Restaurant in Oslo, Norway
Central Oslo Table

Dinner Restaurant occupies a central Oslo address on Stortingsgata, with easy booking and a convenient location for city-centre plans. Limited public data on cuisine, price, and format makes it difficult to recommend with confidence over more documented alternatives. Explorers after verifiable Norwegian dining depth will find stronger options elsewhere in the city.
If you are deciding between Dinner Restaurant at Stortingsgata 22 and Oslo's more decorated dining options, the honest answer is that limited public data makes a confident recommendation difficult. What is clear: the address places it in central Oslo, within easy reach of the city's main cultural strip, which matters both for dining-in and for anyone considering whether a delivery or takeout order from this part of town makes logistical sense. For a food-focused explorer who wants depth and verifiable credentials before booking, the gaps in the record here are worth weighing against the more documented alternatives in the city.
Dinner Restaurant sits on Stortingsgata, one of Oslo's central arteries running alongside the National Theatre and the western edge of the city centre. The location is convenient — close to public transport and the kind of area where you will find both quick-stop options and more considered dining. That central positioning is a practical plus if you are coordinating around other Oslo plans, whether that is a concert, a museum visit, or an early evening before heading to one of the city's bars. For context on what else is nearby and worth your time, the full Oslo restaurants guide and Oslo bars guide cover the broader neighbourhood picture.
On the question of takeout and delivery — which is worth addressing directly given how many diners in central Oslo use off-premise options , the absence of confirmed delivery infrastructure, menu data, or packaging details in the public record means this is not a venue Pearl can recommend specifically for that use case. If food that travels well is a priority, Oslo has more trackable options. The central location does at least suggest that walk-in collection, if offered, would be direct from most of the city centre.
For the explorer-type diner who wants to use an Oslo trip to engage seriously with Norwegian food culture, the time investment is better directed toward venues with documented culinary programs. Oslo's dining scene rewards research: Maaemo and Kontrast represent the high-commitment end, while Hot Shop offers a more accessible entry into the New Nordic conversation. If you are building an Oslo itinerary around food, the Oslo experiences guide and Oslo hotels guide are useful companions for logistics.
Timing-wise, Oslo dining in general is most rewarding in the summer months when daylight is long and the city's food culture opens up , outdoor seating becomes available, and the seasonal produce that drives much of Norwegian cooking is at its peak. Autumn brings a second wave of interest around game and foraged ingredients. If you are planning a trip around food specifically, May through September is the window that gives you the most options across the city's restaurant scene, from casual to formal.
Norway's broader restaurant geography is also worth knowing if Oslo is your base. RE-NAA in Stavanger, Speilsalen in Trondheim, Lysverket in Bergen, and Under in Lindesnes are all worth building a trip around if you are serious about Norwegian fine dining. Closer to Bergen, Glime Restaurant in Hardanger Fjord and MiraBelle by Ørjan Johannessen in Bekkjarvik offer strong regional cases for extending your itinerary beyond the capital.
Booking difficulty is assessed as easy. No confirmed reservation platform, phone number, or advance-booking window is available in the public record for Dinner Restaurant, so contacting the venue directly or checking current availability through a walk-in is the most reliable approach. Given the central Oslo location, walk-in availability during off-peak hours , weekday lunches or early weekday evenings , is a reasonable assumption, though this cannot be confirmed without current operational data.
Address: Stortingsgata 22, 0161 Oslo, Norway. Price range, hours, dress code, and seat count are not confirmed in the public record. For Oslo dining more broadly, Bar Amour and Mon Oncle are Pearl-tracked options in the city with more available detail for planning purposes.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dinner Restaurant | Easy | — | |||
| Maaemo | New Nordic, Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Kontrast | New Nordic, Scandinavian | €€€€ | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| Hot Shop | New Nordic, Modern Cuisine | €€€ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Statholdergaarden | Modern European, Classic Cuisine | €€€€ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Arakataka | Nordic , Norwegian | €€ | Unknown | — |
How Dinner Restaurant stacks up against the competition.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.