Budapest is hearty, paprika-rich and increasingly modern. Alongside the classics like goulash, chicken paprikash and langos, the city has a fast-growing bistro and ruin-bar food scene. Locals eat well beyond the Castle District, especially around the Jewish Quarter and the city’s residential neighbourhoods.
Below are the restaurants our local guides send friends to in Budapest, hand-picked across neighbourhoods and budgets. No tourist traps, just places worth your appetite.
Where locals eat in Budapest
Blind Mice Exchange Pub
A gimmicky-in-the-best-way bar where drink prices rise and fall like a stock ticker on the screen – buy low, drink well. Rooms upon rooms mean a proper dancefloor plus quieter corners, and the calendar is full of themed nights, from costume parties to karaoke.
Bors GasztroBar
A tiny, wildly popular hole-in-the-wall on Kazinczy street doing inventive soups and stuffed baguettes at pocket-money prices. A local go-to in the ruin-bar quarter; there is almost always a queue, and it is worth it.
Kadar Etkezde
A legendary old-Pest lunch canteen on Klauzal ter, recently reopened after years away, with shared tables, soda siphons and honest home-style Hungarian cooking. Cash, lunchtime only, and full of regulars.
Mazel Tov
A gorgeous plant-filled ruin-bar restaurant in the Jewish Quarter serving fresh Middle Eastern food (hummus, shakshuka, grilled meats) under fairy lights and a glass roof. Buzzy and beautiful; book for dinner.
Getto Gulyas
A friendly District VII spot dedicated to Hungarian comfort classics, above all the stews: goulash, porkolt and paprikas, plus game dishes and good local wine. Hearty, unpretentious and a reliable taste of the real thing.
Menza
A stylish retro-canteen bistro on buzzy Liszt Ferenc square, reworking Hungarian classics (chicken paprikash, schnitzel) in a fun 70s setting with a great terrace. Popular with locals and visitors alike.
Marxim
A cheerfully kitsch, communist-themed pizzeria in Buda, walls plastered with Soviet iconography and pizzas named for the old regime (the Gulag, Anarchismo). Cheap, fun and a Budapest institution with students.
Rosenstein
A warm, family-run restaurant behind Keleti station serving soulful Hungarian and Jewish home cooking, from goose to matzo-ball soup to the famous flodni cake. Old-fashioned in the best way; book ahead.
Frici Papa
A no-frills, dirt-cheap canteen on Kiraly utca ladling out big plates of Hungarian classics, schnitzel, stews, stuffed cabbage, to students, workers and thrifty travellers. Order at the counter and dig in.
Taste Budapest with a local
Book a small-group food tour, or find a place to stay near the best eating.
Budapest food FAQ
What food is Budapest known for?
Budapest is known for goulash, chicken paprikash, langos, chimney cake and a lively new-wave bistro and ruin-bar food scene.
Where do locals eat in Budapest?
Locals tend to eat around District VI, District VII, District II, District VIII, away from the busiest tourist strips.
What are the best restaurants in Budapest?
Our local picks include Blind Mice Exchange Pub, Bors GasztroBar, Kadar Etkezde, plus more in the full list above.
Is eating out in Budapest expensive?
You will find options across budgets in Budapest, from casual, wallet-friendly spots to higher-end dining, so it suits most travellers.