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    Restaurant in Madrid, Spain

    Amós

    450pts

    Serious Spanish cooking without the prestige markup.

    Amós, Restaurant in Madrid

    About Amós

    Amós brings chef Jesús Sánchez's Cantabrian-rooted modern Spanish cooking to Madrid's Salamanca district at a €€€ price point — below the cost of the city's starred tasting-menu rooms but with Michelin Plate recognition and an improving OAD ranking to back it up. Book the Esencia tasting menu if you want the kitchen at its best, and note the narrow operating window: closed Monday and Tuesday, Sunday dinner not available.

    Verdict: Book Amós for a Cantabrian-rooted modern Spanish meal in Madrid's Salamanca district — it earns its place without the four-figure price tag of the city's leading tasting-menu rooms

    Amós is the right call if you want serious modern Spanish cooking at a €€€ price point, in a neighbourhood that skews toward expense-account dining. Chef Jesús Sánchez built his reputation on the Cantabrian coast before opening this Madrid outpost, and the kitchen brings that northern Spanish sensibility — seafood-forward, ingredient-led, technically precise , into one of the capital's smarter postcodes. It holds a Michelin Plate (2025) and sits at #450 on the Opinionated About Dining Leading Restaurants in Europe ranking for 2025, up from #404 in 2024. For the price, that trajectory matters: this is a venue moving in the right direction.

    If you're exploring what Madrid's modern Spanish dining scene offers at the level below Michelin-starred rooms, Amós belongs in your shortlist alongside El Bohío and other regionally-rooted modern kitchens. For a broader sweep of the city's options, our full Madrid restaurants guide covers the full range from casual to destination dining.

    The Portrait

    Amós sits at Calle de José Ortega y Gasset 2, in Madrid's Salamanca district , the kind of address that implies a certain polish. The neighbourhood is home to luxury retail and hotel dining rooms, which means the competition for a well-heeled lunch crowd is stiff. What separates Amós from the surrounding hotel restaurants is the cooking's geographic honesty. Jesús Sánchez is an award-winning chef whose identity is anchored in Cantabria, the northern coastal region where the Atlantic drives the larder. That specificity of origin is what gives the menu its coherence.

    The format gives you two directions: the Memoria menu, which draws from à la carte selections and allows a degree of choice, and the Esencia option, a tasting-style progression that hands control to the kitchen. For a food and wine enthusiast visiting Madrid rather than living here, the Esencia route tends to deliver more depth , it reflects how the kitchen wants to cook rather than what the neighbourhood expects to order. That said, the Memoria format is the more practical choice for diners who need to manage time, dietary preferences, or a mixed table.

    The drinks program at Amós is worth treating as a serious part of the experience rather than an afterthought. A modern Spanish kitchen at this level, particularly one drawing on Cantabrian seafood and produce, pairs well with the structured whites of northern Spain , Galician Albariño, Basque Txakoli, and the white wines of Ribera del Duero all have natural affinities with the kitchen's flavor register. While specific list details are not available in the current record, a €€€ venue in Salamanca at this recognition tier will typically carry a well-curated Spanish-focused cellar. If wine matters to you, ask when booking whether the sommelier can walk you through regional pairings , that question alone tells you how seriously the drinks side is being handled. For context on Madrid's broader wine and drinks scene, our Madrid bars guide and Madrid wineries guide are worth checking before or after your visit.

    Salamanca address also places Amós within easy reach of Madrid's smarter hotels. If you're staying in the area, our Madrid hotels guide can help you plan the full stay. For post-dinner or pre-dinner exploration, our Madrid experiences guide covers what else the city offers at this end of the market.

    One practical note worth flagging: Amós is closed Monday and Tuesday. Service runs Wednesday through Saturday at both lunch (1:30–3:30 pm) and dinner (8:30–10:30 pm), with Sunday lunch only (1:30–3:30 pm). That Sunday dinner gap is a real constraint if your Madrid stay ends on a Sunday night , plan accordingly. The lunch windows are narrow at two hours, which is tight by Madrid standards where lunch can drift past 4 pm elsewhere. Factor that in if you're coming from across the city.

    In the broader context of Spain's modern cuisine scene, Jesús Sánchez occupies a position analogous to what chefs like Arzak in San Sebastián and Martin Berasategui in Lasarte-Oria represent in the Basque Country: a regional cooking identity brought to high technical discipline. Amós is not operating at that star-count tier, but the OAD ranking movement and consistent Michelin recognition suggest a kitchen that has earned its footing. For comparison, kitchens like Quique Dacosta in Dénia, Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona, or El Celler de Can Roca in Girona set the ceiling for Spanish fine dining , Amós is a step below that tier but considerably more accessible to book and considerably easier on the budget. For another regionally-grounded modern Spanish experience, El Retiro in Llanes offers a coastal Cantabrian counterpart worth knowing about.

