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Compartir Cadaqués occupies a rustic stone-and-slate property in the Costa Brava village that shaped Dalí's imagination, and brings Disfrutar-trained technique to a shareable, informally structured menu. Ranked #115 in Opinionated About Dining's Casual Europe list for 2025 and holding a Michelin Plate, it is the clearest dining argument for spending a full afternoon in Cadaqués rather than passing through.
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- Address
- Riera de Sant Vicenç, s/n, 17488 Cadaqués, Girona, Spain
- Phone
- +34 972 25 84 82
- Website
- compartircadaques.com

A Village Setting That Sets the Terms
Cadaqués operates on its own logic. The white-walled fishing village at the far end of Cap de Creus has no direct motorway access, which means anyone arriving has committed, the winding coastal road from Roses discourages casual detours. That physical remove has preserved something: the village moves slowly, eats late, and rewards those who plan to stay long enough to use both service windows in a day. Compartir Cadaqués fits that rhythm. Situated on Riera de Sant Vicenç, it occupies a rustic property of slate, stone, and timber, with a patio-terrace that functions as the room's centrepiece when the weather holds. The architecture reads as vernacular rather than designed, which, in a village this self-conscious about its own aesthetic, is itself a kind of positioning.
The Disfrutar Connection and What It Means Here
Spain's modern fine-dining circuit runs on lineage. The chefs who trained at elBulli dispersed across the peninsula and, over two decades, shaped a generation of kitchens from El Celler de Can Roca in Girona to DiverXO in Madrid and beyond. Disfrutar in Barcelona, itself a product of that lineage, represents a specific strand of that inheritance: technically precise, playful with form, and committed to a kind of progressive rigour that sits at the opposite end of the register from rustic simplicity. The culinary team behind Compartir Cadaqués comes from that environment. Chef Nil Dulcet oversees a kitchen that uses those techniques not to produce a tasting-menu spectacle but to sharpen the execution of a more accessible, sharing-oriented format. That shift in register, from the high formality of a Barcelona progression to an à la carte designed for a table of friends eating together, is the editorial point. The technique travels; the ceremony does not. It places Compartir Cadaqués in a bracket that Spain does well but rarely exports convincingly: serious cooking in an informal frame, in a setting that earns the informality rather than borrowing it from the room's design language.
For reference points on what full-ceremony Spanish fine dining looks like at the top of the market, Arzak in San Sebastián, Azurmendi in Larrabetzu, Martin Berasategui in Lasarte-Oria, and Mugaritz in Errenteria occupy that upper tier. Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María and Quique Dacosta in Dénia show how coastal ingredients get handled at three-star intensity. Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona, Ricard Camarena in València, and Atrio in Cáceres sit closer in spirit to the Catalan culinary corridor. Compartir Cadaqués is not competing with any of them directly, its price point (€€€) and format place it in a different conversation, but the technical pedigree is shaped by the same tradition.
Format and Menu Architecture
The menu at Compartir Cadaqués divides into two structural tracks: an à la carte built around sharing, and a tasting menu served to the full table when the group elects it. The à la carte carries dedicated sections for oysters and rice dishes, both of which signal a conscious orientation toward the Costa Brava's coastal larder. Rice in Catalonia has its own regional grammar, looser than a Valencian paella, often more liquid in texture, and dedicating a menu section to it is a statement of local intent rather than a generic gesture toward Mediterranean cooking. The emphasis on local provenance and traditional flavours runs through both tracks without becoming nostalgic about it; the techniques applied are current even when the ingredients and reference points are rooted in place. A Google rating of 4.6 across 2,830 reviews at the €€€ price range is a useful data point: at that volume of feedback, the score reflects consistent execution rather than a handful of exceptional visits.
Recognition and What It Signals
Opinionated About Dining ranked Compartir Cadaqués at #97 in its Casual Europe list in 2023, #116 in 2024, and #115 in 2025. The trajectory is not a steep climb, but the consistency of appearing in the upper tier of that list across three consecutive years says something about reliability. In Spain's coastal dining economy, that combination, OAD Casual recognition plus a Michelin Plate, positions a restaurant as genuinely worth planning around rather than stumbling upon. For a village that receives visitors primarily for Dalí associations and the coastline, that level of culinary recognition is notable. Internationally, the casual fine-dining format Compartir Cadaqués occupies has equivalents: Frantzén in Stockholm and FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai show how the same premise, technically demanding cooking in a format that does not require a special occasion, plays out at different price tiers and geographies.
Planning a Visit
Compartir Cadaqués serves lunch (1 to 3 pm) and dinner (8 to 10 pm) Tuesday through Sunday, with Monday closed throughout the season. The kitchen is closed on Monday and Sunday. The €€€ price range positions it above casual beachside eating but below the formal tasting-menu tier that dominates Spain's highest-profile destinations; for a group sharing across both the à la carte and the tasting menu option, it represents a meaningful but not extravagant lunch or dinner. Given the drive required to reach Cadaqués from either Girona or the French border, building the meal into the centre of a day rather than an afterthought makes practical sense.
Side-by-Side Snapshot
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Compartir Cadaqués | Modern Mediterranean Tapas | $$$ | Michelin Plate | historical centre of Cadaqués |
| Punta de Cap de Creus | Mediterranean with Catalan and Indian influences | $$ | , | Cap de Creus |
| Mirko Carturan Cuiner | Modern Mediterranean with Piedmont Influences | $$$ | Bib Gourmand | Caldes de Montbui |
| SiNoFos | Modern Mediterranean Fusion | $$$ | Michelin Plate | Eixample |
| Mas Concas | Mediterranean with French Influence | $$ | Bib Gourmand | Cinc Claus |
| L'Eixida | Mediterranean Fusion with Asian & South American Influences | $$$ | Michelin Plate | Peratallada |
Continue exploring
More in Cadaqués
Restaurants in Cadaqués
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Browse all →At a Glance
- Elegant
- Rustic
- Sophisticated
- Cozy
- Special Occasion
- Celebration
- Group Dining
- Date Night
- Courtyard
- Terrace
- Open Kitchen
- Historic Building
- Standalone
- Extensive Wine List
- Local Sourcing
- Garden
Warm, inviting, and cheerful atmosphere with natural materials (slate, stone, wood) throughout. The interior patio-terrace is cozy and alive, with professional yet friendly young staff creating an intimate dining experience.











