Restaurant in Madrid, Spain
La Penela
150Pearl PointsGalician cooking, open late, worth booking.

About La Penela
La Penela brings OAD-recognised Galician cooking to Salamanca, Madrid's most polished dining district, with a kitchen that runs until midnight every night of the week. Under chef David Pérez, it earns a 4.3 Google score from nearly 2,800 reviews and three consecutive Opinionated About Dining Casual Europe appearances. Book it when you want serious regional Spanish cooking without the lead time or price of Madrid's top creative restaurants.
La Penela, Madrid — Pearl Verdict
If you are looking for a late-night Galician kitchen in the Salamanca district that keeps the pass open until midnight every day of the week, La Penela is the most reliable answer on this side of the city. The price point is not published, but context matters: this is Calle Velázquez in one of Madrid's most affluent postcodes, and Galician seafood rarely comes cheap anywhere in the capital. Budget accordingly. What you get for that spend is a neighbourhood anchor with a 4.3 Google rating across 2,744 reviews — a volume that filters out most statistical noise , and three consecutive years on Opinionated About Dining's Casual Europe list, including a rank of #616 in 2024 and #764 in 2025. The trajectory is worth noting: it entered OAD's Recommended tier in 2023, climbed to #616 in 2024, then dropped slightly in 2025. That is not a red flag, but it tells you the competition is tightening. Book it now rather than waiting.
Portrait
Galician cooking has a strong foothold in Madrid, and La Penela has been building its case in Salamanca long enough to earn repeat-visitor loyalty. Under chef David Pérez, the kitchen leans on the fundamentals that make Galicia's food worth travelling for: shellfish, cured meats, octopus, and the kind of fish cookery that does not need embellishment to hold attention. If you have eaten here before and ordered the obvious, your next visit should push toward whatever the kitchen is running as a daily special , Galician menus at this level tend to shift with the catch, and the regulars know to ask.
The late-night angle is genuine and practically useful. Madrid eats late by any standard, but finding a kitchen that runs until midnight across all seven days , including Sunday , is less common than it sounds. If a dinner runs long, or you arrive in the city after 10 pm, La Penela is a real option where many comparable rooms would already be closed. The lunch service (1–5 pm) is equally long by European standards, which makes it a workable choice if your afternoon is unscheduled. Both services attract a Salamanca crowd that tends toward the polished rather than the tourist-heavy, which shapes the room's atmosphere without making it formal.
For anyone comparing it against other Galician kitchens operating in Madrid, Garelos and O'Grelo are the two names that come up most consistently. Each occupies a slightly different register, and the right choice depends on your priorities around price, room, and booking ease. La Penela's OAD recognition gives it a credential neither of those venues currently matches at the same level, which is relevant if you are making a decision for a guest who pays attention to those lists. For Galician cooking in its original context, Ceibe in Ourense and As Garzas in Barizo are the reference points worth knowing.
If your Madrid dining calendar also includes a higher-stakes meal, the city's leading end runs through DiverXO, Coque, and Deessa , all of which operate at a different price tier and require significantly more lead time to book. La Penela sits comfortably below that bracket in both spend and booking friction, which is part of its appeal. Spain's wider fine dining circuit, from El Celler de Can Roca in Girona to Arzak in San Sebastián, Azurmendi in Larrabetzu, Martin Berasategui in Lasarte-Oria, Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona, and Quique Dacosta in Dénia, sets a high national bar, but La Penela is playing a different game: neighbourhood-rooted, category-specific, and OAD-verified.
Ratings & Recognition
- Google: 4.3 / 5 (2,744 reviews)
- OAD Casual Europe 2025: #764
- OAD Casual Europe 2024: #616
- OAD Casual Europe 2023: Recommended
Booking & Practical Details
Booking difficulty: Easy , walk-ins are plausible, but calling ahead is sensible, particularly for weekend evenings when the Salamanca crowd fills neighbourhood rooms quickly. Hours: Monday to Sunday, 1–5 pm and 8 pm–midnight. Address: Calle Velázquez, 96, Salamanca, 28006 Madrid. Dress: No published dress code, but the Salamanca location and the clientele suggest smart-casual is the right call , trainers will likely feel out of place. Budget: Price range not confirmed; Galician seafood in this postcode typically runs into mid-to-upper casual territory. Factor in wine, which Galicia produces seriously (Albariño from Rías Baixas is the default pairing). Dietary needs: Contact the restaurant directly before visiting , no dietary information is listed publicly. For more Madrid options: see our full Madrid restaurants guide, Madrid hotels guide, Madrid bars guide, Madrid wineries guide, and Madrid experiences guide.
How It Compares
Frequently Asked Questions
What are alternatives to La Penela in Madrid?
