Restaurant in Hamburg, Germany
Witwenball
410pts300 wines, rotating menu, €€ value.

About Witwenball
Witwenball is a wine-forward modern bistro in Hamburg's Eimsbüttel neighbourhood, holding a Michelin Plate (2024) and back-to-back Star Wine List #1 rankings (2023–2024). With 300+ organic-focused wines, a rotating themed menu, and a 4.6 Google rating across 700+ reviews, it delivers serious wine credentials at €€ pricing. Book when the current menu theme suits you.
The verdict on Witwenball
The themed menu at Witwenball rotates every few weeks, which means the window for any given iteration is short. If a particular pairing has caught your attention, book soon rather than later. At €€ pricing, this is one of the more accessible wine-forward restaurants in Hamburg, and the combination of a Michelin Plate (2024) and back-to-back Star Wine List #1 rankings (2023 and 2024) gives it more credibility than its neighbourhood bistro aesthetic might suggest. For anyone who takes wine seriously, Witwenball is worth booking.
Portrait
Witwenball sits on Weidenallee 20 in Eimsbüttel, a neighbourhood west of the Schanzenviertel that draws a design-conscious, independent-minded crowd. The space itself signals intent before you order anything: pale green chairs, azure blue bench seats, shining marble tables, a white marble counter, and decorative wine shelving that frames the room without tipping into showiness. This is not a wine bar that hedges toward the casual. It is a considered environment built around the idea that wine and food should reinforce each other.
The drinks program is the reason to book. Over 300 wines are available as pairings to the changing menu, with a stated emphasis on organic viticulture. That breadth puts Witwenball in a different category from most neighbourhood restaurants at this price point. The Star Wine List recognition — #1 in Hamburg two years running — confirms what the list itself suggests: this is a serious selection, curated with a point of view rather than assembled for volume. If you are choosing between venues for a dinner where the wine matters as much as the food, Witwenball earns its place over most comparably priced options in the city. For Hamburg's broader wine scene, see our full Hamburg wineries guide.
The food operates on a rotating themed menu that changes every few weeks. That model rewards repeat visits and keeps the kitchen from going stale, but it also means there is no fixed reference point for what you will eat on a given night. The Michelin Plate recognition acknowledges consistent quality without the formality of a star, which maps accurately to the room: this is cooking that takes itself seriously without requiring you to do the same. The desserts, per the venue's own framing, are worth ordering. Plan accordingly rather than skipping the final course.
For a special occasion at the €€ tier, Witwenball occupies a sensible middle ground. It is more considered than a standard bistro booking, the wine list gives the evening a focal point, and the interior has enough visual character to make the setting feel deliberate. It is not the choice if you want a private dining room or white-glove service , but if you want a dinner that feels genuinely curated without the formality (or the price) of Hamburg's top-end tables, this works. For comparison at higher price points, consider Restaurant Haerlin for classic French grandeur or The Table Kevin Fehling for avant-garde tasting menus at €€€€.
The Google rating of 4.6 across 702 reviews is a useful signal: broad approval at volume is harder to maintain than a handful of enthusiast scores, and it suggests the experience holds up consistently rather than just on its leading nights. For other Hamburg restaurants earning sustained praise, haebel and Klinker are worth comparing in the mid-range bracket, while 100/200 Kitchen offers a creative tasting format at a step up. See our full Hamburg restaurants guide for a broader view of the city's dining options.
Booking difficulty is rated easy, which reflects the neighbourhood profile and price point. This is not a table that requires months of planning, but given the short rotation of the themed menu, timing your visit to a specific iteration may take some coordination. Check what is currently running before you book if the theme matters to you.
For those interested in how Hamburg's wine-focused dining compares to other German cities, Aqua in Wolfsburg and JAN in Munich represent the higher end of the national spectrum, while CODA Dessert Dining in Berlin offers a comparable emphasis on pairing within a single-focus format. For European reference points where wine and creative menus intersect at the leading level, Frantzén in Stockholm and FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai illustrate where the format can go. Closer to home, Schwarzwaldstube in Baiersbronn, Vendôme in Bergisch Gladbach, and ES:SENZ in Grassau represent Germany's broader fine-dining conversation for context.
Practical details
Address: Weidenallee 20, 20357 Hamburg, Eimsbüttel. Budget: €€ , accessible for a wine-focused dinner. Reservations: Booking is easy; no urgent lead time required, though the rotating menu means it is worth checking the current theme before you go. Dress: No published dress code; the relaxed but considered interior suggests smart-casual is appropriate. Wine list: 300+ wines with an emphasis on organic producers. Awards: Michelin Plate (2024), Star Wine List #1 Hamburg (2023 and 2024). For more options in the area, see our full Hamburg bars guide, our full Hamburg hotels guide, and our full Hamburg experiences guide.
