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    Restaurant in London, United Kingdom

    Bancone

    350pts

    Serious pasta, central London, no big spend.

    Bancone, Restaurant in London

    About Bancone

    Bancone holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand for 2024 and 2025 — Michelin's marker for cooking that outperforms its price. The fresh pasta is the reason to come, and the silk handkerchiefs with walnut butter are the dish to start with. At ££ in Covent Garden, it's the most reliable Italian in the area for a pre-theatre dinner or a focused solo lunch at the counter.

    The Verdict

    Bancone is the right call for anyone who wants serious fresh pasta in central London without committing to a big-spend evening. It holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand for 2024 and 2025 — meaning Michelin's own inspectors have flagged it as good cooking at a price that doesn't hurt — and a Google rating of 4.4 across more than 3,400 reviews backs that up. If you're after a pre-theatre dinner near Covent Garden, a relaxed solo lunch at the counter, or a low-friction weeknight meal with someone you want to actually talk to, this is where to book. If you need a grand occasion restaurant with tableside ceremony, look elsewhere.

    What Bancone Is

    The name means 'counter' in Italian, and that's the honest pitch: a pasta-focused Italian in Covent Garden built around an open kitchen where you can watch the dough being worked. Chef Ben Waugh leads the kitchen, and the menu is anchored in freshly made pasta rather than the kind of broad Italian-American canon you'll find at a dozen places within walking distance. Antipasti , burrata, prosciutto, grilled artichokes , set the table, but pasta is the point. The signature dish, silk handkerchiefs with walnut butter and confit egg yolk, appears on almost every table for a reason: it's technically precise, restrained, and the kind of thing that makes the ££ price tag feel like a bargain.

    Bancone sits in a category of London Italian that has quietly raised the bar over the last few years. Compare it to Bocca di Lupo, which covers more of Italy's regions but at a higher price point, or Brutto, which leans Florentine and more casual. Bancone's focus is narrower and the pasta execution is the tightest of the three for the money.

    A Multi-Visit Strategy

    If you've been once and ordered the silk handkerchiefs , which you should , here's how to think about a return. The antipasti section is worth working through properly on a second visit: the burrata and grilled artichokes are reliable, and they're easy to skip the first time when you're focused on the pasta. A second visit is also the right time to try whatever seasonal pasta is on the menu alongside the silk handkerchiefs, rather than defaulting to the same order. The open kitchen counter is worth requesting specifically if you haven't sat there yet , it changes the meal into something more engaging than a standard table, and the format suits solo diners or pairs better than groups of four or more.

    By a third visit, you should know the menu well enough to eat mostly antipasti and one pasta, which keeps the bill low and the meal focused. Bancone rewards repeat visits precisely because the menu isn't sprawling: you're not working through 40 dishes, you're finding your personal order within a tight, well-executed list. That kind of focus is what the Bib Gourmand recognises , and it's what makes this a place worth going back to rather than ticking off once.

    For broader Italian options across London, Luca offers a more polished, higher-spend Italian experience in Clerkenwell, and Artusi in Peckham brings a neighbourhood-Italian feel at a similar price tier. If you're building a London Italian shortlist, those two alongside Bancone cover different parts of the city and different occasions. For something further afield in the UK with Michelin-level ambition, L'Enclume in Cartmel and Moor Hall in Aughton represent a different tier entirely , but Bancone is the answer when you want that level of ingredient focus without the occasion pressure or the travel.

    Who It's For

    Bancone works leading for: solo diners who want counter seating and a focused meal; pairs looking for a pre-theatre dinner near Covent Garden; anyone who wants to eat well in central London without spending £80+ per head. It is less suited to large groups expecting a convivial round-the-table Italian feast, or to anyone who needs the full ceremony of a special-occasion dinner. For that, the comparison list below will point you in a different direction.

    If you're visiting London and want to understand the city's Italian scene beyond the obvious, our full London restaurants guide covers the full range. And if you're combining dinner with a stay nearby, our London hotels guide has current options across price tiers. For pre- or post-dinner drinks in the area, the London bars guide is worth checking.

    Internationally, Bancone sits in a tradition of counter-pasta restaurants that have found traction in major cities. 8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana in Hong Kong and cenci in Kyoto show how Italian technique travels , but Bancone's particular strength is applying that same seriousness of purpose at a price point that makes it a regular, not just a destination.

    Practical Details

    Address: 39 William IV St, London WC2N 4DD. Cuisine: Italian, fresh pasta-focused. Price range: ££ (Michelin Bib Gourmand 2024 and 2025 , Michelin's marker for good food at a moderate price). Reservations: Bookable and recommended, especially for evenings and pre-theatre slots; booking difficulty is rated easy, so last-minute bookings are often possible, but don't rely on a walk-in for a Friday evening. Counter seating: Request specifically when booking if you want the open kitchen experience. Dress code: Smart casual is fine , this is not a jacket-required room. Google rating: 4.4 from 3,403 reviews. Chef: Ben Waugh.

    Also worth knowing: Archway in London covers a different Italian register if you're building a comparison shortlist, and Hand and Flowers in Marlow is a useful benchmark if you're thinking about what Bib Gourmand recognition looks like at the pub end of the spectrum. For experiences and activities around a Covent Garden visit, our London experiences guide has current listings.

