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    Restaurant in Linz, Austria

    Verdi

    450Pearl Points

    One star, forest setting, book early.

    Verdi, Restaurant in Linz

    About Verdi

    Verdi holds a Michelin star (2024) and a 4.8 Google rating from nearly 600 reviews, making it the strongest argument for a fine dining booking in Linz. The kitchen runs modern international cooking on classical foundations with precise Asian inflections, and the forest-edge setting above the city adds a terrace and city-view tables that matter at dinner. Book at least four weeks out — this one fills.

    Verdi, Linz — Pearl Verdict

    If you have already eaten at Verdi once, the question for a second visit is simpler than you might expect: book it again. The Michelin star awarded in 2024 is not a novelty; it reflects a kitchen that has been earning its reputation in Linz for years. The arrival of Philipp Lukas alongside his father Erich has sharpened rather than disrupted what was already a coherent approach — classical foundations, restrained technique, and occasional Asian inflections that feel purposeful rather than fashionable. The cooking does not chase trends between visits. What changes, if anything, is your reading of the room: the terrace, the forest edge, the quiet authority of the service. You notice more on a return.

    Verdi sits on the edge of a forest above Linz at Pachmayrstraße 137, far enough from the city centre to feel deliberate. You drive or arrange a car. That distance is part of the proposition: this is not a place you stumble into. Some tables offer a view down over Linz, and on a clear evening from the terrace that view earns its own argument for the booking. The interior is described as chic, and the room reads the way a restaurant should at this price point , composed, not performative. If you are arriving for the first time from somewhere like Steirereck im Stadtpark in Vienna or Döllerer in Golling an der Salzach, you will find the scale more intimate and the atmosphere less formal, which for many diners is a preference, not a compromise.

    The kitchen's signature move is the kind of dish that sounds complicated but resolves cleanly on the plate: piglet belly cooked to a crispy exterior with a tender interior, set against Calamansi gel's citrus acidity and finished in a broth carrying Karashi mustard heat and lemongrass length. That combination , Central European technique, Southeast Asian flavour logic , is a reliable indicator of how the menu works across the board. Nothing is baroque. The Asian references arrive as seasoning rather than concept, grounding the cooking in something more specific than generic European fine dining. For a food-focused traveller building an Austrian itinerary alongside visits to Senns in Salzburg or Griggeler Stuba in Lech, Verdi offers a genuinely different register , less alpine, more quietly cosmopolitan.

    The wine service is worth noting for practical reasons. The suggestions are described as judicious, which in Michelin-reviewed Austrian fine dining typically means a list that skews towards domestic producers with considered international depth. Austria's wine programme at this level , particularly Upper Austrian and Wachau-adjacent selections , tends to reward engagement with the sommelier rather than defaulting to the obvious choices. Do not rush that conversation.

    Service team is described as exceedingly charming and professional, and that combination , warm without being theatrical , matters at a restaurant positioned above the city. It sets the tone from arrival. For diners comparing Verdi against Michelin-starred peers in the broader Austrian context, including Schwarzer Adler in Hall in Tirol or Restaurant 141 by Joachim Jaud in Mieming, the service register here is notably personal rather than orchestrated.

    If bar or counter seating is available at Verdi, it is worth requesting. Restaurants at this level that offer counter positions next to the kitchen give you direct sight lines into the plating process , the moment the Calamansi gel is placed, the broth poured, the composition confirmed. At a kitchen running the kind of technically precise but unfussy cooking that defines Verdi's output, that visibility changes how you read each course. It also, in practice, tends to generate more direct conversation with the kitchen team. The database does not confirm counter availability, so ask when booking , if it exists, it is the position to take. Comparable experiences at the counter level can be found at Marcel von Winckelmann in Passau, a short drive across the German border for context on the wider regional fine dining circuit.

