Restaurant in Buenos Aires, Argentina
Trescha
830ptsBuenos Aires' hardest table. Worth the effort.

About Trescha
Trescha holds a Michelin star (2024 and 2025) and a Latin America's 50 Best listing, making it the clearest case for spending at the $$$$ tier in Buenos Aires. Chef Tomás Treschanski's research-led tasting menu pushes Argentine cooking in a direction you won't find at a parrilla. Book months ahead — this is Near Impossible to secure on short notice.
Verdict: Book Trescha if you want the most technically ambitious cooking in Buenos Aires right now
At the $$$$ price point, Trescha is one of a handful of Buenos Aires restaurants that can legitimately claim Michelin recognition — holding a star in both 2024 and 2025 while also appearing on the Latin America's 50 Best list. For a first-timer weighing where to spend serious money on a single meal in the city, that double credential matters. This is not a steakhouse splurge or a comfort-food pilgrimage; it is an authorial tasting experience built around Argentine produce and chef Tomás Treschanski's research-driven cooking. If that format suits you, Trescha is the clearest case in Buenos Aires for spending at this level.
What Trescha Is
Trescha is located in Villa Crespo, a working neighbourhood in Buenos Aires that sits west of Palermo and has become one of the city's more interesting pockets for independent dining. The restaurant is Treschanski's vehicle for a contemporary Argentine cooking style that draws on local ingredients and documented culinary research rather than on imported fine-dining conventions. The result is a tasting format in which each course reflects a specific product, technique, or cultural reference — not a menu that follows a European fine-dining template with Argentine ingredients dropped in.
For a first-timer, the key expectation to set is that this is a kitchen that challenges assumptions. The cooking style is described as pushing cultural and technical boundaries, which in practice means you should arrive curious and open rather than expecting a parade of familiar Argentine flavours in refined form. Think of it less as Argentine cuisine dressed up and more as a serious investigation of what Argentine cooking can be.
The Morning and Weekend Question
The assigned editorial angle here is brunch and weekend service, and the honest answer for first-timers is this: Trescha's public profile and its Michelin and 50 Best recognition are built on its main tasting experience, not a casual morning format. No verified data in our records confirms a brunch or breakfast service at Trescha. If a weekend visit is your priority, contact the restaurant directly to confirm what services are available on a given day before planning around a morning booking. Do not assume a Michelin-starred tasting restaurant at this price tier runs a standard brunch format , many do not, and arriving with that expectation will lead to disappointment. What Trescha reliably delivers is its full tasting experience, and that is the service worth booking a trip around.
Booking Trescha: Expect Difficulty
Booking difficulty is rated Near Impossible. A two-star Michelin hold, Latin America's 50 Best placement, and a physically small restaurant in a residential neighbourhood means demand significantly outpaces availability. First-timers visiting Buenos Aires on a fixed itinerary should treat Trescha as the first reservation to secure, not one to attempt after flights are booked. Book as far in advance as your travel dates allow , months ahead is not excessive for the most sought-after nights. The restaurant is at Murillo 725 in Villa Crespo; no phone or website is currently listed in our records, so use a reservations platform or contact the restaurant through verified third-party channels.
Ratings Snapshot
- Michelin Stars: 1 Star (2024, 2025)
- Latin America's 50 Best: Listed
- Google Rating: 4.6 from 233 reviews
- Price Range: $$$$
Practical Details
| Detail | Trescha | Aramburu | Don Julio |
|---|---|---|---|
| Price Range | $$$$ | $$$$ | $$$$ |
| Michelin Star | Yes (2024, 2025) | No | No |
| 50 Best Listed | Yes | No | Yes |
| Format | Tasting menu | Tasting menu | À la carte |
| Booking Difficulty | Near Impossible | Hard | Very Hard |
| Neighbourhood | Villa Crespo | San Telmo | Palermo |
How It Compares
See the full comparison section below for Trescha versus its Buenos Aires peers.
Who Should Book Trescha
Book Trescha if: you are visiting Buenos Aires specifically to eat at the highest level of contemporary Argentine cooking; you are comfortable with a research-led tasting format that does not follow convention; and you can secure a reservation in advance. This is the right choice if design-led, produce-driven fine dining is your priority and you want the meal that carries the most current critical weight in the city.
Do not book Trescha if: you want a classic parrilla experience, a lively à la carte dinner with a group, or a casual weekend brunch. For the leading traditional Argentine cooking at a fraction of the price, El Preferido de Palermo is a better fit. For the definitive Buenos Aires steak experience at the same price tier, Don Julio is the reference point. For a different take on modern Argentine tasting menus, Aramburu is the closest peer in format and price.
Pearl Picks: Explore More in Buenos Aires and Beyond
- Casa Cavia , for a more relaxed, design-forward Buenos Aires experience
- Julia , for a neighbourhood-scale Buenos Aires restaurant worth knowing
- Ajo Negro - Mar de Tapas , if you want a change of register in Buenos Aires
- Azafrán in Mendoza , for serious cooking in Argentina's wine country
- Cavas Wine Lodge in Alto Agrelo , for a wine-region fine dining experience outside the city
- Awasi Iguazu in Puerto Iguazu , for destination dining beyond Buenos Aires
- EOLO - Patagonia's Spirit in El Calafate , for remote Argentine fine dining in Patagonia
- La Bamba de Areco in San Antonio de Areco , for a gaucho-country escape near Buenos Aires
- El Colibri in Santa Catalina , for off-the-radar Argentine dining
- Frantzén in Stockholm , for a global reference point in authorial tasting menus
- FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai , for the same tasting-menu format in the Middle East
- Our full Buenos Aires restaurants guide
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- Our full Buenos Aires wineries guide
- Our full Buenos Aires experiences guide
FAQ
What should I order at Trescha?
