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    Restaurant in Orlando, United States

    Capa

    850Pearl Points

    Michelin star, fireworks view, book now.

    Capa, Restaurant in Orlando

    About Capa

    Capa is the most serious restaurant inside the Orlando resort corridor — a Michelin-starred Spanish steakhouse on the 17th floor of the Four Seasons with consecutive star recognition in 2024 and 2025. The tapas-to-wood-fired-steak format rewards communal ordering, and the patio fireworks view is a genuine bonus. Book well in advance; hotel guests get priority access.

    The Verdict

    If you're staying at the Four Seasons Orlando and haven't already reserved a table at Capa, do it now. This is the resort's Michelin-starred Spanish steakhouse on the 17th floor, and it earns that star with a combination that's harder to pull off than it sounds: Basque-inflected small plates, wood-fired prime cuts aged 30 to 40 days, and a 350-label wine list weighted toward Spain. For a first-timer, the booking difficulty is real — this is one of the harder reservations in Orlando — but the experience justifies the effort. Knife & Spoon at the Ritz-Carlton is your closest steakhouse alternative, but Capa's tapas-forward structure and rooftop setting give it a different character entirely.

    Getting In: Book Early and Know Your Options

    Capa is a hard reservation. The 17th-floor setting, Michelin recognition, and Four Seasons guest priority mean tables go fast. The insider move: Four Seasons hotel guests get first access to the reservation window, so if you're staying on property, use that advantage and book as soon as the window opens. If you're dining as a non-guest, aim for early in the week , Tuesday or Wednesday dinner service , when competition is lighter. The dress code is resort casual: button-down and slacks for men, cocktail dress for women. No jacket required, but this is not a jeans-and-sneakers room.

    What Capa Actually Is

    Think of Capa less as a traditional steakhouse and more as a Spanish communal dining room that happens to serve exceptional prime beef. The structure matters for first-timers: you're expected to order across the menu, starting with Para Picar and Raciones small plates , prawns, octopus, cured meats, regional Spanish cheeses, and the pan con tomate that multiple sources flag as non-negotiable , before moving to the wood-fired steaks. Those cuts, finished over oak and dressed simply with olive oil, salt, and pepper, are aged 30 to 40 days and designed to hold their own without sauce intervention. Desserts include churros with chocolate, crema Catalan with blood orange and saffron, and a guindilla with spicy chocolate ice cream and Reus hazelnuts.

    The wine program, overseen by sommelier Thomas Rotherham, runs to 1,375 bottles in inventory with over 50 Spanish selections on the list. Wine pricing lands at $$$, meaning expect a strong representation of bottles above $100. Corkage is $50 if you bring your own. Two cocktails , the Agua de Valencia and Robujito , are served in sharable porrons, vessels with a long spout designed for communal pouring. For a first visit, ordering one of these sets the tone for the meal's communal rhythm.

    The Room: Atmosphere First

    The elevator opens onto pitch-black walls interrupted by a ceiling-spanning art installation by Dutch artist Peter Genetenaar , a crimson piece evoking a matador's cape. The effect is dramatic and deliberate. This is not a quietly lit hotel restaurant. The room has energy, and on the nights when the Disney fireworks are visible from the patio, the restaurant builds in natural pauses so guests can step outside. If you're after a quieter, conversation-first dinner, request an early seating before 8 PM when the room fills and the noise builds. The patio is worth it regardless of timing , the view over the resort and fireworks display is a material part of the experience, not just a backdrop.

    Chef Fabrizio Schenardi leads the kitchen, with General Manager Christopher Wong overseeing the floor. Four Seasons operates the property, which informs the service standard , attentive without being intrusive, and calibrated for guests who may be dining here across multiple nights of a resort stay. The kitchen knows returning guests are part of the model.

    On Delivery and Off-Premise: Skip It

    This is worth stating plainly for anyone considering a workaround: Capa does not translate off-premise. The experience is architectural , the ceiling installation, the patio fireworks view, the communal porron service, the theater of wood-fired cooking. The tapas format means individual dishes can feel incomplete without the sequencing and room energy that surrounds them. If you can't get a table and you're tempted by in-room dining or delivery alternatives, your money is better spent at Sear + Sea or redirected toward a future booking. There is no meaningful off-premise version of Capa worth ordering. The Michelin star is for the full experience, and the full experience requires the room.

    Pearl Ratings Snapshot

    • Food: Michelin 1 Star (2024, 2025) , consecutive recognition for the Basque-Spanish steakhouse format
    • Google: 4.6 out of 5 (974 reviews) , strong sustained rating for a resort restaurant at this price point
    • Price: $$$$ overall; cuisine pricing at $$$, meaning a typical two-course meal without drinks runs $66+
    • Wine: 350 selections, 1,375 bottles in inventory, strong Spain and California depth, corkage $50
    • Booking difficulty: Hard , advance reservation required; hotel guests have priority access

    How It Compares

    For the full peer comparison, see the section below. In summary: Capa is the most distinctive $$$$ dinner in the Orlando resort corridor, but not necessarily the most formal. Victoria & Albert's is the room you book when ceremony matters more than communal energy. Capa is the room you book when you want a Michelin-starred meal that still feels like a real dinner.

    Practical Details

    Capa is located at 10100 Dream Tree Blvd, Lake Buena Vista , the 17th floor of the Four Seasons Resort Orlando at Walt Disney World Resort. Dinner service only. Resort casual dress code. The patio is available for fireworks viewing during service. Wine corkage is $50. For broader dining options across the city, see our full Orlando restaurants guide. If you're planning around a longer stay, our Orlando hotels guide covers the full resort landscape. And if cocktail bars are on your itinerary, our Orlando bars guide is the right place to start.

