Restaurant in Brighton and Hove, United Kingdom
Cin Cin
475Pearl PointsBib Gourmand Italian. Book it.

About Cin Cin
Cin Cin holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand for 2024 and 2025, making it the most credentialled Italian at its price point in Brighton. Come for the daily pasta specials and all-Italian wine list — book a counter seat if you want to watch the kitchen work, or the rear room for a quieter dinner. Booking is easy, but the counter fills fast on weekends.
The Verdict
Cin Cin holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand for 2024 and 2025, and at a ££ price point on Western Road in Hove, it delivers the kind of Italian cooking that most Brighton restaurants at this price tier simply don't match. The blackboard specials change daily, the pasta is made in-house, and the all-Italian wine list is genuinely knowledgeable rather than an afterthought. Book it for a weekday evening if you want the counter — seats in front of the open kitchen are limited and go fast.
Why Cin Cin Works
The Bib Gourmand is Michelin's marker for exceptional food at a moderate price, and Cin Cin has earned it in consecutive years. That consistency matters: it tells you this isn't a one-season performance. The format here is small plates built around seasonal produce and handmade pasta, with a five-course chef's menu available for those who want a more structured path through the kitchen's output. Both gluten-free and vegan versions of the tasting menu are offered, which is worth knowing if your group has dietary requirements.
The room itself is part of the proposition. There are four distinct ways to sit: counter stools facing the open kitchen, a horseshoe bar, window seats looking onto Western Road, and a calmer rear room for those who prefer less theatre. That range makes Cin Cin genuinely versatile — it works for a solo dinner at the counter, a paired date at the window, or a quieter table in the back if you're catching up with someone properly. The kitchen is visible from most positions, which means watching pasta being cooked and meats roasted is part of the experience rather than a bonus.
Pasta is the main reason to come. Dishes from the database give you a sense of the kitchen's range: rigatoni with chalk stream trout, mussels, kale and spiced sofrito alongside tortelli of sweet potato with truffle sauce, amaretti and sage. This is not red-sauce Italian; the flavour combinations are considered and the sourcing is local where it counts (Sussex beef appears on the menu). For a meatier option, the beef rump with a rotolo of slow-cooked shin, Gorgonzola, spinach and roasted shallot in a rich beef sauce is the kind of dish that justifies a weeknight trip to Hove on its own terms.
Arancini , Venetian duck ragù with parsley and garlic emulsion , are described as a fixture, meaning they're the kind of dish that regulars return for. The rosemary focaccia arrives light and aromatic. Desserts include tiramisu and a Piedmontese chocolate, caramel and amaretti pudding, with a trio of Italian cheeses as an alternative if you'd rather finish savoury. The cheese option is worth knowing about if you're planning to extend the evening into the wine list.
Timing and Booking
Booking here is rated Easy, which means you don't need to plan weeks in advance the way you would for a Michelin-starred room like CORE by Clare Smyth in London or L'Enclume in Cartmel. That said, the counter seats and window positions are limited, and if those matter to you, booking ahead is still the smarter move. Weekday evenings tend to be calmer than weekends; the rear room is your leading option for a quieter dinner. The kitchen's daily blackboard specials mean the menu shifts with what's fresh, so visiting more than once genuinely gives you a different experience each time.
Cin Cin sits on Western Road in Hove, a few minutes from the Brighton seafront and easily reached on foot from most central accommodation. For a full picture of where to stay nearby, see our Brighton and Hove hotels guide, and for broader dining options in the city, our full Brighton and Hove restaurants guide covers the range. If you're building a full trip, the bars guide and experiences guide are worth checking too.
The Wine List
An all-Italian list assembled with evident care is a meaningful differentiator at this price point. Italian regional wine is a category that rewards knowledge, and the list here is described as knowledgeably put together, with optional wine flights available alongside the chef's menu. If you're interested in Italian producers beyond the familiar northern regions, this is a list worth exploring rather than treating as a formality. For context on what Italian wine looks like at the extreme high end, 8½ Otto e Mezzo Bombana in Hong Kong operates in an entirely different financial register, but Cin Cin's list punches credibly within its tier.
