Restaurant in Gdańsk, Poland
Solid Michelin-recognised pick for Old Town dinners.

Piwna47 holds a Michelin Plate for 2024 and 2025, serves Mediterranean cuisine at the €€ tier, and sits on Gdańsk's historic Piwna Street. With a 4.5 Google rating from over 1,700 reviews and easy booking conditions, it is the most practical combination of Michelin recognition and accessible pricing in the Old Town. The right call for a date or small-group dinner.
If you are comparing Piwna47 against the Spanish tasting-menu spectacle at Arco by Paco Pérez, you are looking at two different decisions. Arco sits at €€€€ and asks you to commit the whole evening. Piwna47 is €€ Mediterranean on one of Gdańsk's most storied streets, holds a Michelin Plate for two consecutive years (2024 and 2025), and lets you walk away having eaten well without clearing your weekend budget. For most visitors to Gdańsk, that is the smarter starting point.
Piwna Street runs through the heart of Gdańsk's Old Town, and the address alone tells you something about the physical context: narrow cobbled lanes, Hanseatic townhouse facades, and the kind of built environment that makes a dining room feel like it belongs rather than arrived. The spatial experience at Piwna47 reflects that setting. This is not a cavernous modern restaurant designed around volume; the room works on an intimate scale, which means the quality of what arrives at the table reads more clearly. Seating arrangements in venues of this type in the Old Town district tend toward close-set tables and low ceilings, giving the space a contained warmth that suits a date or a considered dinner with someone worth impressing, rather than a loud group celebration. If you are planning a special occasion for two or a small party, the room's scale works in your favour. Larger groups should check seating availability carefully before booking.
The Mediterranean cuisine framing positions Piwna47 in a category that travels well: the cooking draws on southern European technique and produce without being pinned to a single national tradition. That gives the kitchen flexibility, and at the €€ price tier, flexibility usually means you are getting more range on the plate than a narrowly focused restaurant at the same spend. Two back-to-back Michelin Plate recognitions confirm that the food clears a meaningful technical threshold. The Michelin Plate is not a star, but it is the Guide's formal signal that the kitchen is worth your attention, and earning it twice in a row at a mid-range price point is harder than it looks. Across Poland, fewer restaurants hold that combination of accessible pricing and Michelin recognition; for a useful benchmark on what that standard looks like nationally, compare to Bottiglieria 1881 in Kraków or Rozbrat 20 in Warsaw.
The Google rating of 4.5 across 1,766 reviews is a practical trust signal worth taking seriously. At that volume, a 4.5 average is not the result of a loyal core of regulars inflating the score; it reflects consistent delivery across a wide and varied audience. That consistency matters for special-occasion bookings, where you cannot afford a variable night.
Gdańsk's Old Town is busiest in summer, particularly July and August, when the city draws significant tourist traffic from across Europe. Piwna Street is a central artery and foot traffic around the restaurant peaks during that window. For a special-occasion dinner, the shoulder months of May, June, and September give you better conditions: comfortable evening temperatures, fewer crowds on the street outside, and a room that is busy without being pressured. Midweek evenings in any season will generally give you a quieter, more considered experience than Friday or Saturday nights, when Old Town restaurants run at capacity. If you are visiting Gdańsk specifically for the dining, that midweek advantage is worth building your schedule around. For broader planning across the city, see our full Gdańsk restaurants guide.
Piwna47 fits a specific kind of occasion well: dinner for two, a small group of four looking for something better than a tourist-track meal, or a business dinner where quality signals matter but you are not trying to stage-manage a tasting-menu production. The Michelin recognition gives it credibility as a choice you can justify to whoever you are taking. The €€ pricing means you are not over-committing on a meal where the conversation is the point. It is less suited to large groups celebrating loudly, or to diners whose priority is a single-cuisine deep dive; for the latter, Arco by Paco Pérez is the more appropriate call despite the higher price. For a lighter spend in the Old Town neighbourhood, Hewelke operates at the € tier. If modern cuisine at €€€ is more aligned with your budget and preference, Mercato and Fino are both worth considering. For Mediterranean dining elsewhere in Poland, Muga in Poznań and the broader Tri-City area option of Vinissimo in Sopot offer useful comparisons. For European Mediterranean benchmarks at a higher tier, La Brezza in Ascona and Il Buco in Sorrento illustrate what the format looks like when price ceiling rises significantly.
Reservations: Booking is rated Easy — walk-ins may be possible, but given the Michelin recognition and high review volume, advance booking is sensible for weekend evenings and peak summer dates; a few days' notice should suffice in most seasons. Budget: €€, placing this firmly in the mid-range tier for Gdańsk. Address: Ul. Piwna 47, 80-831 Gdańsk. Awards: Michelin Plate 2024 and 2025. Google Rating: 4.5 from 1,766 reviews. Dress: No formal dress code is listed; smart casual is appropriate for the Old Town setting and the occasion level the venue attracts. Hours and booking contact: Not listed — check directly with the venue before your visit. For broader Gdańsk trip planning: hotels, bars, experiences, and wineries.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Piwna47 | Mediterranean Cuisine | €€ | Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024) | Easy | — |
| Arco by Paco Pérez | Spanish | €€€€ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Tygle | Traditional Cuisine | €€ | Unknown | — | |
| Mercato | Modern Cuisine | €€€ | Unknown | — | |
| Villa | Modern French | €€€ | Unknown | — | |
| Hewelke | Modern Cuisine | € | Unknown | — |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Specific menu items are not published in available data, but the kitchen focuses on Mediterranean cuisine — expect dishes built around fresh produce, olive oil, and coastal European flavours. Given back-to-back Michelin Plates in 2024 and 2025 at a €€ price point, the cooking is clearly consistent enough to trust the menu as written. Ask your server what is arriving fresh that week rather than anchoring to a specific dish.
It works for solo diners who want a proper sit-down meal rather than something quick. Mediterranean formats — smaller shared plates or composed mains — tend to translate well to solo eating without the awkwardness of a tasting-menu counter. The Old Town location on Piwna Street also means you are close to the city's main sights if you want to combine dinner with an evening walk.
Book at least a week in advance, and further out if you are visiting in July or August when Gdańsk's Old Town draws heavy tourist traffic. Piwna47 holds consecutive Michelin Plates, which creates steady demand beyond the local crowd. Walk-ins may happen, but it is not a risk worth taking on a trip itinerary.
No specific dietary policy is documented in the venue data, but Mediterranean kitchens generally have structural flexibility — vegetable-forward dishes, fish, and legume-based options appear across the format by default. Call ahead or email the restaurant directly before your visit to confirm what can be accommodated, particularly for allergies rather than preferences.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.