11 Best Restaurants in Sorrento, Sorrento and the Sorrentine Peninsula

A'Marenna

$ Fodor's choice

Run with enthusiasm and love by two young Sorrentine women, this small rustic-styled bakery and bistro makes generously filled panini using fresh ingredients on ciabatta and panuozzo pizza-dough bread. It's also a fab spot to linger with some local wine and a cheese platter.

Don Alfonso 1890

$$$$ Fodor's choice

A gastronomic giant and pioneer in upscale farm-to-table cuisine (it even grows its own produce on a small farm nearby), Don Alfonso is considered one of Italy's best restaurants. It's a family affair, with mamma (Livia) handling the dining room, papà (former chef Alfonso Iaccarrino) tending to the organic plot, one son working as the current chef (preparing classic dishes alongside edgier creations), and the other serving as maître d'. For an extra splurge you can stay at their self-styled boutique hotel with a range of vibrantly decorated rooms and a heating pool. 

Fresco Sorrento

$ Fodor's choice

A popular gelateria run by a young couple offering lots of fresh house-made gelato flavors as well as interesting bubble tea options, granita, frappé, frullati, fresh fruit cups, and crepes. 

Via Fuoro 27, Sorrento, Campania, 80067, Italy
081-8772832
Known For
  • fab ice-cream flavors
  • lemon granita slush and sorbetti
  • nutty pistacchio and nocciola
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Jan.--Mar.

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Ristorante Bagni Delfino

$$ Fodor's choice

At this informal, waterside restaurant and snack bar, you won't see many locals—they're unlikely to be impressed by the four-language menus—but the seafood platters are fresh and flavorful, and you can eat alfresco in the sunshine or inside a glass-enclosed dining area with a nautical motif. You can even go for a swim (just please, wait an hour or so after eating!). For a special-occasion splurge consider renting out their new (opened 2021) luxury resort next door, Villa del Maggiore, replete with pool, terraces. and direct private access to the sea.

Ristorante Museo Caruso

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Sorrentine favorites, including acquerello (fresh fish appetizer) and ravioli with crab and zucchini sauce, are tweaked creatively here. The staff is warm and helpful, the singer on the sound system is the long-departed "fourth tenor" himself, and the operatic memorabilia (including posters and old photos of Caruso) is displayed in a flattering blush-pink light.

Da Emilia

$$

Near the steps of the Marina Grande, this reliable choice for seafood (established in 1947) might not be Sorrento's most visually prepossessing place, but its homespun, family feel—complete with wooden tables and checked tablecloths—is a refreshing change from the town's (occasionally pretentious) elegance.

Via Marina Grande 62, Sorrento, Campania, 80067, Italy
081-8072720
Known For
  • tasty and fresh seafood combos like mussels with Sorrentine lemons
  • harbor terrace above the rocks
  • family run
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Nov.–Feb.

Il Buco

$$$

In the spirit of the "slow food" movement, this colorful contemporary restaurant just off Piazza Sant'Antonino uses only local and seasonal ingredients of the highest quality in its nouvelle creations. Ask your waiter what inventive sea and land dishes make up the day's specials.

Seconda Rampa di Marina Piccola 5, Sorrento, Campania, 80067, Italy
081-8782354
Known For
  • exquisite, bite-size experimental dishes
  • intimate outdoor rooms outside
  • choice of changing menus
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Wed. and Jan. and Feb.

La Basilica

$$

Under the same ownership as the Ristorante Museo Caruso, this budget alternative—in a tiny alley between piazzas Tasso and St. Antonino—offers the same wine list (about 1,700 labels) plus a bountiful choice of hearty Italian dishes. Its main salon is decorated with modern paintings of an erupting Vesuvius (there's outdoor seating as well), but the smaller room on the opposite side of the road is more romantic, with a tiny balcony overlooking the tortuous road to the harbor.

La Lanterna

$$

On the site of Roman thermal baths (you can see the ancient ruins under a glass section in the floor), this is a historic venue as well as a beloved eatery. Whether dining outdoors under the lanterns or indoors under the beamed ceiling and stucco arcades, you'll enjoy cucina tipica, locale e nazionale (traditional local and national cooking), including seafood and meat dishes as well as top-quality vera pizza napoletana (truly authentic Neapolitan pizza).

Meating

$$

This steak house--pizzeria, with a stylish Spanish-theme dining area of fiery toro artwork and exposed brick, is a good alternative to Sorrento's many seafood-focused restaurants. As you'd expect from the name, it has plenty of meat dishes as well as a good selection of vegetarian and fish options.

Ristorante 'o Parrucchiano La Favorita

$$

Opened in 1868 by an ex-priest ('o parrucchiano means "the priest" in the local dialect), this restaurant serves classic Sorrentine cuisine in a 19th-century setting that's enchanting, although  it can feel touristy: a sprawling, multilevel greenhouse packed with tables and chairs amid fruit trees and enough tropical foliage to fill a Victorian conservatory.

Corso Italia 71, Sorrento, Campania, 80067, Italy
081-8781321
Known For
  • fecund greenhouse and terrace foliage and fruit
  • signature cannelloni created in 1870
  • gorgeous setting but may disappoint food-wise