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    Restaurant in San Sebastián, Spain

    Rekondo

    890pts

    Serious Basque cooking, fewer tourists than pintxos bars.

    Rekondo, Restaurant in San Sebastián

    About Rekondo

    Rekondo is the strongest case for traditional Basque asador cooking in San Sebastián if you prioritise wine depth over tasting-menu theatre. With a 98,500-bottle cellar ranked by Star Wine List and cuisine pricing well below the city's €€€€ tasting-menu tier, it delivers serious value — provided you plan around the August closure and the Mount Igueldo location.

    Who Should Book Rekondo — and When

    Rekondo is the right call if you want serious Basque asador cooking without the formality or price ceiling of San Sebastián's Michelin-starred tasting-menu circuit. It suits food-focused travelers who want to eat well at lunch, drink from one of Spain's most respected wine cellars, and leave without a four-hour commitment. Pairs, small groups, and solo diners who care about wine all find it a productive choice. If you need a tasting menu with tableside theatre, look instead at Arzak or Akelaŕe. If you want depth in the glass and tradition on the plate, Rekondo is worth the trip up Mount Igueldo.

    The Venue

    The restaurant sits on the road ascending Mount Igueldo, above the bay of La Concha. The location matters practically: you will need a taxi or a car — it is not walkable from the old town. The reward is a setting that looks over the bay and a dining room that reads as classic-contemporary rather than rustic. The interior is more considered than the mountain-road approach suggests, and the space is comfortable enough for a long lunch without feeling stuffy. Seating is arranged for conversation, the room is not cavernous, and the atmosphere is closer to a serious regional restaurant than a tourist destination. Rekondo has operated for over six decades, which shows in the confidence of the service and the depth of the cellar rather than in any dated décor.

    The kitchen operates under chef Iñaki Arrieta and the house is run by owner Txomin Recondo, who also serves as wine director, with sommelier Alejandro Hernández supporting the list. The general manager is Lourdes Recondo. That family-and-team continuity over decades is part of why the cellar has accumulated to the scale it has: 5,570 selections and a reported inventory of 98,500 bottles, with particular depth in Spain, Bordeaux, Burgundy, Champagne, Rhône, Italy, Argentina, and Chile. Star Wine List ranked Rekondo's list at both #1 and #2 in its 2026 rankings. If the wine list is your primary reason to visit , and for many it is , Rekondo is among the most credentialed addresses in the Basque Country for that purpose.

    Seasonal Logic: When and What to Book

    Rekondo's kitchen is built around seasonality, and the menu shifts accordingly. The kitchen's approach is tradition-first with seasonal adaptation, so the time of year you visit directly determines what you will find. The baked crab (txangurro) and hake in parsley sauce are documented as signature dishes and appear with some regularity, but more ingredient-driven preparations , artichokes with hollandaise and winter truffle, grilled foie gras , are contingent on season. Winter visits will find the truffle and foie preparations available; spring and autumn bring the vegetable-forward dishes into the rotation. Summer guests should note the closure: the restaurant closes for the entire month of August, which is a significant planning consideration for anyone visiting San Sebastián during the main tourist season. The kitchen also closes from December 23 to January 11 and April 11 to 19. Book outside those windows and you gain access to a menu that is genuinely tied to what is available locally, which is the point of the asador format.

    For wine specifically, the winter and spring visit windows tend to produce the most interesting pairings with seasonal game, truffle, and richer fish preparations. The list's Bordeaux and Burgundy depth makes it worth asking Alejandro Hernández for guidance rather than defaulting to the local Rioja or Txakoli selections , those are well-represented too, but the cellar's distinguishing feature is its French and broader European range.

    Practical Details

    Rekondo is open Monday and Thursday through Sunday, with both lunch (1:15–3:30 pm) and dinner (8:30–10:30 pm) sittings. Tuesday and Wednesday are closed. Booking is rated as easy relative to the San Sebastián restaurant market, which puts it in a different category from Amelia by Paulo Airaudo or iBAi by Paulo Airaudo, where lead times are considerably longer. Still, peak season weekends fill quickly, so booking at least two weeks ahead is sensible for Saturday lunch. Cuisine pricing sits in the €€ range for a typical two-course meal (€40–€65 before wine), which is a meaningful value gap versus the €€€€ tasting-menu restaurants in the city. Wine pricing is €€€, meaning the list includes many bottles over €100 , budget accordingly if you intend to drink well. The Google rating is 4.6 across 1,413 reviews, and Opinionated About Dining ranked Rekondo #51 in its Casual Europe list for 2025, consistent with its #45 placements in 2024 and 2023. Michelin awards the venue a Plate designation (2025).