- Trescha runs a tasting menu format, so the kitchen makes the selection for you. There is no à la carte option to navigate. Trust the menu as presented , it reflects Treschanski's current research and seasonal produce focus. If you have strong preferences or aversions, communicate them clearly when booking.
Can Trescha accommodate groups?
- No specific seat count or private dining information is confirmed in our records. Given the restaurant's small footprint in a residential Villa Crespo address and its Near Impossible booking difficulty, large groups face a harder path than couples or small parties. Contact the restaurant directly before planning a group booking of more than four.
Does Trescha handle dietary restrictions?
- No public policy is confirmed in our records, but any Michelin-starred tasting menu restaurant at this price point is expected to manage dietary requirements when given advance notice. Declare all restrictions at the time of booking, not on arrival. Do not assume flexibility on the night without prior confirmation.
What should a first-timer know about Trescha?
- The most important thing to understand is the format: this is a tasting menu experience, not a conventional dinner where you order from a list. The cooking is research-led and challenges what Argentine cuisine typically looks like at this tier. Arrive without rigid expectations about what the food should taste like, secure your reservation months in advance, and treat this as the anchor booking of your Buenos Aires trip rather than a last-minute addition.
Can I eat at the bar at Trescha?
- No confirmed bar seating or walk-in bar service is documented in our records. Given the booking difficulty and tasting-menu format, Trescha is not a drop-in venue. Plan accordingly.
What should I wear to Trescha?
- No formal dress code is confirmed in our records. As a general reference point for Michelin-starred tasting menu restaurants in Buenos Aires, smart casual is the floor , think clean, considered clothing rather than formal attire. Buenos Aires fine dining culture is generally less rigid than European equivalents at this tier, but arriving in resort or casual wear at a $$$$ Michelin venue is worth reconsidering.
How far ahead should I book Trescha?
- Book as early as your travel dates allow. Pearl rates Trescha's booking difficulty as Near Impossible. With a Michelin star held for two consecutive years and a position on the Latin America's 50 Best list, tables are scarce. For a specific date on a weekend or during peak travel months (December–February for summer in Buenos Aires), three to four months ahead is a reasonable minimum. Treat it as the first booking you make, not the last.
Compare Trescha
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Trescha | $$$$ | — |
| Don Julio | $$$$ | — |
| Aramburu | $$$$ | — |
| El Preferido de Palermo | $$ | — |
| Elena | $$$ | — |
| La Carniceria | $$ | — |
How Trescha stacks up against the competition.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I order at Trescha?
Trescha runs a tasting menu format guided by Chef Tomás Treschanski's research-driven approach to Argentine ingredients, so there is no à la carte selection to navigate. You commit to the full experience at the $$$$ price point. The menu changes based on Treschanski's seasonal focus, so specific dishes can change in advance — trust the format or book elsewhere. Check the venue's official channels for the latest details.
Can Trescha accommodate groups?
Groups are possible but constrained. Trescha is a small restaurant in Villa Crespo, and its Michelin star makes demand heavy year-round. Larger parties should check the venue's official channels well in advance — expect limited availability for groups above four or five. If your group wants the same evening at a high-end Buenos Aires table with more flexibility, Aramburu or Elena are worth considering.
Does Trescha handle dietary restrictions?
Given the tasting menu format and Chef Treschanski's research-led approach to local products, dietary restrictions should be communicated at the time of booking rather than on arrival. A restaurant holding a Michelin star for two consecutive years (2024 and 2025) is expected to accommodate serious dietary needs with notice, but the highly composed menu format makes last-minute changes difficult.
What should a first-timer know about Trescha?
Trescha is not a neighbourhood bistro — it is a Michelin-starred, Latin America's 50 Best-listed tasting menu restaurant in Villa Crespo, a residential area west of Palermo. First-timers should expect a multi-course, chef-driven format with a $$$$ price tag and a booking lead time measured in months, not days. Come with an appetite for contemporary Argentine cooking that pushes technical and cultural limits, not for a casual dinner out.
Can I eat at the bar at Trescha?
Bar seating details are not confirmed in available records for Trescha. Given the restaurant's small size and the demand generated by its Michelin star and 50 Best recognition, walk-in or bar access is unlikely to be a reliable route in. Book a formal reservation to guarantee a seat.
What should I wear to Trescha?
Trescha is a $$$$ Michelin-starred restaurant and the level of dress should reflect that. Smart attire is the practical minimum — think what you would wear to a serious tasting menu restaurant in any major city. There is no indication of a strict formal dress code, but arriving in casual clothes at a two-year Michelin star holder would be out of place.
How far ahead should I book Trescha?
Book as far out as possible — a minimum of two to three months is a reasonable baseline, and peak travel periods may require more. Trescha holds a Michelin star (2024 and 2025) and a Latin America's 50 Best placement in a physically small restaurant, which puts booking difficulty at near-impossible. If you have a fixed travel window, lock in a reservation before you book your flights.
Recognized By
More restaurants in Buenos Aires
- Don JulioDon Julio holds a Michelin star and ranked #10 in the World's 50 Best Restaurants in 2024 — the most credentialed steak reservation in Buenos Aires. Expect dry-aged Angus and Hereford from the restaurant's own farm, a 60,000-bottle cellar, and a near-impossible booking window. Reserve two months out or queue close to opening time.
- AramburuArgentina's only two-Michelin-starred restaurant, Aramburu delivers an 18-course tasting menu in an intimate Recoleta setting — technically serious, globally credentialed (La Liste, Les Grandes Tables du Monde), and near-impossible to book. At $$$$ pricing, it is the right call for food-focused diners who want the most ambitious dining experience Buenos Aires offers. Book well in advance via email or phone.
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