Restaurant in Zürich, Switzerland
Williams Butchers Table
410Pearl PointsDry-aged beef, butcher's counter, no fuss.

About Williams Butchers Table
Ranked the best steakhouse in Switzerland, Williams ButchersTable in Zurich runs dry-aged beef across Swiss, Black Angus, and USDA Prime programmes through a high-temperature grill. The rotational Wagyu and Old Cow events are worth timing your visit around. Booking is straightforward across two city locations, with on-site sommeliers to guide the wine pairing.
Ranked the leading steakhouse in Switzerland, Williams ButchersTable at Schifflände 6 makes a direct case: if dry-aged beef is your priority, this is where you go in Zurich.
The format is distinctive. A central butcher's counter runs through the dining room, and the expectation is that you engage with it. Staff walk you through the available cuts, explaining provenance and ageing before you commit. That spatial arrangement is not decorative: it puts the sourcing conversation at the center of the meal rather than burying it in a menu footnote. The room carries a dual register, part working butcher's shop, part considered restaurant, and the combination works better than it sounds.
The sourcing spans three distinct programmes: Swiss beef, Black Angus, and USDA Prime from Spain. All three run through a dry-ageing process, and the grill operates at high temperature, which matters for crust development on thicker cuts. The ButchersExperience tasting format moves through prime cuts including the Morucha Côte de Boeuf, a Spanish regional breed with notable fat marbling and a longer ageing window than commodity beef. Seasonal rotation is where Williams ButchersTable earns repeat visits: the Wagyu Experience and Old Cow Experience are not permanent fixtures but rotational events tied to supply and availability. If rare-breed or heritage beef is your reason for coming, check what is running before you book. A visit without one of these events is still worth it, but a visit timed to the Wagyu or Old Cow rotation is a materially different meal.
Wine programme is curated to work with the meat rather than compete with it. Sommeliers are on-site and engaged, which is useful given how differently the three beef programmes respond to tannin and acidity. This is not the kind of restaurant where you order a glass of whatever and move on. If you are spending at this level on the beef, the beverage pairing conversation is worth having.
Booking is direct by Zurich fine-dining standards. Williams ButchersTable operates across two locations, Bellevue and Hegibachplatz, which spreads demand and makes last-minute tables more realistic than at destination restaurants like IGNIV Zürich by Andreas Caminada or The Counter. For the rotational events, earlier booking is advisable since the rare-breed cuts are supply-limited. The Schifflände location sits on the riverfront near Bellevue, which adds logistical convenience if you are staying in central Zurich. For broader context on where this fits in the city's dining options, see our full Zurich restaurants guide.
Joel Pires and Mario Pappa run the kitchen. The approach is product-led rather than technique-forward: the cooking does not obscure the beef, it frames it. Sides and starters are designed to support rather than compete, with seasonal vegetables and salads rotating alongside the meat programme. This is relevant because it signals where the kitchen's priorities lie. Do not come expecting elaborate appetisers or a multi-element tasting menu in the classical sense. Come expecting the leading version of the ingredient in front of you.
For travellers building a Switzerland dining itinerary around serious cooking, Williams ButchersTable occupies a different register than Michelin-focused destinations like Schloss Schauenstein in Fürstenau or Cheval Blanc by Peter Knogl in Basel. Those are tasting-menu experiences built around a chef's creative vision. Williams ButchersTable is built around a product category executed at a high level. Both have a place in a serious eating trip; they are answering different questions. If you are also exploring Hotel de Ville Crissier in Crissier or Memories in Bad Ragaz, Williams ButchersTable works well as the casual-but-serious meat anchor of a broader Swiss itinerary. For everything else in the city, our Zurich hotels guide and our Zurich bars guide are worth checking before you arrive.
What to Know Before You Book
- Dry-aged beef across three sourcing programmes: Swiss, Black Angus, USDA Prime from Spain
- High-temperature grill used across all cuts
- Rotational events (Wagyu Experience, Old Cow Experience) are supply-dependent and worth timing your visit around
- Two Zurich locations: Bellevue (Schifflände 6) and Hegibachplatz, making availability easier than single-site competitors
- On-site sommeliers available to match wine to your specific cut and programme
- Booking difficulty is low to moderate; rotational events require earlier reservation
- For rare-breed events, confirm availability before booking rather than assuming the programme is always running
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Williams Butchers Table handle dietary restrictions?
Dietary accommodations can vary. Flag restrictions in advance via the venue's official channels.
Is Williams ButchersTable good for solo dining?
Yes, and the butcher's counter format works well for solo diners. You can engage directly with staff about the cuts on display, which makes the experience feel less transactional than a standard table for one. Ranked as Switzerland's best steakhouse, the focus is firmly on the meat rather than the social dynamic, which suits solo visits.
Can Williams ButchersTable accommodate groups?
Groups are a reasonable fit here given the venue has two Zurich locations (Bellevue and Hegibachplatz), which means capacity is not as tight as a single-site restaurant. For larger parties, the Wagyu Experience or Old Cow Experience formats work well as a shared centrepiece. check the venue's official channels at Schifflände 6 to confirm group booking arrangements.
Can I eat at the bar at Williams ButchersTable?
The butcher's counter is the centrepiece of the dining room and is where the real interaction happens — but whether it functions as a walk-in bar-style seat depends on the service format at the time of your visit. The experience is built around selecting cuts at the counter, so arriving with that expectation is more important than worrying about bar versus table seating.
Location
Schifflände 6, 8001 Zürich, Switzerland
Compare Williams Butchers Table
| Venue | Price |
|---|---|
| Williams Butchers Table | |
| IGNIV Zürich by Andreas Caminada | €€€€ |
| KLE | €€€ |
| Kronenhalle | €€€ |
| The Counter | €€€€ |
| Eden Kitchen & Bar | €€€€ |
Comparing your options in Zurich for this tier.
Also Consider
- IGNIV Zürich by Andreas Caminada, Sharing, €€€€
- KLE, Vegan, €€€
- Kronenhalle, Swiss, Traditional Cuisine, €€€
- The Counter, Creative, €€€€
- Eden Kitchen & Bar, Italian, €€€€
Against Zurich's broader fine-dining set, Williams ButchersTable occupies a clear lane: it is the city's most serious dedicated beef restaurant, and no direct competitor matches it on cut selection and dry-ageing depth. If you are choosing between this and The Counter for a splurge dinner, the decision comes down to format. The Counter is creative and chef-driven; Williams ButchersTable is product-driven. Both are at the €€€€ tier, but the experience structure is entirely different. For a celebration where you want a chef's narrative, The Counter. For a celebration built around the best beef in Switzerland, Williams ButchersTable.
IGNIV Zürich by Andreas Caminada is another €€€€ option but operates on a sharing format anchored in creative European cooking. It is not a useful comparison for anyone prioritising beef specifically, but it is the stronger pick if you want a table where everyone eats very differently. Kronenhalle at €€€ offers Swiss traditional cooking with genuine historic atmosphere and is easier on the bill, but it does not compete on beef quality or programme depth. If budget is a constraint and beef is still the goal, Kronenhalle has its merits as a fallback, but the gap in sourcing rigour is real.
Eden Kitchen & Bar at €€€€ is Italian-focused and a reasonable peer on price, but serves a fundamentally different cuisine. It is worth considering if your group is split between meat-focused and broader Italian preferences. For a single-minded beef evening, Williams ButchersTable has no serious competition in Zurich. Book it when a rotational event like the Wagyu or Old Cow Experience is running and you have the strongest case for the spend.
Recognized By
Explore Zürich
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