    FAQs

    • What should I order at Bancone? Start with the silk handkerchiefs with walnut butter and confit egg yolk , it's the dish that defines the restaurant and the one Michelin inspectors reference when describing the kitchen's strengths. Antipasti like burrata or grilled artichokes are worth adding. On a second visit, work through the seasonal pasta options alongside the signature.
    • Is Bancone worth the price? Yes, clearly. A Michelin Bib Gourmand for two consecutive years (2024 and 2025) is Michelin's formal verdict that the cooking quality exceeds what the price would normally deliver. At ££ in central London, it competes well against the broader Italian mid-market and beats most of it on pasta execution.
    • Is Bancone good for solo dining? It's one of the better solo-dining options in Covent Garden. Request the counter when booking , sitting at the open kitchen gives you something to watch, and the focused menu means you're not navigating a sprawling list alone. The ££ price point also means a solo meal stays sensibly priced.
    • Is Bancone good for a special occasion? For a low-key celebration or a birthday dinner where the food matters more than the theatre, yes. For a formal occasion that needs grand surroundings and tableside ceremony, no , the room and format aren't built for that. CORE by Clare Smyth or The Ledbury are the right calls for that kind of evening.
    • Is the tasting menu worth it at Bancone? The verified data does not confirm a tasting menu format at Bancone , the kitchen's structure is à la carte, pasta-focused. If a tasting format has been introduced, confirm directly with the restaurant before booking around it.
    • What should I wear to Bancone? Smart casual. This is a Bib Gourmand Italian in Covent Garden, not a jacket-required dining room. Jeans are fine; you don't need to dress up, but the room is lively enough that you won't feel out of place if you do.
    • Does Bancone handle dietary restrictions? Fresh pasta kitchens typically have flexibility on some restrictions but less so on gluten , confirm directly with the restaurant ahead of your visit, as the menu's pasta focus means gluten-free options may be limited.
    • What are alternatives to Bancone in London? For Italian at a similar price tier: Artusi in Peckham for neighbourhood-Italian feel, Brutto for a Florentine-leaning room, and Bocca di Lupo for broader regional coverage at a slightly higher spend. For a step up in formality and price, Luca in Clerkenwell is the natural next call.

    Compare Bancone

    Bancone vs. Similar Venues
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    BanconeItalian££It’s all about freshly made pasta and great value at this lively Covent Garden Italian. Start off with antipasti like burrata, prosciutto or grilled artichokes, before moving on to the main event; there’s a range of pastas available, but the best of all might still be the signature ‘silk handkerchiefs’ with walnut butter and confit egg yolk. Sit up at the open kitchen to watch the chefs working their magic – ‘bancone’ is Italian for ‘counter’ after all.; Michelin Bib Gourmand (2025); Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024)Easy
    CORE by Clare SmythModern British££££Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Restaurant Gordon RamsayContemporary European, French££££Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Sketch, The Lecture Room and LibraryModern French££££Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    The LedburyModern European, Modern Cuisine££££Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Dinner by Heston BlumenthalModern British, Traditional British££££Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown

    Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Does Bancone handle dietary restrictions?

    Bancone's menu centres on fresh pasta, which limits options for gluten-free diners. The antipasti section, which includes dishes like burrata, prosciutto, and grilled artichokes, gives more flexibility for those avoiding carbs or eating vegetarian. Call ahead if you have specific requirements, as pasta-heavy kitchens have limited wiggle room. The open kitchen format means chefs are visible and accessible if you need to ask directly.

    What are alternatives to Bancone in London?

    For similar value at the ££ tier, Padella in Borough Market is the most direct comparison: shorter menu, longer queues, no reservations. If you want to spend more for a broader Italian experience, Murano in Mayfair steps up in price and formality. Bancone's Michelin Bib Gourmand status puts it ahead of most casual pasta spots in central London for recognised quality at this price point.

    What should I wear to Bancone?

    No formal dress code applies at Bancone. The Covent Garden setting and ££ price range signal a relaxed, neighbourhood-restaurant feel rather than a fine dining room. Come as you are for a post-work dinner or pre-theatre meal without overthinking it.

    What should I order at Bancone?

    Order the silk handkerchiefs with walnut butter and confit egg yolk — it's the signature dish and the one most associated with Bancone's reputation. The antipasti, including burrata, prosciutto, and grilled artichokes, are worth adding as a starter. Sitting at the open kitchen counter gives you a better view of the pasta work and is the format the restaurant is built around.

    Is Bancone good for a special occasion?

    It works for a low-key celebration or a birthday dinner where the priority is great food over ceremony. The open kitchen and lively room are more convivial than intimate, so if you need a private, quiet setting for a proposal or significant milestone, look elsewhere. For a relaxed 'treat yourself' dinner without a large bill, Bancone's Bib Gourmand credentials make a strong case.

    Is Bancone worth the price?

    Yes, clearly. A Michelin Bib Gourmand in 2024 and 2025 is Michelin's explicit endorsement that a restaurant delivers good cooking at a reasonable price, and Bancone has held it two consecutive years. At ££ in central London, where the category average skews higher, that's a dependable signal you're getting more than you're paying for.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Bancone?

    Bancone's format is a focused à la carte rather than a tasting menu operation, so this isn't a relevant booking consideration here. If a tasting menu is what you're after in London at this price band, look at a Bib Gourmand holder with that format instead. Bancone is better framed as a two or three-course dinner built around the pasta section.

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