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    Restaurant in Palma, Spain · Inside Convent de La Missió, Grand Luxury Boutique Hotel

    Marc Fosh

    850Pearl Points

    One star, farm-to-table, book ahead.

    Marc Fosh, Restaurant in Palma

    About Marc Fosh

    The only Michelin-starred British chef cooking in Spain operates out of a converted 17th-century seminary in central Palma. At the €€€€ price point, Marc Fosh delivers produce-driven Mediterranean cooking anchored to the island's own farm. Lunch is the value entry point; dinner's Aromas del Mediterráneo menu is the full expression. Book three to four weeks out minimum.

    The Verdict

    A converted 17th-century seminary on a quiet Palma backstreet is where you'll find the only Michelin-starred British chef cooking on Spanish soil. Marc Fosh holds one Michelin star (2024) and a Google rating of 4.6 across more than 1,000 reviews — numbers that reflect a restaurant doing something consistently right over many years. At the €€€€ price point, the question is whether it earns its place in your Palma itinerary. The answer is yes, with conditions: come at lunch if you want value, come in the Mediterranean growing season if you want the cooking at its peak, and book well ahead either way.

    Setting the Scene

    The restaurant sits inside the Convent de La Missió hotel, a rigorously restored seminary that keeps its architectural bones intact while running a minimalist interior with brightly lit spaces and a patio terrace. The atmosphere is calm rather than buzzy — this is not a room that hums with ambient energy after a long service. It is quiet, composed, and better suited to a meal where conversation matters than one where you want to feel the city's pulse. For a livelier room at a similar quality level, Aromata or Adrián Quetglas will serve you better. Marc Fosh is the choice when the food is the point.

    The Cooking and the Season

    The editorial angle here matters: this is a kitchen built around what Mallorca produces, and what Mallorca produces shifts substantially across the year. Most of the ingredients come from the restaurant's own farm, Finca Son Mir, which means the menus rotate with what is actually growing rather than what is available from a supplier's catalogue. In practical terms, this makes timing your visit a real consideration. Spring and autumn are when Mediterranean produce is at its most varied , early spring brings legumes, wild greens, and young lamb; late summer into autumn delivers the island's stone fruits, tomatoes, and game. If you are visiting in the height of summer, the kitchen still has excellent raw material to work with, but the range is narrower. A winter visit is the least compelling from a seasonal produce standpoint, though the cooking technique and the room remain constant.

    Menu structure gives you options across price bands. At lunch, there is a weekly menu alongside more substantial set options. The Aromas del Mediterráneo menu is reserved for dinner. If you are calibrating value, the lunch menus offer the most accessible entry point into Michelin-starred cooking in central Palma, and the kitchen is running the same produce and the same technique regardless of which service you attend. This is worth knowing: the gap between a Marc Fosh lunch and a Marc Fosh dinner is primarily a matter of menu length and price, not of kitchen effort or quality.

    Simply constructed yet technically precise cooking style , seasonal Mediterranean ingredients treated with restraint and creativity , places this squarely in a European fine dining tradition that values clarity over complexity. It is a different register to the more theatrical work happening at DiverXO in Madrid or the deep-rooted Basque formalism of Arzak in San Sebastián. If you have eaten at El Celler de Can Roca in Girona or Azurmendi in Larrabetzu and found yourself wanting something quieter and more produce-forward, Marc Fosh is a natural fit. For readers planning a broader Spain trip, it sits comfortably alongside Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona or Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María as a one-star worth the stop.

    Booking and Hours

    Restaurant is closed on Mondays and Sundays. Tuesday through Saturday it runs lunch from 1:00 PM to 2:30 PM and dinner from 7:30 PM to 9:00 PM. Those are tight windows, particularly the lunch sitting, and with a Michelin star drawing visitors year-round to an island with a concentrated tourist season, booking difficulty is real. Plan to reserve at least three to four weeks out during summer. If you are travelling in the shoulder season (April–May or October–November) you may find slightly more availability, but this is not a walk-in restaurant at any time of year. Booking is effectively mandatory.

    Address , Carrer de la Missió, 7 , puts you in Palma's historic centre, walkable from most of the old town and a short ride from the waterfront. Parking in this quarter is limited; arriving on foot or by taxi is the practical choice.

    Who Should Book

    Marc Fosh works leading for food-focused travellers who want a single serious meal in Palma and value produce-driven cooking over theatrical spectacle. It is a good choice for a special occasion dinner or a leisurely lunch when you have the afternoon free. It is less well-suited to large groups (the intimate room and tight service windows constrain that), and it is not the place for a quick pre-theatre meal. If you want Palma's broader dining picture before you commit, our full Palma restaurants guide covers the range, and our Palma hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide can help you build a fuller itinerary around the meal.

    For something quieter before or after dinner, Stagier Bar and Bàrbar are both worth knowing in the neighbourhood. And if Marc Fosh is fully booked on your dates, the comparison section below maps your next-leading options in the city.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Marc Fosh?

