Restaurant in Lucca, Italy
200 years old. Still Lucca's reliable Tuscan anchor.

Buca di Sant'Antonio has been feeding Lucca from the same address near Piazza San Michele for over 200 years, and it holds a Michelin Plate for 2024 and 2025 to back up its longevity. At €€ with a 4.6 Google rating across 2,000+ reviews, it is the most accessible Michelin-recognised Tuscan table in the city. Book a few days ahead; autumn is the strongest season for the traditional menu.
Yes, book it — particularly if you are visiting Lucca for the first time and want a reliable, historically grounded Tuscan meal in a room that has been doing this for over two centuries. Buca di Sant'Antonio holds a Michelin Plate for both 2024 and 2025, carries a Google rating of 4.6 across more than 2,000 reviews, and sits at a €€ price point that makes it one of the most accessible Michelin-recognised tables in the city. It is not the place to come for creative cooking — that is L'Imbuto. But for traditional Tuscan food done with genuine care, in a room with character and history, Buca di Sant'Antonio earns its reputation without asking you to pay for it.
Buca di Sant'Antonio has been operating from Via della Cervia, steps from Piazza San Michele in Lucca's historic centre, for more than 200 years. That kind of longevity is worth pausing on. This is not a restaurant that has survived by rebranding or chasing trends , it has stayed alive because it does something specific well. The room itself tells you this immediately: copper pots and pans hang from the ceiling, the light is warm, the atmosphere is settled rather than performative. The ambient energy here is low-key and convivial, the kind of room where conversation is easy and the pace is unhurried. It is a practical choice for couples, for food-curious travellers eating alone, and for anyone who finds the louder end of the Lucca dining scene tiring.
The cuisine is traditional Tuscan , meat dishes and house-made pasta are the backbone of the menu. This is the kind of kitchen that takes seasonal raw materials seriously, which means what you find on the menu will shift depending on when you visit. Come in autumn and the kitchen will be working with game, mushrooms, and the new olive oil that Tuscany produces in October and November. A winter visit leans into slow-cooked preparations and heartier pasta formats. Spring brings lighter treatments and fresh herbs. This seasonality is not marketed as a concept , it is simply how a restaurant cooking traditional Tuscan food for more than two centuries operates. If you are visiting between October and December, you are likely to encounter the menu at or near its most expressive.
For a food or wine enthusiast visiting the region, Buca di Sant'Antonio sits comfortably alongside the broader Tuscan culinary tradition that stretches from Caino in Montemerano to L'Asinello in Castelnuovo Berardenga. It does not reach the technical ambition of those tables, but it is also not trying to. If your frame of reference is the broader Italian fine dining conversation , the kind that includes Osteria Francescana, Dal Pescatore, or Uliassi , Buca di Sant'Antonio is playing a different game, and it wins on its own terms: consistency, rootedness, and value.
The 4.6 Google rating across 2,071 reviews is notable because it is hard to sustain at that scale. Most restaurants that handle volume see their rating drift. The fact that Buca di Sant'Antonio holds this figure suggests the kitchen delivers consistently, not just on good nights. The Michelin Plate , awarded in both 2024 and 2025 , confirms that the food meets a recognised standard of quality without being in the starred category. For the €€ price bracket, that combination of signals is strong.
Booking is direct. This is not a restaurant that requires weeks of planning or a specific strategy to secure a table. Arriving without a reservation is higher risk during peak Lucca tourist season (April to October), particularly around summer weekends and the Lucca Comics festival in late October. Outside those windows, you have more flexibility, though a reservation is always the sensible move for a restaurant of this reputation. There is no noted booking difficulty , plan ahead by a few days rather than a few weeks, and you should be fine.
For context on the wider Lucca scene, see our full Lucca restaurants guide. If you are building a longer itinerary, our Lucca hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide are worth consulting alongside this page.
See the comparison section below for how Buca di Sant'Antonio stacks up against other Lucca restaurants including All'Olivo, Giglio, Il Mecenate, L'Imbuto, and Nida.
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Buca di Sant'Antonio | Tuscan | Just a stone’s throw from Piazza San Michele, in the heart of the beautiful historic centre of Lucca, the Buca di Sant'Antonio dates back over 200 years and is one of the city’s oldest restaurants. Here, the old copper pots and pans that hang from the ceiling add to the warm, romantic atmosphere, while the cuisine unsurprisingly showcases traditional Tuscan specialities including meat dishes and home-made pasta.; Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024) | Easy | — |
| L'Imbuto | Creative | Unknown | — | |
| Nida | Japanese | Unknown | — | |
| All'Olivo | Tuscan | Unknown | — | |
| Giglio | Classic Cuisine | Unknown | — | |
| Il Mecenate | Tuscan | Unknown | — |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Yes, it works well for solo diners. The room has a warm, lived-in character — copper pots overhead, a multi-room layout — that makes eating alone feel comfortable rather than exposed. At €€ pricing, a solo meal here is a low-risk way to get a proper Tuscan feed in Lucca's historic centre.
Bar seating is not confirmed in available venue data. Given the restaurant's traditional Tuscan format and 200-year-old setup, this is not the kind of place with a stand-up bar scene. If counter or bar dining is your priority, check current arrangements when you book.
The restaurant's multi-room layout — built up over more than two centuries on Via della Cervia — suggests reasonable capacity for groups. For parties of six or more, call ahead rather than assuming availability, especially during peak Lucca tourist months.
At €€, yes — the value case is solid. A Michelin Plate in 2024 and 2025 confirms consistent kitchen standards, and the setting (historic building near Piazza San Michele, copper-hung ceilings) adds context you're not paying a premium to access. For a higher-end Tuscan experience in Lucca, L'Imbuto is the step up; for a straightforward mid-range meal, Buca di Sant'Antonio delivers reliably.
Tasting menu availability is not confirmed in the venue data. The restaurant's identity is rooted in traditional Tuscan cooking — meat dishes and house-made pasta — so à la carte ordering likely gives you the most direct access to what the kitchen does well. Confirm format options when you book.
No dress code is specified, but the setting — a 200-year-old room steps from Piazza San Michele, with a Michelin Plate and a warm, traditional atmosphere — points to neat, presentable clothes rather than casual tourist wear. Think: what you'd wear to a mid-range Italian restaurant you want to take seriously.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.