Restaurant in Bregenz, Austria
Michelin-noted value in a thin dining market.

A Michelin Plate winner in both 2024 and 2025, Petrus Café Brasserie delivers reliable quality at the €€ price point in central Bregenz. With a 4.4 Google rating across 571 reviews and an international menu suited to special occasions and pre-theatre dinners, it is the most straightforward fine-dining decision in the city. Booking is easy outside festival season.
At the €€ price point, Petrus Café Brasserie is one of the most sensible dinner decisions you can make in Bregenz. A Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025 tells you the kitchen is cooking at a level worth attention — consistent quality without the three-figure bill that follows a star. If you want a reliable special-occasion dinner in western Austria's most culturally active city without committing to a full tasting-menu experience, book here. If you need a Michelin-starred room or a destination dining pilgrimage, look elsewhere.
Bregenz is not a city that drowns in fine-dining options. Perched on the eastern shore of Lake Constance, it draws visitors for the Bregenzer Festspiele and the broader Vorarlberg cultural programme, not for a restaurant scene that competes with Vienna or Salzburg. That context matters when you consider what Petrus Café Brasserie is doing: holding a Michelin Plate recognition for two consecutive years in a city where the competition for that kind of notice is thin but the discerning audience — festival visitors, cross-border diners from Germany and Switzerland, locals who know the area's culinary reputation , is real.
The international menu positions Petrus as a brasserie in the fullest sense: a room that can handle a business lunch, a pre-theatre dinner before a Festspiele performance, or a celebration meal without needing the guest to commit to a fixed tasting format. That flexibility is part of the value. You are not locked into a three-hour omakase progression; you can order to the depth your occasion demands. For a special occasion or anniversary dinner, that freedom to pace the meal is often more comfortable than a tasting menu, particularly when guests at the table have different appetites and tolerances for a long evening.
Spatially, the name signals the experience before you arrive. A café-brasserie format implies a room with width rather than intimacy , expect a setting that accommodates both pairs and small groups without the pressure of a hushed, sparsely seated fine-dining space. For a date or a celebration dinner with three or four guests, that scale works in your favour: the atmosphere is present without being claustrophobic, and conversation does not require the calculated restraint of a tasting-menu counter. The Anton-Schneider-Straße address puts the restaurant in central Bregenz, accessible on foot from the main cultural venues.
The Michelin Plate designation, held back-to-back through 2024 and 2025, is a meaningful signal. The Plate is awarded to restaurants where Michelin's inspectors found food worth noting , good cooking, consistent technique, ingredients handled with care , even when the full star threshold was not met. At the €€ tier, clearing that bar two years running suggests the kitchen is not coasting. It means sourcing decisions are being made with some intention: the international menu format requires more discipline to execute well than a single-region cuisine, because you cannot hide behind local tradition when the comparisons span borders. A dish that does not stand up does not have a cultural frame to lean on.
That sourcing context is relevant for Bregenz specifically. Vorarlberg sits at the intersection of Austrian, Swiss, and German food culture, and the leading kitchens in the region have learned to read all three. An international menu in this location, recognised by Michelin two years in a row, implies the kitchen is working with ingredients and technique that rise above the tourist-traffic safety net that many brasseries at this price point rely on. For the €€ guest, that is the core promise: food that earns its Michelin notice without charging you the premium that usually accompanies it.
With a Google rating of 4.4 across 571 reviews, the public verdict tracks with the Michelin signal. That volume of reviews at that rating in a city of Bregenz's scale is a strong consistency indicator. Outlier reviews at either extreme matter less; 571 data points average out to a kitchen and a room that reliably deliver. For a special occasion where the risk of a bad experience is costly, that consistency record is worth more than a single glowing review from a flagship visit.
Booking difficulty is easy , you do not need to plan weeks in advance the way you would for a starred restaurant in Vienna. That accessibility is part of the appeal for visitors to Bregenz who are organising a trip around festival programming and need dining to slot in without the logistical overhead of a hard-to-get reservation. Plan your Bregenz visit with our full Bregenz restaurants guide, and if you're staying overnight, check the Bregenz hotels guide for accommodation options nearby.
If Petrus is your base in western Austria, it is worth knowing the regional dining tier above it. Griggeler Stuba in Lech and Gourmetrestaurant Tannenhof in Sankt Anton am Arlberg represent the starred tier in the Vorarlberg and Arlberg range if you want to escalate for a milestone occasion. For Austrian dining beyond the region, Senns in Salzburg and Steirereck im Stadtpark set the ceiling. Petrus sits comfortably in the tier below that ceiling , reliable, Michelin-noted, and priced for regular use rather than once-a-year occasions.
For context across international dining at a comparable positioning, Marcel von Winckelmann in Passau offers a cross-border reference point for international cuisine in this corner of Europe. And if you're planning a broader Bregenz stay, the Bregenz bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide round out the picture.
Reservations: Easy to book; no weeks-in-advance pressure required, though booking ahead for festival periods is advisable. Dress: No stated dress code; smart casual is appropriate for the brasserie format and the occasion level. Budget: €€ price range , expect a mid-range spend per head that represents strong value given the Michelin Plate recognition. Address: Anton-Schneider-Straße 11, 6900 Bregenz, Austria. Leading for: Special occasions, pre-theatre dinners, business meals, and anniversary dinners where you want Michelin-noted quality without a tasting-menu commitment.
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Petrus Café Brasserie | €€ | — |
| Steirereck im Stadtpark | €€€€ | — |
| Mraz & Sohn | €€€€ | — |
| Döllerer | €€€€ | — |
| Landhaus Bacher | €€€€ | — |
| Obauer | €€€€ | — |
How Petrus Café Brasserie stacks up against the competition.
No dress code is on record for Petrus Café Brasserie, which fits the brasserie format. At the €€ price point, neat casual is a reasonable call. Avoid festival-night extremes in either direction if you're visiting during Bregenzer Festspiele season.
Under normal circumstances, same-week booking is usually fine. During the Bregenzer Festspiele, the window tightens considerably — book before you travel rather than on arrival. Bregenz has limited alternatives at this quality tier, so don't leave it to chance in peak season.
At €€, the answer is yes for most visitors. A back-to-back Michelin Plate in 2024 and 2025 signals consistent kitchen standards, and the price sits well below what comparable recognition costs in Vienna or Salzburg. For Bregenz specifically, this is where the value sits in the market.
No menu format details are available in the venue record, so a direct verdict on a tasting menu isn't possible here. Given the €€ pricing and brasserie positioning, a full tasting format would be atypical — check directly with the restaurant before building an evening around it.
A café-brasserie format generally handles solo diners well, and the €€ price range keeps the financial commitment low. With a Michelin Plate backing the kitchen, it's a practical choice for a solo dinner that doesn't feel like a compromise. Seating specifics aren't documented, so call ahead if counter or bar seating matters to you.
It works for a relaxed celebration rather than a grand-gesture dinner. The Michelin Plate recognition (2024 and 2025) gives it credibility, and the €€ pricing means you won't overpay for the occasion. If the event calls for a more formal setting, note that Bregenz doesn't offer many higher-tier alternatives — Petrus is likely the strongest local option regardless.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.