Restaurant in Venice, Italy
Book for the room, not the menu.

Harry's Bar in Venice is a reliable, higher-priced room that trades on consistency and history rather than culinary ambition. Go for lunch, sit downstairs at the bar if you can, and book it as a comfortable anchor in a Venice itinerary — not as the main culinary event. Easier to book than most of its Venice peers at this price level.
Yes — but not for the reasons you might expect. Harry's Bar at Calle Vallaresso 1323 is one of the few places in Venice where the room does the work before the food arrives. The ground floor is compact, white-jacketed, and deliberately unglamorous: wooden chairs, close-set tables, no canal view, no theatrical lighting. That austerity is the point. This is a bar-restaurant that built its reputation on the consistency of what it serves, not on how it looks while serving it. If you have been once and are wondering whether to return, the answer is yes — but go for lunch rather than dinner when the room is calmer and the experience is closer to what made it famous.
The space itself rewards a second visit more than a first. First-timers often arrive expecting grandeur and leave slightly surprised by the modesty of the room. Regulars understand that the intimacy of the downstairs bar area , tight, unhurried, with a front-row view of the bartenders , is the place to be. Upstairs is quieter and more formal; useful for groups who need space to talk, less useful if you want the atmosphere that gives Harry's Bar its identity. Seat yourself downstairs if you have the option.
Harry's Bar is also one of the more direct bookings in a city where several serious restaurants require planning weeks in advance. By Venice standards, this is a relatively accessible reservation, which matters when you are building an itinerary around tighter windows. Compare that to Ristorante Quadri on the Piazza San Marco, where the room is grander and the booking timeline longer, or Glam Restaurant by Enrico Bartolini, which operates at a different register entirely , tasting menus, serious wine program, a more deliberate pace. Harry's Bar sits between those poles: it charges at the higher end of the Venice market but delivers something more casual in format than its price suggests.
That gap between price and formality is where Harry's Bar divides opinion. You are paying for history and consistency, not for technical ambition. If that trade-off suits your priorities , and it suits a lot of people's priorities in Venice , this remains one of the most reliable rooms in the city. If you want cooking that justifies its price through innovation rather than heritage, look at Local or Oro Restaurant instead.
Reservations: Recommended; booking is relatively direct by Venice standards. Dress: Smart casual; the room is unfussy but the clientele dresses up slightly. Timing: Lunch over dinner for a more composed experience. Groups: Upstairs accommodates larger parties; downstairs bar area suits pairs and small groups of up to four.
For a broader view of where to eat in Venice, see our full Venice restaurants guide. For bars, see our full Venice bars guide, and for places to stay, our full Venice hotels guide. If you are exploring further into Italy, strong alternatives at a higher level of culinary ambition include Dal Pescatore in Runate, Piazza Duomo in Alba, and Uliassi in Senigallia. For reference points outside Italy, Le Bernardin in New York City and Lazy Bear in San Francisco show what sustained reputation looks like in very different formats.
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Harry's Bar | Easy | — | |
| Local | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Ristorante Quadri | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Osteria alle Testiere | €€€ | Unknown | — |
| Al Covo | €€€ | Unknown | — |
| Corte Sconta | €€€ | Unknown | — |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Small groups of two to four are the practical sweet spot at Harry's Bar, Calle Vallaresso 1323. The room is compact and tables are closely spaced, so larger parties can find the experience cramped rather than convivial. For groups of six or more, Al Covo or Corte Sconta offer more flexible layouts with no loss of quality.
Yes, bar seating is available and is arguably the smarter option for solo visitors or pairs who want the atmosphere without committing to a full table reservation. You can order food at the bar, which keeps the experience lighter and faster. It is also the easiest way to walk in without a booking, though peak hours in summer still carry a wait.
Pricing varies at Harry's Bar; confirm via check the venue's official channels.
Harry's Bar is located in Venice, at Calle Vallaresso, 1323, 30124 Venezia VE, Italy.
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