Restaurant in Toledo, Spain
Clandestina De Las Tendillas
250Pearl PointsToledo, Refined

About Clandestina De Las Tendillas
Clandestina De Las Tendillas holds one Sol in the 2026 Guía Repsol and offers rare late-night service in Toledo's historic core. Limited public information makes it a secondary choice compared to more transparent peers like Adolfo or Víctor Sánchez-Beato, but the flexible hours and walk-in availability suit spontaneous diners who value Repsol recognition over detailed advance intel.
Should you book Clandestina De Las Tendillas? Consider it if you want a Toledo restaurant with verified afternoon hours most days of its operating week and evening hours from Wednesday through Saturday. Publicly verified details are limited, so treat it as a practical option rather than a heavily documented destination.
Verified hours are straightforward: Clandestina De Las Tendillas is closed on Monday; open Tuesday from 1–5 PM; open Wednesday and Thursday from 1–5 PM and 8 PM–12 AM; open Friday and Saturday from 1–5 PM and 8 PM–1 AM; and open Sunday from 1–5 PM. The verified dress code is smart casual. No confirmed award, cuisine type, menu format, price level, seat count, chef profile, phone number, website, or booking policy is available from the provided data, so those details should be checked directly before making plans.
The Room and the Service Format
Clandestina De Las Tendillas is in Toledo. Beyond the city, no verified street address, neighborhood, room description, seat count, or service format is available here. That means visitors should avoid assuming whether the experience is formal, casual, tasting-menu focused, walk-in oriented, or designed for large groups.
The safest expectation is simple: plan around the confirmed opening windows and the smart-casual dress code. If timing, group size, accessibility, dietary needs, or a particular menu style matters, confirm directly before you go.
Booking Strategy and Peer Positioning
Because no verified booking policy is available, it is not possible to say whether Clandestina De Las Tendillas is walk-in friendly, reservation-only, or usually busy at specific times. The most useful planning detail is its schedule: 1–5 PM hours are verified Tuesday through Sunday, while evening hours are verified Wednesday through Saturday, with later closing on Friday and Saturday.
If you are comparing options in Toledo, Adolfo, El Albero, El Cardenal, La Cábala, and Víctor Sánchez-Beato are the only named peer venues that should be used for comparison here. Without confirmed cuisine, pricing, or menu details for Clandestina De Las Tendillas, the comparison should stay practical: choose based on availability, preferred time of day, and how much verified information you need before committing.
For a one-meal Toledo plan, Clandestina De Las Tendillas is best treated as an option to verify directly rather than a restaurant to evaluate from detailed public claims. Its confirmed strengths in this data are the operating windows and smart-casual dress code; anything more specific should not be assumed.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Clandestina De Las Tendillas good for a special occasion?
It may be suitable if the confirmed hours and smart-casual dress code fit your plans, but no verified details are available here about room style, service format, menu, price, or private-event suitability. For a milestone meal, confirm directly before booking.
How far ahead should I book Clandestina De Las Tendillas?
No verified booking policy is available, so it is not possible to say how far ahead you need to reserve or whether walk-ins are typical. Plan around the confirmed hours: Tuesday 1–5 PM; Wednesday and Thursday 1–5 PM and 8 PM–12 AM; Friday and Saturday 1–5 PM and 8 PM–1 AM; Sunday 1–5 PM; closed Monday.
Does Clandestina De Las Tendillas handle dietary restrictions?
No verified dietary or allergy information is available. If gluten-free, vegan, vegetarian, allergy-related, or other dietary needs are important, check the venue's official channels before visiting.
What should I wear to Clandestina De Las Tendillas?
The verified dress code is smart casual. That is the only confirmed dress guidance available here.
Should I visit Clandestina De Las Tendillas in the afternoon or evening?
The 1–5 PM window is verified Tuesday through Sunday. Evening hours are verified Wednesday and Thursday from 8 PM–12 AM and Friday and Saturday from 8 PM–1 AM. Which is better depends on your schedule; no verified information is available about differences in menu, atmosphere, or demand between services.
What are alternatives to Clandestina De Las Tendillas in Toledo?
Named Toledo comparisons may include Adolfo, El Albero, El Cardenal, La Cábala, and Víctor Sánchez-Beato. Use current availability, hours, and your preferred level of confirmed detail to decide between them.
Location
C. Tendillas, 3, 45002 Toledo, Spain
Compare Clandestina De Las Tendillas
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Clandestina De Las Tendillas | Easy | ||
| La Cábala | Contemporary | €€ | Unknown |
| Adolfo | Modern Cuisine | €€€ | Unknown |
| Víctor Sánchez-Beato | Farm to table | €€ | Unknown |
| El Cardenal | Unknown | ||
| El Albero | Traditional Cuisine | €€ | Unknown |
What to weigh when choosing between Clandestina De Las Tendillas and comparable nearby venues.
Also Consider
- La Cábala, Contemporary, €€
- Adolfo, Modern Cuisine, €€€
- Víctor Sánchez-Beato, Farm to table, €€
- El Cardenal, Notable alternative
- El Albero, Traditional Cuisine, €€
Clandestina De Las Tendillas occupies the accessible-recognition tier in Toledo, sharing one-Sol status with venues like La Cábala (contemporary, €€) and El Albero (traditional cuisine, €€). It sits below the three-Sol Iván Cerdeño and the more established Adolfo (modern cuisine, €€€), which offer documented tasting menus, transparent pricing, and advance-booking pressure. The key differentiator here is late-night service, dinner runs until 1 AM Friday and Saturday, while most Toledo kitchens close by 11 PM. If you're arriving after an evening event or need schedule flexibility, this address delivers Repsol-vetted quality without the reservation anxiety of Adolfo or the farm-to-table specialization of Víctor Sánchez-Beato.
For value-driven diners, Víctor Sánchez-Beato (€€) and El Albero (€€) offer more transparent menus and easier walk-in access, though neither holds Repsol recognition. Adolfo remains the splurge choice for modern technique and cellar depth, while El Cardenal serves as a peer-level fallback with similar one-Sol credentials. Clandestina De Las Tendillas works when you're comfortable with minimal advance intel and want a Repsol-stamped option that operates outside the city's typical lunch-only or early-dinner constraints, allocate your first night to Adolfo and use this for a secondary meal or late-night fallback when other kitchens have closed.
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