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    Restaurant in Berlin, Germany

    Nobelhart & Schmutzig

    1,740pts

    50 Best-ranked. Book six weeks out.

    Nobelhart & Schmutzig, Restaurant in Berlin

    About Nobelhart & Schmutzig

    Nobelhart & Schmutzig holds a Michelin star and ranks #59 on the World's 50 Best Restaurants (2025), with a wine list that has earned consecutive Star Wine List top rankings since 2021. The ten-course set menu is built entirely on ingredients from Berlin and its surrounding regions. Book four to six weeks ahead minimum; midweek sittings run less expensive than weekends.

    Verdict

    If you have already been to Nobelhart & Schmutzig once, the question on a return visit is not whether the kitchen has drifted but whether the wine program has deepened your last experience enough to justify the commitment again. It has. Holding a Michelin star and ranking #59 on the World's 50 Best Restaurants list in 2025 (down from #43 in 2024, but after a peak of #17 in 2022), this is one of the few Berlin restaurants where the wine list is as carefully argued as the food. At €€€€ pricing and near-impossible booking conditions, Nobelhart & Schmutzig is not a casual re-visit. Book it when you want a full evening built around the question of what this specific corner of northern Europe actually tastes like.

    The Room and What You See

    The Friedrichstraße address gives nothing away from the outside. Inside, the counter seats facing the open kitchen are the ones to request: you watch Micha Schäfer's team work the menu in real time, and the sommeliers move between kitchen and guests with the ease of people who have thought carefully about how food and drink intersect at each course. The room is spare, with the visual focus pulled toward the pass rather than toward any decorative statement. If you want drama in the decor, look elsewhere. If you want to watch a tightly disciplined kitchen execute a philosophy course by course, the counter is where that happens.

    The Menu Structure

    The set menu runs to ten courses (the format has evolved over the years, with earlier versions running as six slightly larger courses). Every ingredient traces back to Berlin and its neighbouring regions. The philosophy is not theoretical: if it does not grow or exist within that catchment, it does not appear on the plate. Vegetables and dairy carry significant weight, with eggs described as foundational to the kitchen's identity, and meat present but not dominant. The kitchen makes its own butter. On a return visit, the interest is not in hunting for a dish you remember but in seeing what the season and the producers have made available since you were last here. The menu is genuinely different when the ingredients are different.

    The Wine Program

    This is where Nobelhart & Schmutzig earns its place as a destination rather than just a meal. The wine list has held consecutive Star Wine List leading rankings since 2021, with multiple placements in 2023, 2024, and four rankings in 2025 alone. The list runs to approximately 1,750 selections from an inventory of around 9,250 bottles, with Germany, France, Italy, and Spain as the core strengths. Pricing sits at the mid tier for a restaurant of this calibre: the markup structure is moderate, with a meaningful range of bottles available without requiring a second mortgage. The corkage fee is $25 for those who want to bring something personal. Sommeliers Greta Maiwald and Steve Hartzsch run the floor, and the pairings are not an afterthought. The wine and beverage program here also incorporates beers and distillates alongside wine, which fits the regional sourcing logic: if something fermented or distilled from the area merits attention, it gets it. On a second visit, ask the sommelier to steer the pairing toward German producers specifically. The depth on home-region bottles at this price tier is not replicated elsewhere in Berlin.

    For comparison, Rutz has an exceptional wine program of its own and is arguably easier to book, but its list leans more broadly European without the same regional-sourcing argument threading through both food and drink. FACIL offers strong contemporary European food at €€€€ in a quieter setting but does not carry the same wine list depth or the 50 Best credentials. If the wine experience is your primary driver, Nobelhart & Schmutzig is the clearest choice in Berlin.

    Booking and Timing

    This is genuinely difficult to book. With a 50 Best ranking and limited covers, demand consistently outpaces availability. Plan a minimum of four to six weeks ahead; for Friday or Saturday, longer. The venue operates Tuesday through Saturday from 6 pm, closing on Sunday and Monday. A practical note supported by the venue's own guidance: Tuesday through Thursday service tends to be less expensive than weekend sittings. If the total cost is a consideration, a midweek booking is the smarter call. Walk-in availability is not realistic at this level of demand.

