call. Given the No Carta format and the fact that the daily catch sells through, walk-in or bar counter availability is unlikely to be reliable, especially Tuesday through Saturday evenings when service runs until midnight. Reserve in advance to guarantee a spot.
Does Bistronómika handle dietary restrictions?
The No Carta model means the menu is dictated by what arrived that morning, which makes accommodating strict dietary restrictions structurally difficult. If you have a serious allergy or avoid seafood entirely, this is not the right venue — the entire concept is built around the day's fish and seafood catch cooked on the open grill. Contact them directly before booking to check what flexibility exists on a given service.
Is Bistronómika good for a special occasion?
Yes, with the right expectations. At €€€, it sits clearly below Madrid's €€€€ fine-dining tier, but the Michelin Plate and back-to-back OAD rankings (including #536 in Europe for 2025) mean the quality is verifiable, not assumed. It works well for a celebratory lunch or dinner where the focus is genuinely good food rather than formal ceremony. For a more theatrical special-occasion experience, DiverXO or Smoked Room would be the comparison to make.
Is lunch or dinner better at Bistronómika?
Lunch has a practical edge: Sunday service is lunch-only (1:30–5 pm), so if your schedule is tight, that is your only Sunday option. Dinner runs until midnight Tuesday through Saturday, which fits Madrid's natural eating rhythm and gives the room a livelier feel. Both services operate the same No Carta format, so the food quality is consistent — the choice comes down to your schedule and how you want the evening to run.
What should I order at Bistronómika?
The menu changes daily based on the catch, so there is no fixed dish list to navigate. That said, the Gilda kebab-style appetiser made with red tuna from the Mediterranean is a documented speciality worth ordering if it is available. Beyond that, the focus is top-quality fish and seafood cooked with minimum intervention on the open grill — the daily catch is displayed at the restaurant, and what you see is what gets cooked.
Hours
- Monday
- Closed
- Tuesday
- 1:30–5 pm, 8:30 pm–12 am
- Wednesday
- 1:30–5 pm, 8:30 pm–12 am
- Thursday
- 1:30–5 pm, 8:30 pm–12 am
- Friday
- 1:30–5 pm, 8:30 pm–12 am
- Saturday
- 1:30–5 pm, 8:30 pm–12 am
- Sunday
- 1:30–5 pm
Recognized By
More restaurants in Madrid
- CoqueCoque holds 2 Michelin Stars, a Green Star, and 96 points on La Liste — making it one of Madrid's most credentialled restaurants. Run by the three Sandoval brothers across five distinct spaces, the evening is as much a service experience as a meal. Book well ahead: availability here is near impossible, and this is a venue worth planning a trip around.
- DiverXODiverXO is David Muñoz's three-Michelin-star flagship in Madrid, ranked #4 in the World's 50 Best (2024) and 98 points on La Liste (2026). The single "Flying Pigs Cuisine" tasting menu blends Asian technique with Spanish ingredients in deliberately provocative combinations. Booking difficulty is near-impossible — reserve three to four months out, and only come if you're ready for a long, high-energy evening with no à la carte option.
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