    Getting there requires a taxi from the city centre , factor 10 to 15 minutes and the fare into your plan. There is no public transit to the restaurant's address on Igeldo Pasealekua. For context on the wider city, see our full San Sebastián restaurants guide, hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide.

    The Pearl Verdict

    Rekondo earns its place on a San Sebastián itinerary through a combination of a wine list with few rivals in the region, a seasonal Basque kitchen that avoids tourist-menu compromises, and pricing that is considerably more accessible than the city's tasting-menu addresses. The location requires a short effort, and the August closure demands advance planning. Outside those constraints, it is among the most rewarding lunch options in the Basque Country for a traveler who wants to eat seriously and drink better. For broader Spanish fine dining context, consider how Rekondo's asador tradition fits against other significant addresses: Azurmendi in Larrabetzu, Martin Berasategui in Lasarte-Oria, El Celler de Can Roca in Girona, Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María, DiverXO in Madrid, and Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona. For those making international comparisons on wine-driven dining, Le Bernardin in New York City and Atomix in New York City represent different but instructive reference points on what a serious cellar program can mean for the overall dining value equation.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    • What should a first-timer know about Rekondo? Come for the wine list first, the seasonal Basque kitchen second. The cuisine pricing (€€, roughly €40–€65 for two courses before wine) is accessible for San Sebastián, but wine can add significantly to the bill given the depth of the cellar. Arrive knowing which season you are visiting , the menu shifts meaningfully. The venue has a Michelin Plate and has ranked consistently in Opinionated About Dining's Casual Europe top 55, so quality is well-documented. Do not arrive expecting a tasting menu format; this is a la carte, asador-style service.
    • Is lunch or dinner better at Rekondo? Lunch is the stronger call. The 1:15–3:30 pm sitting on a clear day with views over La Concha bay is the more complete version of the experience, and the Basque asador tradition is built around the long midday meal. Dinner (8:30–10:30 pm) is available Thursday through Monday but the time window is tighter and the daylight context is lost. If you can only do one, book Saturday lunch at least two weeks ahead.
    • Is the tasting menu worth it at Rekondo? Rekondo does not operate a fixed tasting menu in the way that Arzak or Akelaŕe do. It is an a la carte asador. The value case is strong precisely because you are not locked into a set format or a €€€€ price tier. Two courses plus wine from the Txomin Recondo cellar is where Rekondo delivers its leading ratio of quality to spend in San Sebastián.
    • Is Rekondo good for solo dining? Yes, with one qualification. The a la carte format means you control portion and pace, and the wine list makes it genuinely worth visiting alone if you want to drink well. The room is not a bar-counter format, so solo diners sit at a full table, which works comfortably given the relaxed, non-performance service style. The cost is manageable at the cuisine price tier, though solo wine exploration can push the total up.
    • Can Rekondo accommodate groups? The restaurant handles groups in a traditional dining-room format rather than a private-event space model. For parties of four to six, advance booking is direct given the easy booking difficulty rating. Larger groups should contact the restaurant directly to confirm arrangements. The a la carte format works well for groups with varied preferences, and the wine list depth makes it a practical choice for group dining where some guests want to drink adventurously and others want a simple local bottle. See Kokotxa as an alternative for groups wanting a more modern Basque approach at a similar city-centre location.

