Restaurant in Tel Aviv, Israel
Radler
100Pearl PointsLate-slot wine pick

About Radler
Radler is a practical Tel Aviv pick for a later dinner when wine credibility matters more than a big-format dining brief. Star Wine List recognition in 2026 gives it a useful trust signal, easy booking makes it less stressful than higher-demand peers. Choose it for a second-night plan; compare Port Said or Jasmino if the food category needs to be clearer upfront.
For a return visit to Tel Aviv, Radler makes sense as an evening choice when the priority is a venue with confirmed wine recognition. The useful reason to keep it on the list is simple: Star Wine List recognition in 2026 gives it a clear verified detail, while its evening schedule runs daily, with service from 7–11 PM most nights and 6:30–11 PM on Friday.
This is not the page to overread for cuisine, chef, pricing, or format. The stronger decision is whether the wine recognition and evening hours matter enough to choose it over broader Tel Aviv options. For someone who wants an evening plan with a smart-casual dress code, Radler is a sensible pick. For a Tel Aviv meal where the venue choice needs to be compared against other named options, consider Port Said or Jasmino as alternatives.
A better second-night call than a first-night headline
The case for Radler is strongest when the itinerary already includes other Tel Aviv plans and the next evening needs to be direct, city-based, supported by a recognized wine-list signal. The value is less about filling in unverified details and more about having a Tel Aviv evening slot with a clear confirmed reason to go.
Because the verified details are limited, avoid building the decision around assumptions about menu style, chef identity, room size, or price. If the group wants to compare against another Tel Aviv option, North Abraxas is a natural reference point. If the goal is a Tel Aviv venue with confirmed Star Wine List recognition, evening hours, smart-casual expectations, Radler is the cleaner decision.
Use it for the evening slot, not the whole Tel Aviv brief
The evening schedule is the practical point. Radler is open Monday through Thursday from 7–11 PM, Friday from 6:30–11 PM, Saturday from 7–11 PM, Sunday from 7–11 PM. That makes it useful when the plan is specifically evening-based rather than lunch or all-day dining.
For wider planning, keep it paired with the city guides rather than isolated as a single answer: the Tel Aviv restaurants guide for other dining options, the Tel Aviv bars guide if the night continues after Radler, the Tel Aviv hotels guide if location matters. The practical verdict: choose Radler when a Star Wine List-recognized Tel Aviv venue with evening hours is more valuable than a venue whose cuisine, format, price are already clearly defined in advance. Skip it if the table needs those specifics before committing.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can Radler accommodate groups?
The verified details do not specify group capacity. Radler is an evening venue in Tel Aviv, with service from 7–11 PM most nights and 6:30–11 PM on Friday.
How far ahead should I book Radler?
The verified details do not specify booking difficulty or how far ahead to reserve. If Radler is important to your Tel Aviv evening plan, check availability in advance, especially for Friday, when service runs from 6:30–11 PM.
What should I wear to Radler?
Smart casual is the verified dress code. A neat, polished look is the safest choice for an evening visit in Tel Aviv.
What should a first-timer know about Radler?
Treat Radler as an evening Tel Aviv venue rather than a lunch or all-day option. The confirmed facts are its nightly evening hours, smart-casual dress code, Star Wine List recognition in 2026.
Location
Nahalat Binyamin St 48, Tel Aviv-Yafo, 6516307, Israel
Tel Aviv, Israel
Compare Radler
How Radler compares in Tel Aviv
Choose Radler when wine is the deciding factor and the reservation needs to stay manageable. Against North Abraxas and Cafe Europa, it reads as the calmer, more flexible call rather than the obvious scene-first dinner. That makes it useful for a return visitor or a later table, not necessarily the opening meal of a Tel Aviv trip.
Port Said is the stronger choice when the group wants a clearer Israeli food identity and a busier night out. Jasmino is better for a quick kebab-led plan where value and speed matter more than sitting down around a wine list. Radler sits between those modes: more composed than a grab-and-go stop, less of a production than a destination dinner.
Oasis is the better comparison if the priority is a more deliberate dinner plan. Radler wins for easier logistics and late-evening usefulness; Oasis is the one to consider when the meal itself needs to carry the night.
Recognized By
Explore Tel Aviv
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