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Regional Austrian Fine Dining

Google: 4.8 · 80 reviews

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Sölden, Austria

AD VINUM

CuisineRegional Cuisine
Price€€€€
Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceFormal
NoiseQuiet
CapacityIntimate
Michelin

AD VINUM holds consecutive Michelin Plate recognition (2024 and 2025) and a 4.8 Google rating from 65 reviews, placing it among the more consistent regional dining addresses in the Ötztal. The kitchen works within an Austrian regional register, making it a counterpoint to Sölden's higher-altitude, modern-cuisine options. At the €€€€ price tier, it suits an unhurried dinner rather than a quick post-ski stop.

AD VINUM restaurant in Sölden, Austria
About

Regional Cooking at Altitude: Where Sölden's Dining Scene Finds Its Grounding

Ski resorts at Sölden's elevation tend to pull their restaurant scene in two directions: dramatic altitude venues chasing a modern-cuisine brief, and a smaller cohort of lower-valley addresses that hold the regional register. AD VINUM, on Schmiedhofstraße in the valley floor, sits firmly in the second category. The approach here is not novelty for its own sake. Austrian alpine regional cooking has a specific grammar — cured meats, root vegetables, dairy traditions, freshwater fish from nearby rivers, game from the surrounding Ötztal — and a kitchen working seriously within that tradition operates differently from one chasing contemporary techniques.

That distinction matters in Sölden more than in most Austrian resort towns. The resort's most-discussed dining addresses, including ice Q (Modern Cuisine) at 3,048 metres and Ötztaler Stube (Modern Cuisine) with its Michelin star, operate in the modern-cuisine bracket. AD VINUM occupies a different position: a €€€€ address where the editorial interest lies in what the kitchen sources and how it handles ingredients that the surrounding landscape has supplied to Tyrolean tables for generations. The consecutive Michelin Plate recognitions in 2024 and 2025 signal that execution here meets a consistent standard, without the overhaul cycles that newer concept restaurants often require.

The Logic of Regional Sourcing in the Ötztal

Austrian regional cuisine, at its most coherent, is an argument about geography. The Ötztal valley runs roughly 65 kilometres south into the Alps from its junction with the Inn valley, and the altitude gradient across that distance produces ingredients that lowland Austrian kitchens cannot reliably access: alpine herbs that develop higher aromatic intensity at elevation, dairy from cattle that graze on mountain pasture, and game from terrain that has no lowland equivalent. A kitchen committed to working within this sourcing logic is, in effect, documenting what the valley produces in a given season.

This is not a niche concern in the Austrian alpine dining tradition. Restaurants such as Gannerhof in Innervillgraten and Fahr in Künten-Sulz have made regional-sourcing discipline the core of their editorial identity, and both sit in a broader Austrian conversation about what the country's culinary regions actually produce when kitchens pay attention. At the national level, addresses like Döllerer in Golling an der Salzach and Obauer in Werfen have built sustained reputations on exactly this premise. AD VINUM operates within that tradition at the Ötztal scale, where the sourcing radius is tighter and the seasonal window shorter.

Sölden's operating calendar shapes what regional sourcing means here in practice. The resort runs two primary seasons , winter skiing and summer hiking , with a quieter shoulder between them, and a kitchen anchored to local ingredients has to work with that rhythm. Winter menus in the Austrian alpine tradition lean toward preserved and cured products, aged cheeses, braised preparations using meat that carries the weight of cold-weather rearing. Summer brings a different set of possibilities: alpine herbs, soft dairy, lighter preparations. A 4.8 rating across 65 Google reviews across multiple seasons suggests the kitchen manages that seasonal shift without losing consistency.

Where AD VINUM Sits in the Sölden Price Tier

The €€€€ designation at AD VINUM places it at the same price point as Black Sheep and Ötztaler Stube, and above ice Q, which operates at €€€. In a resort context, a top-tier price bracket requires a specific kind of discipline from a regional-cuisine kitchen: the cooking has to justify the price through sourcing quality and technical confidence rather than through the spectacle of altitude or the novelty of a concept. The Michelin Plate, awarded consecutively across two years, suggests that AD VINUM clears that bar on consistency if not on the star-level ambition of Ötztaler Stube.

For comparison across the Austrian alpine dining circuit, the peer set at this price point includes Griggeler Stuba in Lech and Gourmetrestaurant Tannenhof in Sankt Anton am Arlberg, both of which operate in the premium alpine regional and modern-cuisine space. Further afield, Kräuterreich by Vitus Winkler in Sankt Veit im Pongau represents how aggressively a committed alpine herb-sourcing program can differentiate a regional kitchen. AD VINUM's positioning in Sölden is less about competing with those addresses than about occupying a specific role within the resort: the address where regional cooking is taken seriously at an appropriate price for the category.

Planning a Meal at AD VINUM

AD VINUM is located at Schmiedhofstraße 2 in Sölden, on the valley floor rather than at altitude. For skiers and visitors arriving from the resort centre, this is a dinner-format address rather than a mid-mountain stop. The €€€€ pricing and consecutive Michelin recognition position it as a considered evening out within Sölden's dining options, appropriate for a party that wants to move beyond resort-casual eating. Booking in advance is advisable during peak winter and summer seasons when Sölden operates at full resort capacity.

The address works for adults and older children who will sit through a proper dinner service, though the price point and format make it less suited to families with young children looking for flexibility. For visitors planning a broader trip across Austrian dining, the regional cuisine here connects to a wider network of addresses worth noting: Steirereck im Stadtpark in Vienna anchors the national conversation at the top tier, while Ikarus in Salzburg operates a different model entirely. AD VINUM is leading understood as a Sölden-specific expression of a regional tradition that runs across the Austrian alpine arc.

For a full picture of dining, drinking, and staying in Sölden, see our full Sölden restaurants guide, our full Sölden hotels guide, our full Sölden bars guide, our full Sölden wineries guide, and our full Sölden experiences guide. For context on how regional alpine cuisine compares with the broader Austrian scene, Landhaus Bacher in Mautern an der Donau offers a useful reference point in the Wachau.

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In Context: Similar Options

A fast peer set for context, pulled from similar venues in our database.

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Cozy
  • Elegant
  • Sophisticated
  • Intimate
  • Scenic
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Special Occasion
Experience
  • Wine Cellar
  • Private Dining
Drink Program
  • Extensive Wine List
  • Sommelier Led
Sourcing
  • Local Sourcing
Views
  • Mountain
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelQuiet
CapacityIntimate
Service StyleFormal
Meal PacingLeisurely

Chic modern-Alpine style with sophisticated, cozy, and intimate atmosphere enhanced by stunning Alpine views.