Restaurant in Warsaw, Poland
Mokotów Neighbourhood Trattoria

Ciao a Tutti is a neighbourhood Italian restaurant on al. Niepodległości in Warsaw's Mokotów district. Booking is easy, making it a practical choice when Warsaw's harder-to-secure tables are full. Best suited to casual dinners and repeat visits rather than high-stakes occasion dining.
Without confirmed pricing on record, the first thing to flag is that Ciao a Tutti sits at al. Niepodległości 217 in Warsaw's Mokotów district, and booking here is rated easy — which in Warsaw's increasingly competitive dining scene is itself useful information. If you're weighing options and availability is a factor, that ease of access puts it ahead of harder-to-secure tables like Rozbrat 20 or NUTA.
The name , Italian for "hello, everyone" , signals an informal, welcoming register. Expect the physical space to reflect that: the kind of room designed for groups and returning regulars rather than one-off occasion dining. For special occasions where the atmosphere needs to earn its place, that informality is worth weighing against more polished alternatives. If you want the full Warsaw celebratory-dinner experience with sharper service and more considered presentation, venues like hub.praga or Rozbrat 20 carry more weight for milestone occasions.
That said, the ease-of-booking rating and the venue's address in a residential-commercial corridor of Mokotów suggest a neighbourhood-anchored operation: the kind of place where a second or third visit feels more natural than a first. For Warsaw residents building a local rotation, that has real value. For visitors with limited nights, the calculus is different.
If you do visit more than once, the Italian-inflected name suggests a menu structure that rewards repeat visits , antipasti and lighter dishes on a first pass, heavier plates or specials on a return. Without confirmed dish data, that's framing rather than prescription, but the general principle holds: easy-to-book neighbourhood spots in this register tend to have enough range across the menu to justify two or three visits over a season. Use the first visit to read the room and order broadly; return with a clearer target.
For comparison, alewino operates in a similar accessibility bracket and rewards repeat visits with its wine-led approach. Baken is another Warsaw option worth considering for casual, high-repeat-value dining. If you're planning a wider Polish dining trip, Bottiglieria 1881 in Kraków and Arco by Paco Pérez in Gdańsk are the benchmark restaurants worth anchoring an itinerary around.
With booking rated easy, you do not need to plan weeks ahead. A few days' notice should be sufficient for most party sizes. That makes Ciao a Tutti a reliable fallback when Warsaw's harder tables , NUTA, hub.praga , are full. It also makes it a low-friction choice for spontaneous plans or same-week decisions, which has genuine practical value in a city where the better-known spots fill fast on weekends.
Warsaw's restaurant scene has broadened considerably, and the mid-range and neighbourhood tiers now include genuinely good options alongside the headline splurge destinations. For a full picture of what's available, see our full Warsaw restaurants guide. If you're also planning where to stay or what else to do in the city, our Warsaw hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide cover the full picture. For Polish dining beyond Warsaw, Muga in Poznań and Giewont in Kościelisko are worth adding to the list.
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ciao a Tutti | Easy | — | |
| Rozbrat 20 | €€€ | Unknown | — |
| alewino | €€ | Unknown | — |
| Bez Gwiazdek | €€€ | Unknown | — |
| Butchery & Wine | €€ | Unknown | — |
| hub.praga | €€€ | Unknown | — |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.