Frequently asked questions
- Can Witwenball accommodate groups? No group capacity data is published, but the marble counter and bench seating described in the interior suggest a mid-sized room. At the €€ price point, this is a reasonable choice for a small group dinner , but contact the venue directly to confirm availability for parties larger than four, as no booking method or phone number is publicly listed in the venue record.
- Is Witwenball good for a special occasion? Yes, with the right expectations. The Michelin Plate and dual Star Wine List #1 rankings give the evening a credible anchor, the interior is considered enough to feel deliberate, and a 300-bottle wine list means you can make the drinks the focus of the celebration. It is not a formal fine-dining experience , the €€ tier and bistro setting make that clear , but for a birthday or anniversary dinner where atmosphere and wine matter more than ceremony, it works well.
- What should I wear to Witwenball? No dress code is stated. The Eimsbüttel neighbourhood, the €€ pricing, and the bistro-with-serious-wine positioning all point to smart-casual as the appropriate register. You will not be turned away for dressing down, but the marble interior rewards a little effort.
- What should a first-timer know about Witwenball? Three things: the themed menu changes every few weeks, so what you read about may not be what is currently on offer , check before booking. The wine list is the main event, with 300+ organic-focused bottles and two consecutive #1 Star Wine List rankings in Hamburg. And the desserts are specifically called out as a highlight, so do not skip them. Arrive knowing which wines you want to explore and the evening structures itself from there.
- What are alternatives to Witwenball in Hamburg? For modern cuisine at a comparable mid-range price, haebel and Klinker are worth considering. If you want a step up in formality and are willing to spend more, Heimatjuwel at €€€ offers German creative cuisine with strong neighbourhood credentials. At the leading end, The Table Kevin Fehling is Hamburg's most technically ambitious table. Witwenball's specific advantage is the wine list depth at the €€ price point , no direct equivalent in the city matches that combination.
Compare Witwenball
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Witwenball | €€ | Easy | — |
| The Table Kevin Fehling | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| bianc | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Lakeside | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Heimatjuwel | €€€ | Unknown | — |
| Landhaus Scherrer | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
A quick look at how Witwenball measures up.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can Witwenball accommodate groups?
Witwenball is a bistro-format space in Eimsbüttel — think marble tables, bench seating, and a counter rather than a sprawling dining room. Small groups of 4-6 are feasible, but large parties should check the venue's official channels before assuming capacity. The rotating menu format also works best when everyone at the table is on board with sharing a themed experience rather than choosing independently.
Is Witwenball good for a special occasion?
Yes, with the right expectations. The Michelin Plate (2024) and consecutive Star Wine List #1 rankings (2023, 2024) back up the quality, and the bold interior — marble tables, azure bench seats, decorative wine shelving — gives it a distinctive feel without being stuffy. At €€ pricing, it delivers a genuinely celebratory dinner without the cost of a full tasting-menu restaurant. The themed, rotating menu also makes it feel like a specific event rather than a generic night out.
What should I wear to Witwenball?
Eimsbüttel is a design-conscious, alternative neighbourhood, and Witwenball's interior reflects that: relaxed but considered. Neat, put-together casual is the practical read here — you won't be underdressed in dark jeans and a good shirt, and a suit would feel out of place. The venue's own described atmosphere is 'relaxed and bold', which is a reasonable guide for how to dress.
What should a first-timer know about Witwenball?
The themed menu changes every few weeks, so check what's currently running before you go — the specific iteration matters more here than at a static menu restaurant. The wine list runs to over 300 bottles with a strong emphasis on organic viticulture, and the desserts are specifically called out as a highlight, so don't skip them. Booking is not urgent, but given the short window for any given menu, locking in a date sooner rather than later is worth it.
What are alternatives to Witwenball in Hamburg?
For a step up in formality and price, The Table Kevin Fehling is Hamburg's three-Michelin-star counter-dining experience — a different format and budget entirely. Heimatjuwel and Landhaus Scherrer both offer more traditional Hamburg dining if the rotating-menu format isn't for you. bianc is a strong option for modern Italian fine dining at a mid-to-upper price point. Lakeside suits those who want a scenic setting alongside their meal. Witwenball sits apart from all of them specifically on the wine-programme depth and the organic-focused pairing angle at an accessible price.
Recognized By
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