Restaurant in Gdańsk, Poland
Niesztuka
210Pearl PointsMichelin-recognised modern cooking at mid-range prices.

About Niesztuka
Niesztuka holds Michelin Plate recognition for 2024 and 2025, making it the most credentialled modern cuisine option at the €€ price level in Gdańsk. On Mariacka street, the compact room and sourcing-led kitchen deliver consistent quality that justifies repeat visits. Book one to two weeks out; weekends in summer fill fast.
Second visit? Here's what to focus on
If you've eaten at Niesztuka once, you already know it earns its two consecutive Michelin Plate recognitions (2024 and 2025). The question on a return visit is sharper: does the kitchen hold its standard, and is the Mariacka address still the most considered modern cuisine option at this price point in Gdańsk? The short answer is yes. At the €€ price tier, Niesztuka remains the clearest argument in the city for what thoughtful sourcing can do to a menu without pushing the bill into the €€€ territory of Mercato or Villa.
The space
The address on Mariacka — one of Gdańsk's most architecturally dense pedestrian streets — puts Niesztuka inside a building that does a lot of atmospheric work before you sit down. The interior keeps things measured: the room is compact rather than cavernous, which means the dining experience feels deliberate rather than anonymous. Seating is close enough that the room has energy on a busy evening, but the layout does not sacrifice conversation. For a couple or a small group of three, the setting works well; larger parties should confirm space in advance given the scale of the room. If you are returning specifically to secure a particular table or corner, book early in the week and request it directly.
Sourcing and the menu
Niesztuka's Michelin Plate status in both 2024 and 2025 signals consistent kitchen discipline, and in the modern cuisine category at the €€ level that consistency is the differentiator. The Michelin Plate does not imply starred ambition , it marks quality cooking worth knowing about. At this price range in Gdańsk, the relevant question is whether the kitchen is doing something more considered than the neighbourhood bistro format, and Niesztuka is. The menu reads as modern in the sense that sourcing decisions are visible in the cooking: you are eating food that reflects choices about what to use and where it comes from, not a generic European menu assembled from convenience suppliers. For a returning visitor, this means the menu has enough movement across seasons to give a second visit its own logic. The dishes you ate in one visit will not be identical on the next, because the kitchen is working with what is available rather than running a fixed greatest-hits format. That variability is a feature, not a risk, if you approach it as a regular rather than a one-time tourist meal. Compared to Hewelke, which operates at the €€ level with a tighter, more traditional format, Niesztuka gives you more movement and ambition for a comparable spend. Compared to Fino or Eliksir, the register is more formal and more focused on the plate itself rather than the bar or drink-led experience.
How it sits in the broader Polish dining picture
Gdańsk punches above its tourism profile when it comes to serious cooking. Niesztuka is the local proof of that , holding Michelin recognition in a city that most international diners overlook in favour of Warsaw or Kraków. If you are travelling along the Baltic and want a reference point, Bottiglieria 1881 in Kraków and Rozbrat 20 in Warsaw operate at a higher price ceiling but offer a useful comparison for where Niesztuka sits in the national picture: it is the Gdańsk answer to those cities' mid-to-upper modern cuisine options, at a price that still feels like value. For the Tricity area specifically, Vinissimo in Sopot offers a wine-led alternative nearby if you want to vary across a multi-day trip. For modern cuisine benchmarks elsewhere in Europe, Frantzén in Stockholm and Maison Lameloise in Chagny represent what the category looks like at the leading end , useful context for understanding how much value the €€ tier at Niesztuka actually represents. See also: Muga in Poznań and Giewont in Kościelisko for other regional benchmarks in Poland.
Booking and timing
Niesztuka's Google rating of 4.7 across 577 reviews puts it at the leading of Gdańsk's modern cuisine options by volume and sentiment combined. That consistent rating means the restaurant runs busy, particularly on weekends when the Mariacka area draws the highest foot traffic. Booking difficulty is rated Easy overall, but that does not mean walk-in reliable on a Friday or Saturday evening. A week's notice is sensible for midweek; for weekend bookings, two weeks is safer. The Michelin Plate recognition in consecutive years will keep drawing visitors specifically looking for it, so the booking window tightens in summer when Gdańsk's tourist season peaks. If your travel dates are fixed, book before you arrive.
