Restaurant in Vienna, Austria · Inside Anantara Palais Hansen Vienna Hotel
Edvard
550Pearl PointsMichelin tasting menu, serious occasion, book ahead.

About Edvard
Edvard holds a Michelin star and a rising Opinionated About Dining ranking inside the historic Anantara Palais Hansen Hotel on Vienna's Schottenring. Chef Paul Gamauf's vegetable-forward French creative tasting menu runs five, nine, or nine courses with an Austrian-weighted wine list. Book four to six weeks out for weekend tables — availability is tight and the format is built for special occasions.
The Verdict
Edvard is the right call for a special-occasion dinner in Vienna's first district if you want Michelin-level French creative cooking inside one of the city's grandest hotel settings. It holds a Michelin star (2024) and ranks #391 in Opinionated About Dining's Classical in Europe list for 2025, up from #322 in 2024. The tasting menu format, vegetable-forward cooking, and wine list weighted toward Austrian producers make it a coherent package. Book at least four to six weeks out — this is one of the harder reservations to secure in Vienna.
Why Edvard Belongs on the Ringstrasse
The Anantara Palais Hansen Hotel sits on Schottenring at the edge of the Ringstrasse, a stretch of Vienna that was purpose-built to project civic grandeur. The Palais Hansen itself dates to the 1873 World Exhibition, designed by Baron Theophil Edvard von Hansen — the architect the restaurant honours by name. That historical weight gives Edvard a sense of place that many hotel dining rooms in Vienna cannot match. You are eating inside one of the buildings that defined what Vienna wanted to be. That context does not inflate the food, but it does make the evening feel appropriately considered for a celebration or a significant business dinner.
Chef Paul Gamauf runs the kitchen with a seasonal menu that draws on vegetables, herbs, and Mediterranean accents without abandoning classical French technique. Opinionated About Dining notes that his flavour and texture combinations are well balanced and that presentation is strong. You choose from five, seven, or nine courses, so the commitment level is adjustable depending on appetite and schedule. The wine list leans on Austrian producers, which is the right call at this address: Vienna's wine culture is serious, and a list that reflects that is more useful than one padded with international labels.
The dining room's interior is described as elegant without being heavy, which is a meaningful distinction for a venue operating inside a nineteenth-century palace. Grand Habsburg-era spaces can overwhelm a meal; Edvard's reported restraint makes it easier to focus on the food and the company rather than the architecture.
Who Should Book
Edvard works leading for two or three people celebrating something , an anniversary, a significant birthday, a business dinner that needs to read as genuinely considered rather than merely expensive. The tasting menu format is not well suited to large groups looking for a la carte flexibility. Solo diners can make it work, but the format and price point are calibrated for a shared experience. If you are visiting Vienna for the first time and want one serious dinner, Edvard is a credible choice in the first district. If you are returning and want something more experimentally modern, Mraz & Sohn or Konstantin Filippou push further into contemporary territory.
Booking and Timing
Edvard opens Tuesday through Saturday, dinner only, from 6 PM to 10 PM. It is closed Sunday and Monday. That five-night window, combined with a Michelin star and a prestige hotel address, means availability tightens quickly. Plan four to six weeks ahead for a standard Friday or Saturday booking. Weeknight tables open up with slightly shorter lead times, but do not assume you can secure Tuesday or Wednesday on a week's notice during peak season. There is no lunch service, which answers one common question directly: dinner is your only option here.
Ratings at a Glance
- Michelin: 1 Star (2024)
- Opinionated About Dining Classical in Europe: #391 (2025), #322 (2024)
- Google Reviews: 4.5 out of 5 (319 reviews)
How It Compares
For Vienna's full restaurant landscape, see our full Vienna restaurants guide. If you are also planning accommodation, our Vienna hotels guide covers the full range. For Austrian fine dining outside the capital, Senns in Salzburg and Döllerer in Golling an der Salzach are worth considering. For French creative cooking at the highest level internationally, Pierre Gagnaire in Paris and AM par Alexandre Mazzia in Marseille are the reference points. Vienna's creative restaurant scene also includes Amador and Doubek for different takes on the same price tier. Elsewhere in Austria: Griggeler Stuba in Lech, Schwarzer Adler in Hall in Tirol, Restaurant 141 by Joachim Jaud in Mieming, and Landhaus Bacher in Mautern an der Donau round out the options for a longer trip. For bars and experiences in Vienna, see our Vienna bars guide, our Vienna wineries guide, and our Vienna experiences guide.
Practical Details
| Detail | Edvard | Steirereck im Stadtpark | Konstantin Filippou |
|---|---|---|---|
| Price tier | €€€€ | €€€€ | €€€€ |
| Cuisine | French, Creative | Creative | Modern European |
| Dinner service | Tue–Sat, 6–10 PM | Mon–Fri lunch & dinner | Tue–Sat dinner |
| Michelin stars | 1 | 2 | 1 |
| Booking difficulty | Hard | Very hard | Hard |
| Hotel setting | Yes (Anantara Palais Hansen) | No | No |
Frequently Asked Questions
Is lunch or dinner better at Edvard?
