Restaurant in Madrid, Spain
Ricardo Sanz Wellington
700ptsJapanese technique, Iberian ingredients. Book it.

About Ricardo Sanz Wellington
Ricardo Sanz Wellington earns its La Liste 89-point ranking (2026) through a consistent and disciplined argument: Japanese technique applied to premium Iberian ingredients, from Ebro delta rice nigiri to carabinero prawn usuzukuri. It sits in the upper tier of Madrid fine dining without the booking difficulty of DiverXO, and works best for food-focused visitors who want precision over theatrics. Lunch service is the recommended entry point.
Should You Book Ricardo Sanz Wellington?
If you have eaten here before, the honest answer to whether it is worth returning is yes — but with a specific reason to come back. The kitchen's sourcing logic has deepened over time, and the combination of Japanese technique applied to Iberian ingredients remains one of the more coherent cooking propositions in Madrid. Ricardo Sanz Wellington earned 89 points in the La Liste Leading Restaurants 2026 ranking, which positions it firmly in the upper tier of the city's fine dining circuit without quite reaching the avant-garde extremes of DiverXO. For a returning visitor, the question is less "Is it good?" and more "What has changed?" The answer lies mostly on the plate: ingredient sourcing continues to define what makes this restaurant distinct.
What the Kitchen Actually Does
The cooking here is built around a specific argument: that the leading Japanese techniques are made more interesting, not less, when applied to premium Iberian produce. Nigiri is prepared with rice from the Ebro delta — one of Spain's most prized rice-growing regions , rather than Japanese short-grain imports. Carabinero prawns, among the most flavour-dense shellfish available on the Iberian coast, arrive as usuzukuri with a salsa made from their own coral. Tuna tataki is paired with vitello tonnato, which is a deliberate nod to Mediterranean cooking that sits more comfortably on the plate than it sounds. The signature "huevos rotos" replaces the traditional jamón with fingers of Canary Island potatoes and bluefin tuna , a dish that reads as a conversation between Spanish comfort food and Japanese product obsession.
This is not fusion in the careless sense. The kitchen's sourcing choices are the point: every major dish appears to be built around an Iberian ingredient that can hold its own against the precision of Japanese preparation. That discipline is what justifies the €€€€ price tier. If you are eating here for the first time, the tasting menu is the clearer path , it sequences the sourcing story in a way the à la carte does not. If you are returning, the à la carte gives you the chance to focus on whichever ingredients are at peak season.
Timing and Practical Details
The restaurant is open Tuesday through Saturday for both lunch (1:30 PM to 4:30 PM) and dinner (8:30 PM to 11:30 PM), and on Monday for lunch and dinner as well. Sunday is closed. The optimal visit depends on what you want from the meal. Lunch in Madrid's Salamanca neighbourhood carries a different pace than dinner , quieter, more suited to conversation, and often the format preferred by local professionals on expense accounts. Dinner service runs later into the evening and will feel more formal in atmosphere. Both services are available six days a week, so booking difficulty is low relative to harder-to-access Madrid restaurants like DiverXO, where reservations open months in advance and fill almost immediately.
The restaurant sits within the Hotel Wellington on Calle Velázquez 6 in the Salamanca district , Madrid's most consistently upscale neighbourhood. The hotel setting means the room has a formality to it that suits a business meal or a considered celebration more than a casual evening out. The sommelier programme is worth engaging: the pairing options include wine, sake, tea, and beer, which is a broader set of options than most Madrid fine dining rooms offer at this level. Do not skip the mochis at the end of the meal , they are specifically flagged in the La Liste notes and appear to be one of the kitchen's more considered finishes.
Who Should Book This
Ricardo Sanz Wellington works leading for food-focused travellers who want a Spanish fine dining experience that does not default to the usual markers of modern Spanish cuisine , no foam-heavy abstraction, no theatrical tableside theatrics. If you are building a Madrid restaurant itinerary and want contrast alongside something like DSTAgE or Coque, this sits in a different register: more composed, more ingredient-led, less about narrative and more about the quality of what is on the plate. For context within Spain's broader high-end dining circuit, it is a different proposition from El Celler de Can Roca in Girona, Arzak in San Sebastián, or Quique Dacosta in Dénia , less about chef mythology, more about a specific cross-cultural cooking logic applied consistently over time.
