Restaurant in Luxembourg, Luxembourg
Two Michelin stars, serious Italian cooking.

Two Michelin stars and membership of the Grandes Tables du Monde make Mosconi the reference point for Italian fine dining in Luxembourg. Chef Illario Mosconi sources produce directly from Italy, cooking with precision and occasional daring in an intimate room in the historic Grund. Book six to eight weeks out; this is Luxembourg's hardest table to secure at the top of the Italian category.
If you are deciding between Mosconi and Ma Langue Sourit for a formal dinner in Luxembourg, the choice comes down to what kind of cooking you want on the plate. Ma Langue Sourit is the more adventurous, boundary-pushing French option. Mosconi is where you go when you want Italian cooking executed at a two-Michelin-star level, with produce sourced directly from Italy and a room that has been doing this for long enough to feel authoritative. For Italian fine dining in Luxembourg, nothing else in the city competes at this level.
Mosconi sits in the Grund, Luxembourg's historic lower city, on Rue Münster. The neighbourhood is one of the oldest parts of the city, compressed between the Alzette River and the rock faces that define the capital's dramatic topography. The dining room reflects that setting: the space is intimate rather than grand, with the kind of proportions that make a small number of covers feel deliberate. This is not a room designed to impress on scale. It works through restraint and detail, the kind of spatial approach that suits a kitchen focused on precise, pure preparations rather than theatrical service.
For a returning guest, that room dynamic matters. If you have been once for a special occasion and want to return for something more regular, the scale of Mosconi works in your favour. There are no bad seats in a room this size, and the service that comes from Simonetta Mosconi's front-of-house means the welcome on a second visit is likely to feel personal. The awards data confirms the consistency: two Michelin stars, membership of both the Grandes Tables du Monde and Relais & Châteaux, a La Liste score of 80.5 points in 2025, and an Opinionated About Dining Classical Europe ranking of 252nd in 2025 (up from 138th in 2024, which reflects a methodology change rather than a quality drop). This is a restaurant with a stable, well-documented track record.
Chef Illario Mosconi sources his ingredients directly from Italy. Vegetables, herbs, aromatics, and fruit come in from his home country, and the cooking reflects that supply chain: the flavour profile is Italian, not Italian-adjacent. The style is elegant and restrained, with preparations that are described in the awards record as pure and precise. Where the kitchen takes risks, it does so in combinations rather than technique, pairing octopus with sucrine lettuce, mint, and watermelon, or building a pappardelle around a chicken ragout delicately flavoured with saffron and fresh peas. These are not safe, crowd-pleasing choices. They require confidence in the produce and clarity in the execution.
For a guest who has already eaten here once, the direction is clear: trust the kitchen on its more unconventional combinations. The direct pasta courses will deliver, but the dishes that push further are where Mosconi earns its stars. The cuisine sits in the classical Italian tradition, but it is not a museum piece. The OAD Classical Europe rankings specifically place it in that category, which tells you the style is rooted rather than experimental, but the execution is at a level that justifies the price.
Mosconi's editorial angle here is worth addressing directly. Hours are not confirmed in the available data, so the specifics of any weekend or morning service cannot be verified. What the profile of the venue suggests is this: a two-star Relais & Châteaux property in a historic neighbourhood, with a kitchen that depends on Italian produce imports and an intimate dining room, is not typically structured around casual brunch trade. If daytime access is what you are looking for, verify directly with the restaurant before planning around it. For Italian dining in Luxembourg at a more accessible price point and format, Fani or Gusto Naturale are worth checking. For a broader look at what the city offers across formats and times of day, our full Luxembourg restaurants guide covers the range.
Booking at Mosconi is hard. Two Michelin stars, a Grandes Tables du Monde membership, and a small room in a capital city with a well-travelled business population means demand consistently outpaces availability. Book at minimum four to six weeks out for a standard dinner date. For Friday or Saturday evenings, eight weeks is a safer margin. There is no phone number or booking URL in the confirmed data, so the most reliable approach is to contact the restaurant directly via their website or in writing at the address: 13 Rue Münster, 2160 Grund, Luxembourg.
The price range is €€€€, consistent with Luxembourg's top tier. For context, this is the same price bracket as Ma Langue Sourit and Léa Linster. Dress code is not confirmed in the data, but the combination of two Michelin stars, Relais & Châteaux affiliation, and a formal dining room means smart to formal dress is the appropriate assumption. Arriving underdressed at a room like this is a choice that will be noticed. For solo diners, the intimate room size and counter-style interaction that comes with smaller spaces can work well, though the format is not specifically confirmed as counter seating. Groups should be aware that a small room limits large-party options; contact the venue to confirm maximum group size and any private dining arrangements before assuming availability.
For comparison points in Italian fine dining internationally, 8½ Otto e Mezzo Bombana in Hong Kong and Octavium in Hong Kong occupy similar territory in their respective markets. Closer in format is Il Ristorante-Niko Romito in Dubai. For Italian fine dining in other cities, Osteria Mozza in Los Angeles, Frasca Food & Wine in Boulder, cenci in Kyoto, and PRISMA in Tokyo offer useful reference points for what the category can deliver at its peak. Mosconi holds its own in that set. Within Luxembourg, if you are also planning around accommodation or evening entertainment, our Luxembourg hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide cover the surrounding options.
For Italian alternatives in Luxembourg city itself, Cômo, OiO, and Ristorante Roma are worth knowing. None operate at the same award level as Mosconi, but they offer Italian cooking at more accessible price points and with easier booking windows. If you are travelling beyond Luxembourg city, SENSA in Weiswampach is also worth considering for a different perspective on fine dining in the country. For everything else, our Luxembourg wineries guide rounds out the picture.
Quick reference: Italian, €€€€, two Michelin stars, Grandes Tables du Monde, Relais & Châteaux, Grund district, 13 Rue Münster — book 6–8 weeks out, smart to formal dress, small room, hard booking.
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mosconi | €€€€ | Hard | — |
| Ma Langue Sourit | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Léa Linster | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Apdikt | €€€ | Unknown | — |
| Archibald De Prince | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Fani | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Groups are possible but the room in the Grund is small, and with two Michelin stars and Grandes Tables du Monde status, demand is constant. For parties larger than four, contact the restaurant well in advance — availability for larger tables at this level is limited, and lead times will be longer than for couples or small groups.
Formal attire is the safe call. Mosconi holds two Michelin stars, belongs to Grandes Tables du Monde and Relais & Châteaux, and draws a well-travelled business crowd in Luxembourg City. A suit or equivalent is appropriate; anything visibly casual risks standing out in the wrong direction.
It is not the obvious choice for solo dining at this price tier. The format here is formal Italian fine dining at two Michelin stars, and the room in the Grund is intimate rather than counter-oriented. Solo diners are better served by venues with bar or counter seating; Mosconi is better suited to couples or small groups.
Book four to six weeks out at minimum. Two Michelin stars, Grandes Tables du Monde membership, and a small dining room in a capital city with an active corporate dinner market means this fills up. For weekend evenings or special dates, push closer to eight weeks.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.