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Kraków, Poland

Filipa 18

CuisineModern Cuisine
Executive ChefMarcin Sołtys
LocationKraków, Poland
Michelin

A 2025 Michelin Plate recipient on Kraków's Świętego Filipa street, Filipa 18 serves modernised Polish classics in an intimate room fitted with powder blue banquettes and Polish Poster School artwork. Chef Marcin Sołtys works from a small open kitchen, drawing ingredients from the nearby Stary Kleparz market. At the €€ price point, it represents one of the stronger-value propositions among Kraków's recognised modern cuisine addresses.

Filipa 18 restaurant in Kraków, Poland
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Powder Blue Rooms and the Polish Poster School

Kraków's dining scene has developed a clear split between high-concept tasting-menu restaurants and a smaller, more considered middle tier where the emphasis falls on ingredient sourcing and technical restraint rather than theatrical presentation. Filipa 18, on a quiet stretch of Świętego Filipa in the Śródmieście district, belongs firmly to the latter group. The room makes an immediate visual argument: powder blue banquettes run along walls hung with prints from the Polish Poster School, a mid-twentieth-century graphic tradition that remains one of Poland's most distinctive contributions to visual culture. The open kitchen is small enough that you're aware of the heat and rhythm of service without it dominating the space. The overall effect is composed without being stiff — intimate in the way that small European neighbourhood restaurants are intimate, where the physical scale keeps the experience grounded.

That visual register matters because it signals intent. This is not a room designed to impress through grandeur; it's designed to focus attention on what arrives at the table. The combination of bold graphic art and muted upholstery creates a specific kind of atmosphere: convivial but not loud, contemporary but not aggressively minimalist. For the wider context of where Kraków's modern cuisine scene is heading, see our full Kraków restaurants guide.

What the Kitchen Sends Out

Modern Polish cuisine, as practised at the better Kraków addresses, tends to work within a recognisable set of tensions: honouring long-established flavour combinations while revising the textures and presentation formats that traditional cooking produced. At Filipa 18, that revision is handled with evident care. The 2025 Michelin Plate — awarded as part of the same inspection cycle that keeps Kraków's Bottiglieria 1881 at two stars , acknowledges the kitchen's consistency at a price point that sits well below what Kraków's more elaborate tasting menus charge.

The kitchen's sourcing is specific: ingredients come from Stary Kleparz, the covered market a short walk from the restaurant that has supplied Kraków's cooks since the nineteenth century. Using a market of that provenance is not merely a provenance story; it places the menu within a seasonal rhythm that changes with what the market carries, and it creates a logical connection between the city's food culture and what appears on the plate. Breads are baked in-house, which at this price tier marks a genuine commitment to craft rather than an afterthought. Among Kraków's mid-range modern restaurants, that combination of local sourcing discipline and Michelin recognition gives Filipa 18 a clear position. For comparison, Copernicus operates at the €€€ tier with a different style register, while Karakter and Folga occupy adjacent positions in the city's contemporary dining conversation.

Chef Marcin Sołtys runs a kitchen that prioritises textural contrast and what the Michelin citation describes as a careful balancing of complementary flavours. That language, specific to the inspector's notes, suggests a kitchen focused on calibration rather than provocation , dishes that reward attention without demanding it. The open format means you can watch that calibration in real time, which adds a particular quality to the experience in a room this size.

Where It Sits Among Kraków's Recognised Addresses

Kraków has a more active fine and near-fine dining scene than its tourist reputation sometimes suggests. The city holds multiple Michelin-recognised addresses, and the gap between the top tier and the accessible mid-range has narrowed as more kitchens have adopted disciplined sourcing and serious technique. Filipa 18's Michelin Plate at the €€ price point places it in a useful position for travellers who want inspector-endorsed quality without the €€€ or €€€€ commitment that addresses like Artesse require.

That competitive context is worth stating plainly. A 4.7 Google rating across 421 reviews suggests sustained consistency that aligns with the Michelin acknowledgement, and consistency at this price tier, in a city with real dining options, is not automatic. The combination of local sourcing, in-house bread, and textural discipline in the cooking positions Filipa 18 alongside venues that take the mid-range seriously as a category rather than treating it as a step below where the real work happens. Elsewhere in Poland, comparable ambition at equivalent price points can be found at Muga in Poznań and hub.praga in Warsaw, both of which reflect the broader national shift toward modern Polish cooking grounded in regional markets. At the higher end of Poland's recognised dining, Arco by Paco Pérez in Gdańsk and 1911 Restaurant in Sopot show how far the national scene has extended its technical range. For a different scale of modern cuisine ambition internationally, Frantzén in Stockholm and FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai represent what the category looks like at its most resource-intensive.

Other Kraków addresses worth placing in context alongside Filipa 18 include Amarylis and Bufet KRK, which approach the city's modern dining conversation from distinct angles. For restaurants outside the city, Giewont in Kościelisko and Acquario in Wrocław extend the Polish modern cuisine picture into different regional registers.

Planning a Visit

Filipa 18 is located at Świętego Filipa 18, 31-150 Kraków, in the Śródmieście district, within walking distance of the Old Town. Given the Michelin recognition and the small room size implied by the intimate format and open kitchen, booking ahead is advisable, particularly on weekends and during Kraków's busier tourist months from April through September. The €€ price range makes it an accessible anchor for an evening that doesn't require significant financial planning, but the format rewards those who arrive with time to pay attention rather than those looking to move quickly. For accommodation nearby, our full Kraków hotels guide covers the main options by neighbourhood. Those building a broader Kraków itinerary will find relevant context in our full Kraków bars guide, our full Kraków wineries guide, and our full Kraków experiences guide.

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