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    Restaurant in London, United Kingdom

    Pizarro

    370Pearl Points

    Solid ££ Spanish with Michelin recognition.

    Pizarro, Restaurant in London

    About Pizarro

    Pizarro on Bermondsey Street is one of London's most credible Spanish restaurants at the ££ price point — Michelin Plate recognised, OAD-ranked, and built around cleanly executed small plates and mains with an all-Spanish wine list. Book for a relaxed special occasion or an early evening with a focus on the drinks. Easy to secure a table.

    A Bermondsey Spanish that earns its place at the ££ price point

    At the ££ price range, Pizarro on Bermondsey Street gives you a proper full-service Spanish restaurant with Michelin recognition and a seat in the Opinionated About Dining Casual Europe rankings — currently sitting at #775 for 2025, up from #634 the previous year. For context, that places it comfortably above the noise of generic tapas bars while staying well below the splurge tier. If you want seriously executed Spanish food without a £100-per-head commitment, this is one of the more credible options in London right now.

    The room sits a few doors down from José, chef Jose Pizarro's original tapas bar, and the format reflects that lineage: small plates share the menu with main courses, so you can graze or go full table-service depending on your preference. Dishes like croquetas, boquerones, padrón peppers, and presa Ibérica point to a kitchen that takes its Spanish sourcing seriously and executes cleanly rather than elaborately. The wine list is all-Spanish, which is both a commitment and a genuine asset — it gives the drinks program a coherence that many pan-European restaurants miss.

    The drinks program: a reason to arrive early

    The all-Spanish wine list is the strongest argument for treating Pizarro as a drinks-first destination, not just a dinner stop. Spanish wine has one of the most compelling value curves in Europe right now, from Galician whites to Ribera del Duero reds, and a list built entirely around the Iberian peninsula means the pairings are thought through rather than assembled from a generic European selection. If you care about what's in the glass, booking an earlier slot and working through the list at pace is a genuinely good strategy here. The room has the energy to support a longer evening without feeling pressured, and a glass of something from the wine list alongside a round of small plates is the format this kitchen is built for.

    Atmosphere and timing: go early in the week if conversation matters

    Bermondsey Street has settled into its identity as a destination strip rather than a passing neighbourhood, which means Pizarro draws a mix of after-work professionals, food-minded locals, and visitors staying in the area. The room has a stylish edge without veering into formal territory. Energy levels track closely with the calendar: midweek early evenings are the call if you want a room where conversation doesn't require raised voices. Friday and Saturday evenings shift the atmosphere toward something louder and more social, worth knowing if you're planning around a date or a business dinner where the table talk matters as much as the food.

    For a special occasion that isn't a formal celebration, Pizarro hits a useful register. It reads as considered without being ceremonial, which makes it a better fit for a birthday dinner with friends or a relaxed anniversary meal than for a proposal or a milestone where theatre is part of the brief. The price point also means you can order generously, a full round of small plates, a main each, and a few glasses from the Spanish list, without the bill becoming a conversation point.

    Booking and logistics at 194 Bermondsey Street

    Pizarro carries a Google rating of 4.4 across 1,316 reviews, which at that volume is a more reliable signal than a handful of critic mentions. Bookings are currently rated as easy to secure, so you don't need to plan weeks ahead, but for a Friday or Saturday evening, booking a few days out is sensible rather than turning up on the assumption of a walk-in. The address is 194 Bermondsey Street, SE1, within easy reach of London Bridge station. There is no dress code attached to the venue, and the ££ pricing and stylish-casual room tone suggest smart casual is the right read.

    If you're building a broader London day or evening around this part of the city, our full London restaurants guide, London bars guide, and London hotels guide have further options across the capital. For Spanish elsewhere in the world, ZURRIOLA in Tokyo and Arco by Paco Pérez in Gdańsk are two worth knowing about.

    How Pizarro compares to other London Spanish restaurants

    Within the London Spanish category, the most direct comparison is Cambio de Tercio, which sits at a similar price tier and has a longer track record in the city. Cambio leans more theatrical in its cooking and presentation; Pizarro is cleaner and more restrained. If you want spectacle, Cambio is the call. If you want well-sourced, clearly executed Spanish food with a serious wine list, Pizarro has the edge. Donostia is the other strong alternative, focusing on Basque-influenced pintxos and small plates, a better choice if you want to stay strictly in bar-snack territory without committing to a full meal format. Pizarro's hybrid small-plates-plus-mains structure gives it more flexibility for groups with different appetites.

