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    Restaurant in Sanremo, Italy

    Paolo e Barbara

    650Pearl Points

    Book early. Liguria's finest, four nights only.

    Paolo e Barbara, Restaurant in Sanremo

    About Paolo e Barbara

    Paolo e Barbara holds a Michelin star (2024) and has been the most serious address for Ligurian cooking in San Remo since 1987. Dinner only, four nights a week, with kitchen garden produce driving a menu built on regional fish and vegetables. Book four to six weeks out minimum — availability is tight and the format rewards commitment.

    Verdict: Worth the effort to book, but plan well ahead

    Getting a table at Paolo e Barbara takes real commitment. With dinner service running just four nights a week (Wednesday through Sunday, 7:30 PM to 10 PM only), no lunch service at all, and a Michelin star drawing diners from across the Italian Riviera, availability is tight. Book at minimum four to six weeks out, particularly for Friday and Saturday evenings. If you are travelling to San Remo specifically for this meal, treat securing the reservation as the first task, not an afterthought. The effort is justified: this is the most serious Ligurian cooking in the city, and the kitchen garden-to-table model gives the food a coherence that is genuinely difficult to find at this price tier.

    About Paolo e Barbara

    Paolo e Barbara has been running from the same address on Via Roma since 1987, which in the context of Italian fine dining says something meaningful about consistency. Chef Paolo Masieri has spent nearly four decades refining his interpretation of western Ligurian cooking, a cuisine built around the region's exceptional vegetables and coastal fish rather than the meat-heavy traditions you find further inland. What has changed more recently is the degree of self-sufficiency: the restaurant now operates kitchen gardens that supply the majority of its produce, including eggs, olive oil, and a small quantity of wine. That shift from sourcing to growing your own is not a marketing detail here — it directly shapes what arrives on the plate and creates a seasonal specificity that menus at comparable price points often only gesture toward.

    The cooking sits at the intersection of tradition and restrained reinterpretation. Masieri takes regional recipes as a starting point and refines them without dismantling what makes them recognisable. The cappelletti filled with San Remo crayfish and served in a vegetable and Abruzzo saffron broth is a useful illustration: the format is classically Ligurian, the sourcing is hyper-local, and the execution is controlled enough to have held a Michelin star since at least 2024. For the food-focused traveller who wants to understand what western Liguria actually tastes like rather than a generic Italian tasting menu, Paolo e Barbara is the right booking.

    Front of house is managed by Barbara, who handles both service and wine recommendations. At the €€€€ tier in a mid-sized Riviera city, the quality of the wine guidance matters: you are unlikely to arrive with deep knowledge of Ligurian producers, and a well-briefed sommelier effectively doubles the value of the meal. The pairing here is functional rather than theatrical, which suits the register of the cooking.

    The Room and Atmosphere

    Paolo e Barbara operates at the quieter, more considered end of the fine dining spectrum. The evening service across four nights a week suggests a deliberate pace rather than volume-driven turnover, and that intention shows in the ambient feel of the room. This is a conversation-friendly dining environment, the kind of setting where you can hear the table next to you without being distracted by it. If you are looking for the buzzy, high-energy atmosphere of a coastal Italian restaurant on a summer Saturday, this is not the right venue. The mood is composed. For a special occasion dinner or a long meal with a serious food and wine companion, that composure is a feature, not a limitation.

    Who Should Book

    Paolo e Barbara makes most sense for three types of visitors: food-focused travellers who want a specific Ligurian fine dining experience rather than a generic Italian one; couples or small groups marking a meaningful occasion; and diners who appreciate the farm-to-table model operating at a level of seriousness that goes beyond the phrase itself. It is not the right call if you want flexibility on timing, if you need to accommodate a large group, or if your primary interest is the San Remo social scene rather than the food. For context on the broader dining options in the city, see our full San Remo restaurants guide.

    Practical Details

    Dinner only. Wednesday through Sunday, 7:30 PM to 10 PM. Closed Monday and Tuesday. No lunch service is listed. Address: Via Roma, 47, Sanremo. Price range is €€€€, placing it at the leading of the San Remo market. Google rating: 4.4 across 149 reviews, which is a credible signal at this price point. Michelin 1 Star (2024). There is no published booking method in our data — contact directly via the restaurant address or check current booking platforms. Smart casual to formal dress is appropriate for a Michelin-starred room at this price tier.

    VenueLocationPriceBooking Lead TimeLunch AvailableMichelin Stars
    Paolo e BarbaraSan Remo€€€€4–6 weeksNo1 Star (2024)
    Balzi RossiVentimiglia€€€€2–4 weeksCheck directMichelin-recognised
    Quattro PassiMarina del Cantone€€€€3–5 weeksYes (seasonal)2 Stars
    UliassiSenigallia€€€€6–8 weeksSeasonal3 Stars

    For further exploration of the San Remo area, see our San Remo bars guide, our San Remo wineries guide, and our San Remo experiences guide.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should a first-timer know about Paolo e Barbara?