Dinner is your only option. Edvard operates Tuesday through Saturday from 6 PM to 10 PM with no lunch service. If you need midday fine dining in the first district, Silvio Nickol at the Palais Coburg runs lunch. At Edvard, plan your evening around the five, seven, or nine-course format and give yourself the full window.
Is Edvard good for solo dining?
It can work, but Edvard is structured around set menus of five, seven, or nine courses — a format better suited to pairs or small groups who can share the pacing. Solo diners at Michelin-level tasting menus often find the counter or bar the better seat; check directly with Edvard at Schottenring 24 whether a counter position is available before booking alone.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Edvard?
For the format, yes. Opinionated About Dining ranked Edvard #391 in Europe for 2025 and Michelin awarded it a star in 2024, recognising the balance of flavours, textures, and presentation under chef Thomas Pedevilla. The five-course entry point gives you a lower-commitment way in; the nine-course is for those who want the full statement. If you want à la carte rather than a set progression, this is not your restaurant.
Is Edvard worth the price?
At €€€€ with a Michelin star and consecutive OAD recognition (Recommended 2023, #322 in 2024, #391 in 2025), Edvard sits in a credible tier for Vienna fine dining. By comparison, Steirereck im Stadtpark carries more prestige and a higher international profile, but Edvard's hotel setting inside the Anantara Palais Hansen gives it a consistency and polish that justifies the price for a special occasion dinner.
Can I eat at the bar at Edvard?
The venue data does not confirm a dedicated bar-dining option at Edvard. As a hotel restaurant inside the Anantara Palais Hansen, there may be lounge or bar seating in adjacent spaces, but whether the full tasting menu is available there is not documented. check the venue's official channels at Schottenring 24, Vienna, to confirm before planning a bar-seat visit.
Is Edvard good for a special occasion?
Yes, and it is one of the cleaner cases for it in Vienna's first district. The Michelin star, the Palais Hansen setting, the seasonally structured tasting menu in five, seven, or nine courses — all of it reads as a genuine occasion rather than a generic hotel dinner. For an anniversary or milestone birthday for two, this is a solid call. Groups of four or more should check private dining options with the hotel directly.
Does Edvard handle dietary restrictions?
The venue data does not include specific dietary accommodation policies. That said, tasting-menu restaurants at Michelin level routinely handle dietary requirements when flagged at the time of booking — not on arrival. Contact Edvard through the Anantara Palais Hansen Hotel at Schottenring 24 ahead of your reservation to confirm what the kitchen can adjust across the five, seven, or nine-course formats.
Location
Schottenring 24/1010, 1010 Wien, Austria
Vienna, Austria
Compare Edvard
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Edvard | €€€€ | , |
| Steirereck im Stadtpark | €€€€ | , |
| Mraz & Sohn | €€€€ | , |
| Silvio Nickol Gourmet Restaurant | €€€€ | , |
| Konstantin Filippou | €€€€ | , |
| TIAN | €€€€ | , |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Also Consider
- Steirereck im Stadtpark, Creative, €€€€
- Mraz & Sohn, Modern Austrian, Creative, €€€€
- Silvio Nickol Gourmet Restaurant, Modern Cuisine, €€€€
- Konstantin Filippou, Modern European, Modern Cuisine, €€€€
- TIAN, Vegetarian, €€€€
At €€€€, Edvard competes directly with Vienna's other top-tier tasting menu restaurants, but it occupies a distinct position: it is the only one in this set operating inside a major historic palace hotel, which shapes the experience as much as the food does. Steirereck im Stadtpark holds two Michelin stars and is the harder booking, but its parkside setting and lunch service make it more accessible across different occasions. If you have one dinner to spend in Vienna and want the city's single most credentialed table, Steirereck is ahead. Edvard is the better call if you want a hotel-anchored experience with comparable kitchen ambition at a slightly lower level of booking difficulty.
Mraz & Sohn and Konstantin Filippou both push into more experimental modern territory than Edvard's French creative framing. If you want cooking that takes more risks, either of those is the stronger choice. Silvio Nickol Gourmet Restaurant at the Palais Coburg also operates in a prestige hotel context and is a direct structural comparison, both are one-Michelin-star hotel dining rooms at €€€€. The choice between them comes down to cuisine style and which part of the first district you prefer. TIAN is the pick if plant-based cooking is the priority; it is the only fully vegetarian option in this set and holds a Michelin star in its own right.
For most readers choosing between these five venues: book Steirereck if you can get a table and want the city's top tasting menu experience. Book Edvard if you want a Michelin-starred dinner with a strong hotel setting and a slightly more approachable reservation. Book Mraz & Sohn or Konstantin Filippou if you want modern cooking with a more contemporary feel. Book TIAN if vegetables are the point.
Hours
- Monday
- closed
- Tuesday
- 6 PM-10 PM
- Wednesday
- 6 PM-10 PM
- Thursday
- 6 PM-10 PM
- Friday
- 6 PM-10 PM
- Saturday
- 6 PM-10 PM
- Sunday
- closed
Recognized By
Explore Vienna
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