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Notes from Poland is run by a small editorial team and is published by an independent, non-profit foundation that is funded through donations from our readers. We cannot do what we do without your support.
Michelin has published its first-ever restaurant guide covering the whole of Poland, highlighting the country’s impressive culinary scene.
The new, expanded guide adds 92 new restaurants to those previously recognised in Poland, including four newly awarded a coveted Michelin star. Meanwhile, Bottiglieria 1881 in the city of Kraków retains its position as the country’s only restaurant to have two stars, an honour it first received in 2023.
Four New MICHELIN-Star Restaurants in the MICHELIN Guide Poland 2026
The first-ever countrywide Selection in Poland includes 92 new additions to the MICHELIN Guide, alongside four new MICHELIN Stars and 19 fresh Bib Gourmands for great value cookinghttps://t.co/eW4heGcf0f pic.twitter.com/Rfw0DDZTDO
— The MICHELIN Guide (@MichelinGuideUK) May 27, 2026
Until this year, Michelin’s guide for Poland included only Warsaw, Kraków, Poznań, the Pomorskie region (around the city of Gdańsk) and Wrocław (which was added last year). Its latest version, however, covers the country as a whole, including both urban and rural areas.
Michelin now recognises a total of 196 restaurants in Poland. The number with at least one star has risen from seven to 11.
Among the newly starred establishments is Steampunk, located in a converted former water tower in Pszczyna, a town of 26,000 in southern Poland.
Michelin describes entering the restaurant – with decor, as the name suggests, inspired by steampunk culture – as like “stepping into another world”. The food, by chef Ziemowit Owczarz, formerly of Bottiglieria 1881, is “a fantastic example of modern Polish food”, including beef rib and mushroom pierogi in a sauerkraut broth.
Steampunk: The Inspectors Reveal All on a New MICHELIN Star for Poland
Step inside one of Poland’s new MICHELIN-Star restaurants for 2026, with an Inspector’s first-hand account of a unique dining experience
Details here: https://t.co/QYKrDZFbCa pic.twitter.com/Q8jKoiLgMk
— The MICHELIN Guide (@MichelinGuideUK) May 28, 2026
Other restaurants with newly awarded stars include Alon Omakase in Warsaw – Poland’s first Japanese Michelin-starred restaurant – and Baba in Wrocław, which has been upgraded from the “Bib Gourmand” category, which recognises more affordable high-quality dining.
New Bib Gourmand restaurants this year include Kwestia Czasu/NAGO in the northeastern city of Białystok, which draws inspiration from the nearby forests of the Podlasie region, and Piernicova in Toruń, whose name is a reference to the city’s famous gingerbread – piernik in Polish.
However, the star of the show remains Bottiglieria 1881, with Michelin saying that its inspectors continue to be “impressed by the level of refinement and creativity found in the chefs’ boldly flavoured and highly original reinventions of classic Polish cuisine, confirming the restaurant’s two stars for another year”.
Under Michelin’s system, the highest rating of three stars is for restaurants “worth a special journey”. Only 157 establishments worldwide currently hold such a distinction. Two stars are awarded to restaurants “worth a detour” and one to those “worth a stop”.
The guide also offers a green star for establishments committed to sustainable gastronomy. The only restaurant in Poland to hold that award remains Eliksir in Gdańsk, which sources ingredients from local producers and recycles leftover ingredients into other dishes and drinks.
Michelin this year also gave a special service award to Babinicz in Szczawno-Zdrój, a small town of around 5,000 people in western Poland. Staff at the restaurant “stood out for their natural warmth and charm…describing dishes with easy-going confidence…[and] real enthusiasm”, noted the inspectors.
A restaurant in Poland has been named as the best Neapolitan pizzeria in the world by an Italian association devoted to the famous dish.
It is only the second time that a restaurant outside Naples itself has won the award https://t.co/Mucdf1Njre
— Notes from Poland 🇵🇱 (@notesfrompoland) February 13, 2025

Notes from Poland is run by a small editorial team and published by an independent, non-profit foundation that is funded through donations from our readers. We cannot do what we do without your support.
Main image credit: Michelin (press materials)

Daniel Tilles is editor-in-chief of Notes from Poland. He has written on Polish affairs for a wide range of publications, including Foreign Policy, POLITICO Europe, EUobserver and Dziennik Gazeta Prawna.


