    If you're also considering broader London dining beyond the Spanish category, our guide covers standout options across price points, from approachable neighbourhood restaurants to destination tables. You can also explore London experiences and London wineries through Pearl. For destination dining beyond the capital, The Fat Duck in Bray, L'Enclume in Cartmel, Moor Hall in Aughton, Gidleigh Park in Chagford, Hand and Flowers in Marlow, and hide and fox in Saltwood are all worth the trip.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Pizarro worth the price?

    Yes, at ££ it earns its price point. You get Michelin Plate recognition, a chef-driven menu from José Pizarro, and an all-Spanish wine list in a properly run full-service room. Opinionated About Dining ranked it #775 in Europe for casual dining in 2025, which at this price tier is a meaningful credential. It is not cheap tapas, but it delivers enough quality to justify the spend.

    Is Pizarro good for solo dining?

    It works well solo if you are comfortable at a restaurant table or the bar. The format — a mix of small plates and larger mains — suits solo diners who want to graze across a few dishes without over-ordering. Bermondsey Street draws a confident after-work crowd, so eating alone here reads as deliberate rather than awkward.

    What should I wear to Pizarro?

    The room is described as stylish, and Bermondsey Street has a design-industry and creative professional crowd, so neat casual fits well. There is no evidence of a formal dress code. Jeans are fine; trainers are unlikely to cause an issue. Overdressing would be out of place.

    Can I eat at the bar at Pizarro?

    Bar seating is not confirmed in the venue data, but the format — small plates alongside larger mains — is well-suited to counter or bar eating if available. If bar seating matters to you, call ahead or check directly with the restaurant at 194 Bermondsey Street before arrival.

    Is Pizarro good for a special occasion?

    It works for a low-key celebration or a milestone dinner where the food should be good but the atmosphere should not feel stiff. The Michelin Plate and OAD ranking give it credibility as a choice worth making. For a genuinely formal or landmark occasion, a higher price tier would give you more ceremony; Pizarro's strength is quality without excessive formality.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Pizarro?

    The venue database does not confirm a tasting menu format at Pizarro. The documented offering is a combination of small sharing plates and larger main courses, which functions as a build-your-own meal rather than a set progression. If a tasting menu is your preferred format, verify directly with the restaurant before booking.

    What are alternatives to Pizarro in London?

    Cambio de Tercio in South Kensington is the most direct comparison: similar price tier, longer track record, and a strong Spanish wine program. For a more casual tapas-first experience, José — José Pizarro's own tapas bar a few doors down on Bermondsey Street — is worth considering if you want smaller spend and a quicker format. Barrafina is another credible alternative if you are comfortable with a no-reservations counter.

    Location

    194 Bermondsey St, London SE1 3TQ, United Kingdom

    London, United Kingdom

    Compare Pizarro

    Value at a Glance: Pizarro

    A quick look at how Pizarro measures up.

    Also Consider

    Pizarro sits in a different category from London's ££££ restaurant tier, so comparing it directly against CORE by Clare Smyth, Restaurant Gordon Ramsay, Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library, The Ledbury, or Dinner by Heston Blumenthal is not especially useful, those are destination tasting-menu restaurants with price tags to match. If your question is whether to spend ££ at Pizarro or save for a £££ or ££££ experience elsewhere in the capital, the answer depends on what you want from the evening. For Spanish-focused, relaxed, wine-driven dining, Pizarro is the right call. For formal celebration dining where the full production matters, one of the ££££ options above would be the appropriate choice.

    Within its own price tier and cuisine category, Pizarro's strongest competition comes from Cambio de Tercio and Donostia. Cambio de Tercio is the better option if you want larger plates and a more theatrical presentation; Donostia is the call for a Basque pintxos-focused experience in a smaller, more bar-like setting. Pizarro sits between the two, more substantial than a pintxos bar, less showy than Cambio, and its all-Spanish wine list gives it a coherence that neither rival fully matches on the drinks side.

    On value, Pizarro is among the more defensible options in this part of London at the ££ tier: Michelin Plate recognition and a top-800 OAD casual Europe ranking at accessible prices is a combination that's hard to argue against. If you're deciding between Pizarro and a generic neighbourhood Spanish, the credentials here make the choice straightforward. If you're deciding between Pizarro and a serious splurge, treat them as different decisions entirely.

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