How It Compares
Pearl Picks , More Brighton and Hove Dining
- Tutto , Italian, Brighton and Hove
- Burnt Orange , Mediterranean Cuisine, ££
- Amari , Spanish, ££
- Dilsk , Modern British, £££
- Embers , Modern Cuisine, ££
For Michelin-level cooking with more formality, The Fat Duck in Bray, Moor Hall in Aughton, Gidleigh Park in Chagford, and Hand and Flowers in Marlow represent very different propositions in terms of price and occasion. For Italian in a completely different context, cenci in Kyoto is worth a look. Cin Cin's value is that you get Michelin-recognised quality without the occasion overhead of any of those rooms.
Google Reviews
Rated 4.8 from 1,023 Google reviews , a volume of feedback that makes this score reliable rather than the result of a small, self-selecting sample.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the tasting menu worth it at Cin Cin?
Yes, particularly if you want to move through the full range of what the kitchen does. The five-course chef's menu includes separate gluten-free and vegan options and can be paired with an Italian wine flight drawn from a carefully assembled all-Italian list. At ££ pricing with a Michelin Bib Gourmand behind it, the value case is strong compared to what a five-course format typically costs in Brighton.
Is Cin Cin good for solo dining?
It's one of the better solo options in Hove. The horseshoe counter seats put you in direct view of the kitchen — pasta being cooked, hams being sliced — which makes eating alone feel deliberate rather than awkward. Counter seats at a Bib Gourmand restaurant at ££ pricing is a practical win for a solo diner who doesn't want to spend big.
What should a first-timer know about Cin Cin?
The format is sharing plates, so come prepared to order several dishes across the table rather than a single main. Homemade pasta is the anchor — check the blackboard for the daily special. Booking is rated Easy, so you don't need to plan weeks out, but the room at 60 Western Road, Hove is small and fills consistently given its Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition in both 2024 and 2025.
What are alternatives to Cin Cin in Brighton and Hove?
Burnt Orange on Middle Street is the closest comparison for quality-to-price in a relaxed setting, though it skews more towards modern British small plates than Italian. Embers focuses on live-fire cooking and suits diners who want more drama on the plate. For something lighter and coastal in feel, Dilsk and Palmito both operate at a similar price tier but in different formats — Cin Cin remains the clearest choice if Italian and pasta are what you're after.
Is Cin Cin worth the price?
At ££ with a Michelin Bib Gourmand held in consecutive years (2024 and 2025), Cin Cin is one of the stronger value propositions in Brighton and Hove dining. The Bib Gourmand is specifically Michelin's credential for exceptional food at a moderate price, and Cin Cin has earned it twice running. If you want Italian cooking at this quality level, you'd pay considerably more elsewhere for fewer credentials.
Location
60 Western Rd, Brighton and Hove, Hove BN3 1JD, United Kingdom
Brighton and Hove, United Kingdom
Compare Cin Cin
Also Consider
- Burnt Orange, Mediterranean Cuisine, ££
- Palmito, Asian, ££
- Amari, Spanish, ££
- Dilsk, Modern British, £££
- Embers, Modern Cuisine, ££
At the ££ price point in Brighton and Hove, Cin Cin's closest rivals are Burnt Orange and Embers, both of which operate in a similar casual-but-considered register. The difference is credentials: Cin Cin's consecutive Michelin Bib Gourmands give it a verifiable quality floor that neither of those rooms currently matches. If Italian cooking is what you're after, there's no stronger case in the city at this price. If you want Mediterranean sharing plates with a different flavour profile, Burnt Orange is a reasonable alternative, and Amari covers the Spanish end of the same broad category.
For diners prepared to spend more, Dilsk operates at £££ and offers a Modern British experience with more formality. The step up in price buys you a different occasion register rather than a dramatically different quality level, Cin Cin's Bib Gourmand means the quality gap between the two is narrower than the price gap implies. Cin Cin wins on value; Dilsk wins if you need a more formal setting for a special occasion.
Embers and Amari are both worth considering if your group isn't specifically looking for Italian, all three ££ venues are similarly easy to book and comparably priced. The deciding factor is cuisine: if pasta and a knowledgeable Italian wine list are the draw, Cin Cin is the clear call. For everything else in the city, our full Brighton and Hove restaurants guide gives you the wider picture.
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