Restaurant in Lindesnes, Norway
Eat underwater. Book months ahead.

Under sits five metres below the North Sea at Norway's southernmost point, combining a Michelin star (retained in 2025) with one of the most architecturally singular dining rooms in Europe. The New Nordic tasting menu at €€€€ demands advance planning — book two to three months out minimum — and a deliberate trip from Kristiansand. Worth it if the room is part of what you're paying for.
If you're comparing Under to Maaemo in Oslo as your Norwegian fine dining destination, the decision comes down to one thing: do you want to eat inside a building submerged five metres below the surface of the North Sea, at the southernmost tip of Norway, or inside a converted warehouse in a capital city? Both hold Michelin stars and operate at €€€€ pricing. Under wins on singularity of setting; Maaemo wins on accessibility. If you can get to Lindesnes and you're serious about modern Nordic cuisine, Under is the stronger argument for a dedicated trip.
Under earned its first Michelin star in 2024 and retained it in 2025, while also receiving an Opinionated About Dining Highly Recommended nod for Leading New Restaurants in Europe in 2023. Its Google rating sits at 4.7 across 556 reviews — a strong signal of consistent execution, not just hype at opening. This is a restaurant that has settled into its form and is delivering reliably.
The physical experience at Under is the reason the restaurant exists as a destination. The dining room is built into a concrete shell that descends beneath the ocean floor, with a panoramic window running the length of one wall — you are looking directly into the seabed and the water column above it. The marine life outside changes with the light, the tide, and the season. In winter, the water is dark and turbulent; in summer, it catches northern light in a way that shifts the mood of the room entirely. The architecture was designed to blur the boundary between the built interior and the natural exterior, and it does exactly that.
This is not a backdrop , it is the central spatial experience of the meal. For a returning guest, this means the room never quite repeats itself. The same table in February and again in June will feel like two different rooms. That makes Under genuinely suited to multiple visits in a way that few €€€€ restaurants are.
For guests who have already eaten at Under and are planning a return, the most useful thing to know is that the kitchen operates on a seasonal tasting menu format aligned with New Nordic principles , meaning the menu turns over substantially with the seasons rather than dish by dish. A visit in spring, when the coastline around Lindesnes is producing different shellfish and foraged ingredients than winter, will present a materially different set of courses. Under's location at Norway's southernmost point gives chef Nicolai Ellitsgaard access to an unusually concentrated coastal larder , the cold North Sea waters here produce shellfish and fish that are geographically specific to this stretch of coast.
A practical multi-visit strategy: plan a first visit in autumn or early winter when the ocean outside the window is at its most dramatic, and a second in late spring or early summer when the menu reflects the shift in available ingredients and the light through the panoramic window is at its longest and most varied. Friday and Saturday lunch service (the kitchen is open from noon on both days) gives you a third version: a daylight experience of the underwater window that changes the spatial register of the meal entirely compared to an evening visit. If you've only done dinner, lunch is the meaningful second visit.
Under is in Lindesnes, which is not a city. Reaching it requires planning: Kristiansand is the nearest airport (roughly 70km north), and you will need a car or private transfer. There is no walking-in scenario here. For accommodation, the surrounding area has limited options , check our full Lindesnes hotels guide well in advance, as the handful of properties nearby fill around peak booking windows for the restaurant. Similarly, if you're building a broader Norwegian dining itinerary, our full Lindesnes restaurants guide is the place to start for context on what else is operating in the area.
The restaurant is closed Sunday and Monday. Dinner service runs Tuesday through Saturday from 6pm. Friday and Saturday lunch opens at noon. If your travel window is limited to a weekend, Saturday is your most flexible day , you can take either service. If you are travelling specifically for Under, build two nights around it: one for dinner and, if you can, one for the lunch service on the same trip for the spatial contrast alone.
Against Norway's other €€€€ New Nordic options, Under occupies a category of its own in terms of setting, but it is not the only serious argument for a destination meal. RE-NAA in Stavanger holds two Michelin stars and is the stronger technical case if your priority is kitchen precision over spatial drama , and Stavanger is far easier to reach with direct flights from most European hubs. Maaemo in Oslo is three stars and the most demanding version of New Nordic, but it lacks Under's physical distinctiveness. If you are choosing between Under and Maaemo, the question is whether you want the leading meal or the most memorable room.