    Verdi is open Tuesday through Saturday from 5 PM, closing at 1 AM. It is closed Sunday and Monday. There is no lunch service. That schedule is a practical constraint worth building your itinerary around , if you are visiting Linz mid-week, dinner at Verdi is the anchor booking. For broader Linz dining context, see our full Linz restaurants guide. For where to stay, our full Linz hotels guide covers the relevant options. The Linz bars guide, Linz wineries guide, and Linz experiences guide round out the city picture if you are planning more than one night.

    Ratings

    • Google: 4.8 / 5 (586 reviews)
    • Award: Michelin 1 Star (2024)
    • Price: €€€

    Booking

    Book hard and book early. Verdi carries a Michelin star and a 4.8 Google rating from nearly 600 reviews , that combination at a restaurant open only five evenings a week means tables move fast. Aim for a minimum of four weeks in advance for a Friday or Saturday booking; mid-week Tuesday to Thursday gives you slightly more flexibility but not significantly. The location above the city means the restaurant draws both Linz residents and visitors making a specific trip, so competition for prime slots is real year-round. No booking method or phone number is listed in our current data , verify directly via the restaurant's own channels before travel. For comparable booking difficulty in Austria's one-star tier, see Senns in Salzburg as a reference point.

    Know Before You Go

    • Address: Pachmayrstraße 137, 4040 Linz, Austria
    • Hours: Tuesday–Saturday, 5 PM–1 AM. Closed Sunday and Monday.
    • Lunch: Not available. Dinner only.
    • Price range: €€€
    • Cuisine: International with classical foundations and Asian influences
    • Award: Michelin 1 Star (2024)
    • Getting there: Forest-edge location above Linz , car or taxi recommended. Not walkable from the city centre.
    • Booking: Book at least four weeks out for weekends. Confirm booking channels directly with the restaurant.
    • Seating: Some tables offer city views; terrace available seasonally.

    How It Compares

    See vs_category_html below.

    FAQ

    • Can Verdi accommodate groups? Verdi's seat count is not confirmed in our data, but at a Michelin-starred restaurant at the €€€ price point operating out of a country setting above Linz, large groups (eight or more) will need to enquire directly and book well in advance. The kitchen-led, composed-menu format tends to favour smaller tables. If you are organising a group dinner in Linz at this level, contact the restaurant early , and have a fallback like Rossbarth in mind if they cannot accommodate your party size.
    • What should a first-timer know about Verdi? The location is the first thing: this is not a city-centre restaurant. You need transport to reach it at Pachmayrstraße 137 on the forest edge above Linz. Once there, expect a calm, professional room, a Michelin-starred kitchen running modern international cooking on classical lines, and a €€€ price point that sits in the mid-range for Austrian fine dining. The cooking uses occasional Asian flavour references , notably in broth construction and acidity , without losing its European character. It is not an experimental meal; it is a precise one. Compare it mentally with muto if you want something more creative and less formal, or Essig's for a contemporary alternative in the city.
    • Can I eat at the bar at Verdi? Bar or counter seating is not confirmed in our current data. It is worth asking when you book , at a restaurant of this type, a counter position next to the kitchen is the most interesting seat in the house if one exists. The format of the cooking (composed, multi-element plates) rewards close observation. If counter dining is a priority for you in Linz, muto is worth checking as a more relaxed alternative where bar access is more common at the creative end of the market.
    • Is lunch or dinner better at Verdi? Verdi does not serve lunch. The restaurant opens at 5 PM Tuesday through Saturday and closes at 1 AM. Dinner is your only option. For the terrace and any city view tables, an early dinner booking , arriving closer to opening , gives you the leading light and the most relaxed pacing before the room fills. Weekday evenings (Tuesday to Thursday) tend to be marginally easier to book than Friday and Saturday.
    • What should I wear to Verdi? No formal dress code is listed, but at a Michelin-starred €€€ restaurant in the Austrian fine dining tier, smart casual is the safe call. Think neat, considered clothing rather than business formal. Verdi's setting and tone are refined but not stuffy , the service is described as charming rather than ceremonial. If you are travelling through Austria and have already dined at restaurants like Steirereck im Stadtpark, the dress expectation at Verdi is slightly less formal, which is consistent with its regional rather than capital-city positioning.