Know Before You Go
- Address: Mariacka 2/3, 80-833 Gdańsk, Poland
- Cuisine: Modern Cuisine
- Price range: €€
- Awards: Michelin Plate 2024 and 2025
- Google rating: 4.7 (577 reviews)
- Booking difficulty: Easy , book 1–2 weeks out; 2 weeks minimum for weekend evenings in summer
- Leading for: Couples, small groups of 2–3, solo diners wanting a serious plate at a mid-range price
- Dress code: Not specified , smart casual is appropriate for the setting and price point
- Hours: Not listed , confirm directly before visiting
- Phone/Website: Not listed , check Google or local booking platforms for current contact details
How It Compares
See the full comparison below for how Niesztuka sits against the other serious options in Gdańsk.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Can Niesztuka accommodate groups?
Groups are possible given Niesztuka's address in a substantial building on Mariacka, but at the €€ modern cuisine level with Michelin Plate recognition two years running, demand is steady and tables fill. check the venue's official channels to confirm group availability and any minimum spend requirements before assuming a large booking is straightforward.
Is Niesztuka good for solo dining?
Yes. A Michelin Plate restaurant at €€ pricing on a pedestrian street in Gdańsk's old town is a solid solo call — you get serious cooking without the financial commitment of a higher price tier. The format is modern cuisine rather than omakase or counter dining, so a solo guest will typically be seated at a standard table.
Can I eat at the bar at Niesztuka?
Bar seating is not confirmed in the available venue data. Given Niesztuka's position as a Michelin Plate modern cuisine restaurant at Mariacka 2/3, it is worth calling ahead or checking when you book if bar or counter seating is a priority for you.
How far ahead should I book Niesztuka?
Book at least 1–2 weeks out, and more for weekend evenings. Niesztuka holds a 4.7 rating across over 577 reviews and carries back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition for 2024 and 2025, which puts consistent pressure on availability — especially during Gdańsk's summer tourist peak on Mariacka.
Location
Mariacka 2/3, 80-833 Gdańsk, Poland
Compare Niesztuka
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Niesztuka | Modern Cuisine | Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024) | Easy | , |
| Arco by Paco Pérez | Spanish | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | , |
| Tygle | Traditional Cuisine | Unknown | , | |
| Mercato | Modern Cuisine | Unknown | , | |
| Villa | Modern French | Unknown | , | |
| Hewelke | Modern Cuisine | Unknown | , |
A quick look at how Niesztuka measures up.
Also Consider
- Arco by Paco Pérez, Spanish, €€€€
- Tygle, Traditional Cuisine, €€
- Mercato, Modern Cuisine, €€€
- Villa, Modern French, €€€
- Hewelke, Modern Cuisine, €
Within Gdańsk's modern cuisine options, Niesztuka sits at a specific and useful position: Michelin-recognised, mid-range in price, and more considered in execution than its cost implies. If you are deciding between it and Mercato (€€€) or Villa (€€€ Modern French), the question is whether the extra spend at those venues buys you enough additional experience to justify the step up. For most diners, Niesztuka at €€ with its Michelin Plate credentials is the stronger value proposition, you are not sacrificing ambition, just headroom on the bill.
At the lower end of the price scale, Hewelke (€) is the option for diners who want to spend less and are happy with a tighter, more casual format. It does not carry the Michelin recognition that Niesztuka has earned in consecutive years, and the ambition on the plate reflects that difference. Tygle (€€, Traditional Cuisine) is the right call if you want Polish cooking with a regional focus rather than modern cuisine technique, a different meal entirely, not a direct substitute. For most visitors choosing between Gdańsk's mid-range options, Niesztuka is the booking to prioritise.
The outlier in the set is Arco by Paco Pérez (€€€€), which operates at a significantly higher price point and offers a Spanish-led fine dining format that sits in a different category altogether. Book Arco if you want a special-occasion splurge with an international culinary pedigree. Book Niesztuka if you want the most credentialled modern cuisine experience in Gdańsk at a price that works for a regular dinner rather than a once-a-trip occasion.
Recognized By
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