For Galician cooking at a similar casual register, La Penela's OAD Casual Europe ranking (currently #764 in 2025, up from #616 in 2024) puts it in a specific tier. If you want tasting-menu ambition instead, DSTAgE or Smoked Room operate at a completely different price and format level. For a neighbourhood-style Salamanca dinner without the Galician focus, the area has plenty of options, but few with La Penela's OAD recognition in the casual category.
What should I order at La Penela?
The menu is not detailed in available records, but Galician cooking from this region of Spain centres on seafood, cured meats, and dishes like pulpo a la gallega. Order from those anchors and you are in the right territory. Ask the floor what is running fresh that day — Galician kitchens typically shift with supply.
Is lunch or dinner better at La Penela?
Both services run daily, 1–5 pm for lunch and 8 pm–midnight for dinner. Lunch in Madrid's Salamanca district tends to be more relaxed and slightly better value given the city's menu del día culture. Dinner suits you if you want a later, more unhurried meal — the kitchen stays open until midnight, which is genuinely useful in a city where dinner rarely starts before 9 pm.
What should I wear to La Penela?
Salamanca is one of Madrid's smarter residential and commercial neighbourhoods, so the crowd tends to dress presentably without being formal. Nothing in the venue data specifies a dress code, but turning up in casual smart clothing — jeans and a shirt or equivalent — is a safe read for the area and the restaurant's casual OAD category positioning.
Does La Penela handle dietary restrictions?
No specific dietary policy is documented for La Penela. Galician cooking is heavily seafood- and meat-focused, so vegetarians and vegans will want to call ahead to confirm options before booking. Contact details are not listed in current records, so your best approach is checking directly via reservation platforms or visiting in person.
Is La Penela good for a special occasion?
It works for a relaxed celebration rather than a milestone dinner. La Penela holds OAD Casual Europe recognition, which signals consistent quality, but it sits in the casual category rather than the fine-dining tier occupied by places like DiverXO or Coque. If the occasion calls for a tasting menu and a formal room, look elsewhere. If it calls for a long, good dinner with serious Galician food, La Penela is a credible choice.
Is La Penela good for solo dining?
Solo dining in Madrid is common and rarely awkward at casual neighbourhood restaurants. La Penela's format — a daily-service Galician kitchen in Salamanca — suits a solo diner at the bar or a small table at lunch more than a large group booking. The 1–5 pm lunch window is probably the lowest-friction slot to walk in alone.
Location
Calle Velázquez, 96, Salamanca, 28006 Madrid, Spain
Compare La Penela
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| La Penela | Galician | Easy | |
| DiverXO | Progressive - Asian, Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
| DSTAgE | Modern Spanish, Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Smoked Room | Progressive Asador, Contemporary | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Paco Roncero | Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Coque | Spanish, Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
What to weigh when choosing between La Penela and alternatives.
Also Consider
- DiverXO, Progressive - Asian, Creative, €€€€
- DSTAgE, Modern Spanish, Creative, €€€€
- Smoked Room, Progressive Asador, Contemporary, €€€€
- Paco Roncero, Creative, €€€€
- Coque, Spanish, Creative, €€€€
La Penela operates in a different bracket from Madrid's highest-profile restaurants, which makes the comparison exercise more useful than it might first appear. DiverXO, DSTAgE, Smoked Room, Paco Roncero, and Coque all sit at €€€€ and require significant advance booking, weeks or months for DiverXO, which is among the hardest restaurant reservations in Spain. La Penela offers OAD-verified quality with easy booking and a midnight kitchen, which is a genuinely different value proposition.
If your goal is creative modern cooking at the highest level Madrid offers, DiverXO and Coque are the right calls and the price is the price. If you want something regionally specific, food that has a clear identity and does not try to be everything, La Penela's Galician focus is actually an advantage. Smoked Room and Paco Roncero both deliver a more theatrical dining experience; La Penela does not compete on that axis and is better for it if theatre is not what you are after.
For a practical decision: choose La Penela if you want a late-night option with a credible food track record, no complex booking logistics, and a kitchen that stays in its lane. Choose DiverXO or DSTAgE if the occasion justifies the spend and you have booked well in advance. Choose Coque if you want creative Spanish cooking with serious wine at the top of the capital's price range. La Penela is the answer when those rooms are unavailable, too expensive for the moment, or simply too far from what you actually want to eat.
Hours
- Monday
- 1–5 pm, 8 pm–12 am
- Tuesday
- 1–5 pm, 8 pm–12 am
- Wednesday
- 1–5 pm, 8 pm–12 am
- Thursday
- 1–5 pm, 8 pm–12 am
- Friday
- 1–5 pm, 8 pm–12 am
- Saturday
- 1–5 pm, 8 pm–12 am
- Sunday
- 1–5 pm, 8 pm–12 am
Recognized By
Explore Madrid
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