    Nobelhart & Schmutzig sits on Friedrichstraße in the Kreuzberg-adjacent stretch of central Berlin. For context on where to stay nearby, see our full Berlin hotels guide. For other high-end dinner options in the city, the full Berlin restaurants guide covers the range. If you are building a wider trip around serious German cooking, Aqua in Wolfsburg, JAN in Munich, and Schwarzwaldstube in Baiersbronn are worth mapping alongside this booking. For Modern German cooking with a creative focus at a similarly serious level, Vendôme in Bergisch Gladbach, ES:SENZ in Grassau, and L.A. Jordan in Deidesheim represent strong alternatives with different regional anchors. Restaurant Haerlin in Hamburg is a strong northern German option if you prefer a more classical register. For a global benchmark at a similar philosophical commitment to produce, Le Bernardin in New York City is the standard reference for ingredient-led fine dining at this price tier.

    For more of Berlin's food and drink scene, see our guides to Berlin bars, Berlin wineries, and Berlin experiences.

    Quick reference: Michelin 1 Star | World's 50 Best #59 (2025) | €€€€ | Dinner only, Tue–Sat from 6 pm | Booking: 4–6 weeks minimum | Google rating: 4.3 (964 reviews).

    Compare Nobelhart & Schmutzig

    Value at a Glance: Nobelhart & Schmutzig
    VenuePriceValue
    Nobelhart & Schmutzig€€€€
    CODA Dessert Dining€€€€
    Rutz€€€€
    FACIL€€€€
    Horváth€€€€
    GOLVET€€€€

    Comparing your options in Berlin for this tier.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I wear to Nobelhart & Schmutzig?

    The room is counter-forward and deliberately unfussy — the philosophy is about produce, not ceremony. A dinner jacket is not expected. Think put-together but not formal: well-dressed casual works well here, and overdressing will feel out of place with the stripped-back aesthetic. The venue's 'Noble, Hard & Filthy' motto signals its ethos clearly.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Nobelhart & Schmutzig?

    Dinner only — Nobelhart & Schmutzig does not serve lunch. Service runs Tuesday through Saturday from 6 pm. If price is a factor, the Tuesday-to-Thursday window tends to offer a more accessible entry point compared to Friday and Saturday.

    How far ahead should I book Nobelhart & Schmutzig?

    Plan for a minimum of four to six weeks out, longer if you want a specific date or a counter seat by the open kitchen. With a current World's 50 Best ranking of #59 (2025) and Michelin recognition, demand is consistent and availability is tight. Same-week bookings are unlikely to succeed.

    Can Nobelhart & Schmutzig accommodate groups?

    The format — a set ten-course menu for the whole table — actually suits groups well in terms of pacing and logistics. The constraint is cover count: this is a small room, so larger parties need to plan well ahead and may need to confirm availability directly. Counter seats facing the kitchen are the most requested and least suited to larger configurations.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Nobelhart & Schmutzig?

    Yes, if the format fits you. The ten-course set menu is built entirely on ingredients sourced from Berlin and its surrounding regions — no exceptions. That constraint produces genuinely focused cooking rather than generic tasting-menu gestures. It ranked #59 on the World's 50 Best in 2025, which puts it in traceable company. If you want à la carte flexibility, this is the wrong room.

    Is Nobelhart & Schmutzig good for a special occasion?

    Yes — the combination of counter theatre, a 1,750-selection wine list with sommelier guidance from Greta Maiwald and Steve Hartzsch, and a kitchen that talks you through the sourcing makes for an evening with real substance. It is a better fit for occasions where the meal itself is the point, rather than a backdrop for conversation. For a more intimate private-room experience, FACIL or GOLVET may suit better.

    Is Nobelhart & Schmutzig worth the price?

    At €€€€ with a ten-course format, it is in Berlin's top price tier — but the wine program (Star Wine List top rankings four consecutive years, wine priced at $$, corkage €25) gives strong value relative to comparable European tasting menus. The 2025 World's 50 Best #59 ranking is the clearest external benchmark. If you are comparing against Rutz or Horváth at a lower price point, the gap in ambition and sourcing rigour is real.

    Hours

    Monday
    Closed
    Tuesday
    6 pm–12 am
    Wednesday
    6 pm–12 am
    Thursday
    6 pm–12 am
    Friday
    6 pm–12 am
    Saturday
    6 pm–12 am
    Sunday
    Closed

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