    For comparable Michelin-level experiences in other cities, Le Bernardin in New York City, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Smyth in Chicago, and The French Laundry in Napa represent the benchmark tier. For Spanish-influenced and destination steakhouse comparisons internationally, see A Cut in Taipei and Born and Bred in Busan. Closer to home, Emeril's in New Orleans and Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg offer useful reference points for the luxury resort dining category. Orlando's broader Japanese dining scene, including Sorekara and Kadence, covers the high-end alternative if Spanish steakhouse isn't your direction. Camille rounds out the $$$$ tier with Vietnamese. See also our Orlando wineries guide and our Orlando experiences guide for full trip planning.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can I eat at the bar at Capa?

    Bar seating at Capa is not confirmed in available venue records, but the communal dining format and tapas-first menu make counter or bar dining a natural fit if seats are offered. Call the Four Seasons Orlando directly to confirm walk-in bar availability — this is often your best shot at a same-day table at a $$$$, Michelin-starred room that otherwise books well in advance.

    What should I wear to Capa?

    Resort casual is the official dress code: button-down shirt and slacks for men, cocktail dress for women. Jackets and ties are not required. Given the $$$$ price point and the Michelin-starred setting on the Four Seasons' 17th floor, lean toward the smarter end of resort casual rather than theme-park comfortable.

    What should I order at Capa?

    Start with the para picar and raciones small plates — prawns, octopus, and pan con tomate are specifically called out as highlights. The steaks, aged 30 to 40 days and wood-fired over oak, are the anchor of the menu and best treated as the centerpiece rather than an afterthought. For dessert, the crema Catalan with blood orange, marzipan crumble, saffron, and cinnamon is a documented standout.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Capa?

    Capa is structured around communal tapas rather than a formal tasting menu — the experience is designed to ebb and flow across multiple small plates and then a main beef course, not a locked-in chef's progression. At $$$$ and with Michelin recognition in 2024 and 2025, that format delivers strong value if you order broadly across the menu; if you want a set omakase-style sequence, Victoria & Albert's is the Orlando alternative.

    Does Capa handle dietary restrictions?

    The venue data does not document specific dietary accommodation policies, so contact the Four Seasons Orlando directly before booking. The menu spans cured meats, seafood, aged beef, and dairy-forward desserts, which means the core experience is not naturally plant-based — confirm your needs in advance rather than on arrival at a $$$$ table.

    Can Capa accommodate groups?

    Capa's communal tapas format actually suits groups well — sharing across the para picar, raciones, and steak sections is the intended approach. That said, the 17th-floor dining room at a Four Seasons resort means capacity is finite and demand is high, particularly given back-to-back Michelin stars in 2024 and 2025. Groups of four or more should book as far in advance as possible and confirm group-size availability directly with the property.

    Location

    10100 Dream Tree Blvd, Lake Buena Vista, FL 32836

    Orlando, United States

    Compare Capa

    Full Comparison: Capa
    VenueCuisineAwardsBooking Difficulty
    CapaSteakhouseHard
    SorekaraJapaneseMichelin 2 StarUnknown
    CamilleVietnameseMichelin 1 StarUnknown
    Papa LlamaPeruvianMichelin 1 StarUnknown
    Victoria & Albert'sNew American, ContemporaryMichelin 1 StarUnknown
    Knife & SpoonSteakhouseUnknown

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    Also Consider

    Among Orlando's $$$$-tier restaurants, Capa holds the most distinctive position: it's the only Michelin-starred steakhouse in the market, and its Basque-Spanish communal format sets it apart from the French-influenced formality of Victoria & Albert's. If ceremony and a fixed prix fixe are what you're after, Victoria & Albert's is the booking, it runs higher in price and operates with more ritual. If you want a Michelin-starred meal that still feels like a dinner rather than an occasion, Capa is the call. Knife & Spoon at the Ritz-Carlton is the closest steakhouse peer, but it lacks the tapas structure and elevated view that define Capa's experience. For pure beef quality, the two are competitive; for overall room experience, Capa's 17th-floor setting and fireworks patio give it a clear edge.

    If you're comparing against Orlando's non-steakhouse $$$$ options, the calculus shifts. Sorekara and Camille offer Japanese and Vietnamese at the same price tier, with different formats, tighter menus, potentially easier reservations, and a different energy. Neither carries a Michelin star. Papa Llama brings Peruvian to the $$$$ bracket and is worth considering if you want Latin-influenced sharing plates without the steakhouse component. But none of these venues combine the Michelin credential, the wine depth (350 selections, 1,375 bottles), and the resort-scale service infrastructure that Capa operates with.

    The booking difficulty is the deciding variable for most diners. Capa is the hardest reservation in this peer set. Victoria & Albert's runs it close on difficulty, but its fixed structure means the experience is more predictable once you're in. Capa rewards flexibility, the communal format, the ability to order light or heavy across the tapas section, and the patio access make it the better choice if you're staying on property and can book early. If you're visiting Orlando without a Four Seasons stay and can only secure one high-end dinner, Capa is the reservation worth pursuing first. If it's unavailable, Knife & Spoon is the most comparable fallback for the steakhouse component, and Victoria & Albert's is the right move if the occasion warrants something more formal.

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