    This is a Michelin-starred restaurant that has been run by the same couple since 1987, with chef Paolo Masieri cooking and Barbara managing the floor and wine service. The kitchen grows much of its own produce, including eggs and olive oil, and the menu centres on western Ligurian ingredients — local fish, vegetables, and regional recipes reinterpreted rather than reinvented. It is a dinner-only operation running four nights a week, so treat the booking as the anchor point of your visit rather than a casual add-on.

    How far ahead should I book Paolo e Barbara?

    Book at least three to four weeks ahead, particularly for Friday and Saturday. With service running only Wednesday through Sunday evenings, seats are finite and demand from both locals and visitors to the Italian Riviera is real. If you are travelling specifically to eat here, confirm the reservation before you book travel.

    What are alternatives to Paolo e Barbara in San Remo?

    Paolo e Barbara is the clear first choice in San Remo for Michelin-level Ligurian cooking, but if you cannot get a table, Quattro Passi in Nerano holds two Michelin stars and offers a comparable southern Italian fine dining format at a higher price point. For a different register entirely, Dal Pescatore in Mantua is a three-generation family restaurant with a similar ethos around regional produce and long-term continuity.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Paolo e Barbara?

    Dinner is the only option. Paolo e Barbara does not offer lunch service, so there is no choice to make. Service runs Wednesday through Sunday from 7:30 PM to 10 PM, and the restaurant is closed Monday and Tuesday.

    What should I wear to Paolo e Barbara?

    The venue holds a Michelin star and is priced at €€€€, which signals a considered rather than casual dress expectation. A jacket for men and equivalent effort for women is a reasonable read. The restaurant has been operating at this level since 1987, and the front-of-house is managed by Barbara Masieri personally, which suggests a room that takes presentation seriously.

    Is Paolo e Barbara good for a special occasion?

    Yes, with one practical caveat: this works best for two people or a small group who are genuinely interested in Ligurian cooking, not just a prestigious room. The Michelin star, the longevity since 1987, and Barbara's personal wine guidance make it a strong setting for a birthday, anniversary, or a deliberate food-focused dinner. Groups who want a livelier atmosphere or a more flexible menu format may find a different style of restaurant serves the occasion better.

    Location

    Via Roma, 47, 18038 Sanremo IM, Italy

    Sanremo, Italy

    Compare Paolo e Barbara

    Paolo e Barbara Side-by-Side
    VenueCuisineAwardsBooking Difficulty
    Paolo e BarbaraLigurian, Country cookingHard
    Atelier Moessmer Norbert NiederkoflerItalian, CreativeMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Dal PescatoreItalian, Italian ContemporaryMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Osteria FrancescanaProgressive Italian, CreativeMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Quattro PassiItalian, Mediterranean CuisineMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    RealeProgressive Italian, Modern CuisineMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown

    What to weigh when choosing between Paolo e Barbara and alternatives.

    Also Consider

    At the €€€€ tier, Paolo e Barbara occupies a specific and defensible position: it is the most coherent expression of western Ligurian cooking at the fine dining level in its immediate geography. That specificity is both its strength and its constraint. If you want to eat the food of this particular coastline, San Remo crayfish, local olive oil, coastal vegetables, cooked with thirty-plus years of refinement and a Michelin star behind it, there is no closer comparison in San Remo itself. Balzi Rossi in Ventimiglia is the nearest peer in terms of Ligurian identity and coastal setting, and worth considering if your itinerary puts you closer to the French border.

    If you are willing to travel further for a higher star count, the comparison set changes. Quattro Passi in Marina del Cantone holds two Michelin stars and offers a Mediterranean-leaning menu with more flexibility on service times, including lunch. Dal Pescatore in Runate and Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler in Brunico both operate at the €€€€ tier with stronger star counts, but neither offers the specific Ligurian coastal register that Paolo e Barbara delivers. For the most technically ambitious Italian cooking at this price tier, Osteria Francescana in Modena and Reale in Castel di Sangro are the benchmarks, though both require dedicated journeys rather than a detour from a Riviera itinerary.

    The practical decision is this: if you are already in San Remo or the immediate Ligurian coast, Paolo e Barbara is the clear booking at its price point. If you are building a dedicated Italian fine dining trip and comparing it against venues like Piazza Duomo in Alba, Le Calandre in Rubano, or Enrico Bartolini in Milan, factor in that Paolo e Barbara trades star count for regional specificity and a family-run intimacy that the larger, higher-starred operations do not replicate. For diners who value that, it holds its own.

    Hours

    Monday
    closed
    Tuesday
    closed
    Wednesday
    7:30 PM-10 PM
    Thursday
    7:30 PM-10 PM
    Friday
    7:30 PM-10 PM
    Saturday
    7:30 PM-10 PM
    Sunday
    7:30 PM-10 PM

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