    Pearl Picks , More in Austria and the Region

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can Verdi accommodate groups?

    Group bookings are possible but plan well ahead. With a Michelin star and a Tuesday-to-Saturday-only schedule, tables are in short supply — larger parties will need to check the venue's official channels to check availability and seating configuration. The forest-edge setting above Linz makes it a strong choice for a special occasion dinner with a small group, but don't assume space exists at short notice.

    What should a first-timer know about Verdi?

    Verdi is a Michelin-starred restaurant on the edge of a forest above Linz, run by owner Erich Lukas with his son Philipp now cooking alongside him. The food sits in modern European territory with occasional Asian influences — classical foundations, pared back, not theatrical. At €€€ pricing and with strong service noted across reviews, first-timers should expect a polished but accessible experience rather than an intimidating tasting marathon.

    Can I eat at the bar at Verdi?

    Bar dining is not confirmed in available venue data. The restaurant is described as having a chic interior with some tables offering views of Linz and a terrace — the focus is clearly on seated dining. check the venue's official channels if bar seating matters to your booking decision.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Verdi?

    Dinner is your only option. Verdi opens at 5 PM Tuesday through Saturday and is closed Sunday and Monday — there is no lunch service. Plan for an evening booking and factor in the location above Linz if you're travelling in from the city or beyond.

    What should I wear to Verdi?

    Verdi holds a Michelin star and draws a crowd that treats it as a special occasion destination — dress accordingly. A neat, put-together outfit fits the room; the chic interior and professional service team set a clear tone without tipping into black-tie formality. Arriving underdressed at a restaurant of this standing in a mid-sized Austrian city would stand out for the wrong reasons.

    Location

    Pachmayrstraße 137, 4040 Linz, Austria

    Compare Verdi

    Value at a Glance: Verdi
    VenuePriceValue
    Verdi€€€,
    Rossbarth€€€€,
    Göttfried€€,
    Verdi-Einkehr€€€,
    muto€€,
    Kliemstein Vino Vitis€€€€,

    Comparing your options in Linz for this tier.

    Also Consider

    At the €€€ price point, Verdi sits between Linz's more accessible options and its most expensive rooms, and that positioning is actually its strongest argument. If you are weighing Verdi against Rossbarth or Kliemstein Vino Vitis, both at €€€€, the question is straightforward: Verdi delivers Michelin-starred cooking at a lower price bracket. Unless Rossbarth or Kliemstein Vino Vitis carries a specific credential that addresses your priorities, Verdi is the better value in Linz's top tier.

    For diners who want to spend less without sacrificing quality, muto and Göttfried both operate at €€ and offer creative and regional cooking respectively at considerably lower outlay. muto suits a diner who wants something looser and more experimental; Göttfried suits someone after regional Austrian cooking in a less formal context. Neither competes directly with Verdi on technical ambition or award standing, so if a Michelin-standard meal is the goal, neither is an equivalent substitute.

    Booking difficulty also differentiates the field. Verdi, with its Michelin star and five-evening-only schedule, is the hardest table in this group to secure, plan four weeks out minimum for weekends. muto and Göttfried will generally have more availability at shorter notice. For a Linz visit where you want to anchor one serious dinner and fill the rest of the schedule with lower-effort bookings, the logical structure is Verdi as the headline reservation and Göttfried or muto for the surrounding meals.

    Hours

    Monday
    closed
    Tuesday
    5 PM-1 AM
    Wednesday
    5 PM-1 AM
    Thursday
    5 PM-1 AM
    Friday
    5 PM-1 AM
    Saturday
    5 PM-1 AM
    Sunday
    closed

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