Explore our full Madrid restaurants guide, our full Madrid hotels guide, our full Madrid bars guide, our full Madrid wineries guide, and our full Madrid experiences guide for broader context on where Ricardo Sanz Wellington sits in the city's overall offering.
Compare Ricardo Sanz Wellington
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ricardo Sanz Wellington | Easy | — | |
| DiverXO | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| DSTAgE | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Smoked Room | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Paco Roncero | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Coque | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
A quick look at how Ricardo Sanz Wellington measures up.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I eat at the bar at Ricardo Sanz Wellington?
The venue database does not confirm a dedicated bar counter for dining, and the restaurant operates on a sit-down format attached to the Hotel Wellington on Calle Velázquez. If a bar experience is your priority, call ahead to confirm seating options before booking. For counter omakase formats in Madrid, Smoked Room offers a different kind of chef-facing experience.
Is lunch or dinner better at Ricardo Sanz Wellington?
Lunch is the sharper call here. The kitchen runs the same hours for both services — 1:30 PM to 4:30 PM and 8:30 PM to 11:30 PM Tuesday through Saturday, with Monday lunch also available — but Madrid fine dining lunches tend to be less rushed and often better value when tasting menus are involved. If you want the full Ricardo Sanz tasting menu experience with a sommelier-led pairing (wine, sake, or tea), lunch gives you more room to pace through it. Dinner suits the room's formal Salamanca setting if atmosphere matters to you.
Does Ricardo Sanz Wellington handle dietary restrictions?
The venue record does not specify a dietary restriction policy, so check the venue's official channels before booking. Given the format — a Japanese-Mediterranean tasting menu where ingredients like carabinero prawn, bluefin tuna, and egg-based dishes are central — pescatarian and shellfish-free requests may limit the experience significantly. Confirm in advance rather than assuming flexibility.
What should I order at Ricardo Sanz Wellington?
The La Liste citation specifically flags the nigiri made with Ebro delta rice, the carabinero prawn usuzukuri with coral salsa, and the tuna tataki with vitello tonnato as the dishes that define the kitchen's argument. The signature 'huevos rotos' — Canary Island potatoes and bluefin tuna in place of the usual ham — is the best single illustration of what Ricardo Sanz does differently. Take the sommelier's pairing advice: the option to pair with sake or tea rather than wine alone is worth using.
Hours
- Monday
- 1:30 PM-4:30 PM 8:30 PM-11:30 PM
- Tuesday
- 1:30 PM-4:30 PM 8:30 PM-11:30 PM
- Wednesday
- 1:30 PM-4:30 PM 8:30 PM-11:30 PM
- Thursday
- 1:30 PM-4:30 PM 8:30 PM-11:30 PM
- Friday
- 1:30 PM-4:30 PM 8:30 PM-11:30 PM
- Saturday
- 1:30 PM-4:30 PM 8:30 PM-11:30 PM
- Sunday
- closed
Recognized By
More restaurants in Madrid
- CoqueCoque holds 2 Michelin Stars, a Green Star, and 96 points on La Liste — making it one of Madrid's most credentialled restaurants. Run by the three Sandoval brothers across five distinct spaces, the evening is as much a service experience as a meal. Book well ahead: availability here is near impossible, and this is a venue worth planning a trip around.
- DiverXODiverXO is David Muñoz's three-Michelin-star flagship in Madrid, ranked #4 in the World's 50 Best (2024) and 98 points on La Liste (2026). The single "Flying Pigs Cuisine" tasting menu blends Asian technique with Spanish ingredients in deliberately provocative combinations. Booking difficulty is near-impossible — reserve three to four months out, and only come if you're ready for a long, high-energy evening with no à la carte option.
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