    For produce-driven modern cuisine in Palma, yes. Marc Fosh holds a 2024 Michelin star and sources the majority of ingredients from its own farm, Finca Son Mir, which gives the menus a seasonal coherence you won't find at most €€€€ restaurants in the city. The Aromas del Mediterráneo menu, available at dinner only, is the flagship option. If you're not interested in set menus or Mediterranean ingredient-focused cooking, the value case weakens.

    What should I wear to Marc Fosh?

    The dining room is described as minimalist and meticulous, set inside a converted 17th-century seminary. That context points toward neat, considered dressing rather than formal wear — think well-put-together rather than black tie. The restaurant hasn't published a dress code, so err on the side of dressed up if you're unsure.

    Does Marc Fosh handle dietary restrictions?

    The kitchen has been publicly noted for its plant-based range, and commentary from Michelin's own inspectors flagged the capacity for more plant-based dishes as a strength. check the venue's official channels ahead of your visit to confirm specific dietary needs, since menus rotate seasonally around what Finca Son Mir produces.

    What are alternatives to Marc Fosh in Palma?

    Zaranda is the direct comparison for Michelin-level fine dining on the island. DINS Santi Taura offers a similarly local, product-led approach at a comparable price point. Adrián Quetglas skews more international in technique. La Bodeguilla and Aromata are lower-stakes options if you want quality without the commitment of a tasting menu format.

    Can Marc Fosh accommodate groups?

    The restaurant operates inside the Convent de La Missió hotel and has a patio-terrace in addition to its main dining room, which gives some flexibility. Dinner sittings run from 7:30 PM to 9:00 PM and the window is narrow, so larger groups should book well in advance and confirm capacity directly. It's not a sprawling venue.

    Is Marc Fosh good for a special occasion?

    Yes, with the right expectations. The setting — a restored 17th-century seminary, minimalist interior, patio-terrace — provides a clear sense of occasion without being theatrical. The Michelin star and chef's profile mean the meal carries weight. It works for a serious dinner between two people; for larger group celebrations, confirm space availability before committing.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Marc Fosh?

    Dinner is the stronger option if you want the full range: the Aromas del Mediterráneo menu is only available in the evening. Lunch has its own menus including a weekly set option that likely represents better value at €€€€ pricing. If budget is a consideration, the lunch sitting from 1:00 PM to 2:30 PM is the more accessible entry point to the same kitchen.

    Location

    Carrer de la Missió, 7, Centre, 07003 Palma, Illes Balears, Spain

    Palma, Spain

    Compare Marc Fosh

    Full Comparison: Marc Fosh
    VenueCuisineAwardsBooking Difficulty
    Marc FoshModern CuisineHard
    ZarandaMallorcan, CreativeMichelin 1 StarUnknown
    DINS Santi TauraMallorcan, Modern CuisineUnknown
    La BodeguillaWine Bar, Traditional CuisineUnknown
    Adrián QuetglasModern CuisineUnknown
    AromataContemporaryUnknown

    A quick look at how Marc Fosh measures up.

    Also Consider

    At the €€€€ tier in Palma, Marc Fosh competes directly with Zaranda and DINS Santi Taura. All three carry serious culinary credentials, but they serve different needs. Marc Fosh is the most internationally accessible of the three, the cooking draws on Mediterranean produce and technique in a way that travels well for visitors without deep knowledge of Mallorcan tradition. Zaranda leans harder into Mallorcan creative cuisine and may reward travellers who want a more rooted, island-specific experience. DINS Santi Taura goes furthest into strictly Mallorcan culinary heritage, making it the right call for diners specifically seeking local food culture over a broader Mediterranean register. If you can only book one €€€€ restaurant in Palma and you want the Michelin credential with the most approachable entry point, Marc Fosh wins on that count.

    One tier down, Adrián Quetglas at €€€ is the sharpest alternative if your primary concern is value. The cooking is modern and accomplished, the room is livelier, and the price is meaningfully lower than Marc Fosh's evening menus. For readers who want contemporary cooking without committing to a full fine dining spend, Adrián Quetglas is the practical first choice. Aromata, also at €€€, trades on a more vibrant atmosphere and contemporary Palma sensibility, better suited to a group dinner or a night when energy matters as much as the food.

    On booking difficulty, Marc Fosh and Zaranda are both hard to secure on short notice during the Mallorcan summer season. Adrián Quetglas and Aromata are somewhat more accessible. If you are planning a last-minute trip, start with those two and use Marc Fosh as the anchor booking you make as soon as your dates are confirmed. For a lower-commitment evening with good wine and traditional cooking, La Bodeguilla at €€ is a genuine option, a different register entirely, but worth knowing when the fine dining budget is spoken for.

    Hours

    Monday
    closed
    Tuesday
    1 PM-2:30 PM 7:30 PM-9 PM
    Wednesday
    1 PM-2:30 PM 7:30 PM-9 PM
    Thursday
    1 PM-2:30 PM 7:30 PM-9 PM
    Friday
    1 PM-2:30 PM 7:30 PM-9 PM
    Saturday
    1 PM-2:30 PM 7:30 PM-9 PM
    Sunday
    closed

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