Restaurant in Wien, Austria
Vienna wine country dining: know the tradeoffs.

Nussberg is a venue in Vienna's 19th district, on the city's wine-growing hillside fringe. With no confirmed pricing, menu, or awards data currently available, it's best suited to exploratory visits if you're already in the area. For a planned occasion with more booking confidence, consider Steirereck im Stadtpark or check our full Wien restaurants guide first.
If you're weighing up where to eat in Vienna's 19th district, Nussberg sits in a part of the city better known for its Heuriger wine taverns than destination dining. That positioning matters: before booking, it's worth asking whether the experience here is meaningfully different from a well-run neighbourhood spot, or whether you'd be better served heading to Steirereck im Stadtpark in Vienna for a more documented, high-confidence booking.
Nussberg sits in Vienna's wine-growing hillside fringe, an area where the draw is as much about proximity to the Viennese vineyards as it is about what's on the plate. For a first-timer, that context is useful: this is a neighbourhood where you eat and drink with the landscape in mind, not a destination you cross the city for without a specific reason. If you're already exploring the outer districts or visiting the Nussberg wine slopes, the venue makes good sense as a stopping point. If you're travelling in from the centre specifically for a meal, the case is weaker without more data to confirm quality.
On the question of takeout and delivery — the angle worth addressing given the venue's location — Nussberg's hillside address in the 19th district makes off-premise dining a reasonable practical question. Vienna's outer districts are reasonably well served by delivery platforms, but venues in this part of the city tend to skew toward sit-down, leisurely formats rather than food built for transit. For food that genuinely travels well in Vienna, Pizzeria Riva is a more reliable choice. For the full picture of where to eat and drink in the city, see our full Wien restaurants guide, our full Wien bars guide, and our full Wien wineries guide.
With no confirmed pricing, hours, awards, or menu data currently available, the honest verdict is: hold the booking until more detail is confirmed, unless you're already in the area and treating this as a low-stakes, exploratory visit. Vienna has enough well-documented options , including Landhaus Bacher in Mautern an der Donau and Obauer in Werfen for those willing to travel , that a venue without verifiable data should rank lower on your shortlist for a planned occasion.
For broader planning in Austria, Döllerer in Golling an der Salzach, Ois in Neufelden, and Kräuterreich by Vitus Winkler in Sankt Veit im Pongau all have stronger documented cases. See also our full Wien hotels guide and our full Wien experiences guide for planning the wider trip.
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nussberg | Easy | — | ||
| Steirereck im Stadtpark | Creative | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Döllerer | Contemporary Austrian, Innovative | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| Landhaus Bacher | Austrian, Classic Cuisine | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| Obauer | Classic Cuisine | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| Taubenkobel | Modern Austrian, French Contemporary | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
A quick look at how Nussberg measures up.
Nussberg sits in Vienna's 19th district, a neighbourhood where Heuriger taverns draw steady local and tourist traffic, especially on weekends. Booking at least one to two weeks ahead is a reasonable floor for Friday or Saturday sittings. For midweek visits, a few days' notice is likely sufficient, though specific availability is not confirmed in current records.
Vienna's 19th district dining culture skews towards relaxed, communal Heuriger-style settings, which tend to be welcoming for solo visitors rather than formal or counter-focused formats. Solo dining here is unlikely to feel awkward. That said, confirmed seating arrangements at Nussberg are not on record, so calling ahead is the safest move.
Specific menu items are not available in current venue records, so no dish recommendations can be given without risking inaccuracy. Vienna's 19th district is Heuriger country, meaning local wine paired with cold platters and seasonal Austrian produce is the typical format in this area — check the menu directly before visiting.
For a step up in ambition and credentials, Steirereck im Stadtpark is Vienna's reference-point fine-dining address. If you're open to day-trip range, Landhaus Bacher in Mautern and Obauer in Werfen both carry serious reputations for Austrian regional cooking. Taubenkobel in Schützen am Gebirge suits those who want a wine-forward, countryside feel closer to Nussberg's register.
Without confirmed awards, pricing, or chef details on record, it is hard to position Nussberg firmly as a special-occasion destination versus a neighbourhood regular. Vienna's 19th district setting carries inherent appeal for a low-key celebration. For a milestone dinner where prestige matters, Steirereck im Stadtpark or Döllerer offer more documented credentials to justify the occasion.
Bar or counter seating details are not confirmed for Nussberg in current records. In the Heuriger-style venues typical of Vienna's 1190 district, informal seating at a counter or standing area is common, but this can change for Nussberg specifically. check the venue's official channels before banking on it.
Group capacity details are not on record for Nussberg. Vienna's 19th district wine tavern format generally suits groups better than formal tasting-menu restaurants do, but private room availability and maximum party sizes should be confirmed directly with the venue before planning a large booking.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.