    Compare Rekondo

    Award Winners Like Rekondo
    VenueAwardsPriceValue
    RekondoStar Wine List #2 (2026); Star Wine List #1 (2026); Rekondo is a restaurant located in Igueldo Mountain, overlooking the bay of La Concha and offering the very best of of high Basque gastronomy, with traditional dishes including the Txangurro a la Dono...; A rustic property along the road up to Mt Igueldo with a history dating back over six decades and a classic-contemporary interior that comes as a pleasant surprise. The focus in the kitchen is on Basque cuisine that is respectful of tradition while at the same time constantly evolving and always based around seasonality. Signature dishes here, such as the baked crab and hake fillets in a parsley sauce, stand alongside more contemporary and elaborate options – we particularly enjoyed the artichokes stuffed with a hollandaise sauce, grilled foie gras, winter truffle and a red wine jus). The extensive wine list includes some truly delightful labels.; Opinionated About Dining Casual in Europe Ranked #51 (2025); Michelin Plate (2025); WINE: Wine Strengths: Spain, Bordeaux, Burgundy, Champagne, Rhône, France, Italy, Argentina, Chile Pricing: $$$ i Wine pricing: Based on the list\'s general markup and high and low price points:$ has many bottles < $50;$$ has a range of pricing;$$$ has many $100+ bottles Selections: 5,570 Inventory: 98,500 CUISINE: Cuisine Types: Regional Pricing: $$ i Cuisine pricing: The cost of a typical two-course meal, not including tip or beverages.$ is < $40;$$ is $40–$65;$$$ is $66+. Meals: Lunch and Dinner STAFF: People Wine Director: Txomin Recondo Sommelier: Alejandro Hernández Chef: Inaki Arrieta General Manager: Lourdes Recondo Owner: Txomin Recondo; Opinionated About Dining Casual in Europe Ranked #45 (2024); Michelin Plate (2024); Opinionated About Dining Casual in Europe Ranked #45 (2023)€€€
    ArzakMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best€€€€
    AkelaŕeMichelin 3 Star€€€€
    Amelia by Paulo AiraudoMichelin 2 Star€€€€
    iBAi by Paulo AiraudoMichelin 1 Star€€€€
    KokotxaMichelin 1 Star€€€€

    A quick look at how Rekondo measures up.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can Rekondo accommodate groups?

    Rekondo is a realistic option for groups, given its position as a full-service asador with lunch and dinner sittings Thursday through Sunday (plus Monday). The classic-contemporary interior on Mount Igueldo has more space than the city-centre pintxos format, which helps for larger parties. Book well ahead — Rekondo closes Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and for extended periods in August and over Christmas, so date options are limited. For groups wanting a private-room format with higher ceremony, the starred houses like Arzak or Akelarre give more structure.

    What should a first-timer know about Rekondo?

    Two things matter most before you go: location and wine. Rekondo sits on the road up to Mount Igueldo above La Concha bay, so you need a taxi or car — it is not walkable from the old town. The wine cellar runs to 98,500 bottles across 5,570 selections (Star Wine List ranked it #1 and #2 in 2026), which means the list is a genuine reason to visit, not just a footnote. Food-wise, expect tradition-first Basque cooking — grilled fish, baked crab, seasonal produce — at €€€ cuisine pricing (roughly €40–65 for a typical two-course meal, excluding wine).

    Is Rekondo good for solo dining?

    It works for solo dining, particularly if your focus is the wine list. Rekondo's setting and format are more restaurant than bar, so there is no dedicated counter culture here as you might find at a counter-format omakase. That said, the lunch sitting (1:15–3:30 pm) on a weekday is the more relaxed entry point for a solo visit. If solo dining with a lively bar-counter energy is the priority, iBAi by Paulo Airaudo is a more natural fit in San Sebastián.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Rekondo?

    Lunch is the stronger call. The La Concha bay views from Mount Igueldo are daylight-dependent, and Basque asador cooking — built around seasonal fish, grilled meats, and produce-led dishes — reads as a lunch format culturally across the region. Rekondo's lunch sitting runs 1:15–3:30 pm Thursday to Sunday and Monday. Dinner (8:30–10:30 pm) is available on the same days if scheduling requires it, but the case for evening is mostly logistical, not experiential.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Rekondo?

    Rekondo is an asador, not a tasting-menu house — the format is à la carte Basque cooking rather than a set progression of courses. If a structured tasting menu is what you are after, Amelia by Paulo Airaudo or Akelarre deliver that format with Michelin recognition behind them. Rekondo's value case is different: OAD Casual Europe Top 51 (2025) recognition, a wine list with genuine depth in Bordeaux, Burgundy, and Rioja, and seasonal Basque dishes at €€€ pricing without the ceremony tax of a starred room.

    Hours

    Monday
    1:15–3:30 pm, 8:30–10:30 pm
    Tuesday
    Closed
    Wednesday
    Closed
    Thursday
    1:15–3:30 pm, 8:30–10:30 pm
    Friday
    1:15–3:30 pm, 8:30–10:30 pm
    Saturday
    1:15–3:30 pm, 8:30–10:30 pm
    Sunday
    1:15–3:30 pm, 8:30–10:30 pm Closure December23-January 11, April 11-19, August 1-31

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