FAGN in Trondheim runs at €€€ and delivers a strong New Nordic experience at a lower price point , if budget is a factor, FAGN is where you save money without retreating to a lesser category of cooking. Iris in Rosendal is a comparable destination-dining proposition with a dramatically different setting (a cliffside fjord location) and a creative menu that diverges from the New Nordic frame. For a guest who has already done Under and wants a different version of Norwegian destination dining, Iris is the natural next booking.
Within the broader range of coastal Norwegian dining worth a special trip, Gaptrast in Bergen, Conservatory in Norangsfjorden, and Kvitnes Gård in Kvitnes all represent the growing strength of destination dining outside Oslo. But none of them put you five metres below the ocean. Under remains the most architecturally extreme dining experience in Norway, and at €€€€ with a retained Michelin star, it earns that position rather than simply inheriting it.
If you're building a Scandinavian itinerary around Under, the restaurants below offer useful context or complementary experiences: Boen Gård in Tveit, Huset Restaurant in Longyearbyen, Storfjord Hotel Restaurant in Glomset, Apotekergata 5 in Ålesund, Domestic in Aarhus, and Hot Shop in Oslo. For everything else in the region, see our guides to bars in Lindesnes, wineries in Lindesnes, and experiences in Lindesnes.
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Under | Under is a restaurant in Lindesnes, Norway. It was published on Star Wine List on April 30, 2024 and is a White Star.; Michelin 1 Star (2025); Michelin 1 Star (2024); Opinionated About Dining Top New Restaurants in Europe Highly Recommended (2023) | €€€€ | — |
| Maaemo | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | €€€€ | — |
| RE-NAA | Michelin 3 Star | €€€€ | — |
| Kontrast | Michelin 2 Star | €€€€ | — |
| FAGN | Michelin 1 Star | €€€ | — |
| Iris | Michelin 1 Star | €€€€ | — |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Book at least 3 to 6 months out, especially for weekend sittings. Under's profile — a Michelin-starred restaurant in a remote coastal location with a fixed-format tasting menu — means demand consistently exceeds capacity. Friday and Saturday lunch slots (the only midday service) tend to go fastest.
The restaurant is in Lindesnes, Norway's southernmost point — not a city, not walkable from anything useful. You will need to plan transport from Kristiansand airport, roughly 70km north. The experience is a set tasting menu under chef Nicolai Ellitsgaard, recognised with a Michelin star in both 2024 and 2025, so this is not a drop-in dinner option. Come for the full format or don't come.
There are no comparable fine dining restaurants in Lindesnes itself — Under is the destination. If you want to extend a Norwegian fine dining trip, RE-NAA in Stavanger and FAGN in Trondheim are both Michelin-starred options worth building an itinerary around.
The venue database does not confirm a bar or counter dining option at Under. Given the format — a fixed tasting menu in a purpose-built concrete dining room — walk-in or bar seating is unlikely. Treat this as a reservation-only, full-commitment experience.
At €€€€ pricing, Under is one of Norway's most expensive meals, and the value case depends on whether you're booking for the food, the setting, or both. The Michelin star (held in 2024 and 2025) and an Opinionated About Dining Highly Recommended recognition in 2023 confirm the kitchen is serious. If you're comparing cost-per-impression against Maaemo in Oslo, Under adds a physical experience that no other restaurant in Norway can replicate — but the logistics cost real money on top of the meal.
Yes, with a caveat: the format is a set tasting menu, the location is remote, and a full evening here requires commitment from everyone at the table. For a milestone where the journey is part of the occasion, Under is a strong call. For a group that just wants a great dinner without the expedition, Kontrast or Maaemo in Oslo are easier to execute.
Lunch is available only on Fridays and Saturdays, dinner Tuesday through Saturday. For first-timers, dinner is the default — the underwater views shift dramatically with natural light, and a daytime sitting in Norwegian winter means limited visibility through the submerged windows. If you're visiting in summer and have flexibility, Friday or Saturday lunch lets you see the seabed in full light, which changes the experience meaningfully.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.