    Google reviews sit at 4.6 across 254 reviews , a strong signal at that volume. It suggests consistent execution rather than occasional brilliance, which is exactly what you want from a venue you're booking based on a recommendation rather than personal history.

    Practical Details

    Address: C. de José Ortega y Gasset, 2, Salamanca, 28006 Madrid. Hours: Wed–Sat lunch 1:30–3:30 pm, dinner 8:30–10:30 pm; Sun lunch only 1:30–3:30 pm; closed Mon–Tue. Price: €€€ , mid-to-upper tier for Madrid; expect a meaningful but not ruinous bill compared to the city's €€€€ tasting-menu rooms. Reservations: Booking is classified as easy, but the two-hour lunch windows fill faster than they look , book at least a week ahead for weekend slots. Dress: Salamanca-district smart casual is the baseline; this is not a jeans-and-sneakers room, but a jacket is not required. Booking method: Contact details not available in current record , check directly via search for current reservation platform.

    How It Compares

    See the comparison section below for how Amós stacks up against Madrid's leading modern Spanish and creative dining rooms.

    Compare Amós

    Amós vs. Similar Venues
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    AmósSpanish, Modern Cuisine€€€The Cantabrian flavours of award-winning chef Jesús Sánchez in the Spanish capital. Choose between the Memoria menu (including dishes chosen from the à la carte) and another tasting-style option called Esencia.; Michelin Plate (2025); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Europe Ranked #450 (2025); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Europe Ranked #404 (2024); Michelin Plate (2024)Easy
    DiverXOProgressive - Asian, Creative€€€€Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    DSTAgEModern Spanish, Creative€€€€Michelin 2 StarUnknown
    Smoked RoomProgressive Asador, Contemporary€€€€Michelin 2 StarUnknown
    Paco RonceroCreative€€€€Michelin 2 StarUnknown
    CoqueSpanish, Creative€€€€Michelin 2 StarUnknown

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

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is lunch or dinner better at Amós?

    Lunch is the more practical choice — it runs Wednesday through Sunday, giving you a day more of availability than dinner, which is closed Sunday. The format (Memoria or Esencia menus) is the same either way, so the decision comes down to your schedule rather than a meaningful quality difference. If you want Sunday in Salamanca with a proper sit-down meal, Amós is one of the few serious modern Spanish options open for midday service.

    Can Amós accommodate groups?

    The venue database doesn't specify private dining or group capacity, so check the venue's official channels before assuming it works for larger parties. What is confirmed: Amós operates tight two-hour service windows (1:30–3:30 pm lunch, 8:30–10:30 pm dinner), which limits the kind of open-ended group pacing you'd get at a more casual room. For a group dinner with no time pressure, DSTAgE or Coque may be better fits — both have documented private dining infrastructure.

    Does Amós handle dietary restrictions?

    No dietary information is confirmed in the available venue data. Tasting-menu restaurants in this tier — Michelin Plate, Opinionated About Dining-ranked — routinely accommodate restrictions with advance notice, but you should confirm directly before booking. The two-menu structure (Memoria and Esencia) may limit flexibility compared to a full à la carte room.

    What should I wear to Amós?

    No dress code is confirmed in the venue data. Salamanca is Madrid's most polished residential district, and a Michelin Plate restaurant at a €€€ price point on Calle de José Ortega y Gasset implies a certain level of presentation — think neat and composed rather than casual. When in doubt, err toward what you'd wear to a business lunch in a European capital city.

    Is Amós worth the price?

    At €€€, yes — particularly if you want chef Jesús Sánchez's Cantabrian-rooted modern Spanish cooking without committing to the significantly higher spend of Madrid's top-tier tasting rooms like DiverXO. Amós holds a Michelin Plate (2025) and ranked #450 in Opinionated About Dining's Top Restaurants in Europe for 2025, which puts it in credentialed territory at a price point that doesn't require an expense account. The Memoria menu, which blends à la carte selections into the format, also gives you more control than a fully locked tasting menu.

    Hours

    Monday
    Closed
    Tuesday
    Closed
    Wednesday
    1:30–3:30 pm, 8:30–10:30 pm
    Thursday
    1:30–3:30 pm, 8:30–10:30 pm
    Friday
    1:30–3:30 pm, 8:30–10:30 pm
    Saturday
    1:30–3:30 pm, 8:30–10:30 pm
    Sunday
    1:30–3:30 pm

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