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CuisineNordic - Seafood, Modern Cuisine
Executive ChefFrancesca Fucci
LocationGeneva, Switzerland
Michelin

A Nordic-inflected seafood restaurant on Geneva's Quai du Mont-Blanc, Fiskebar holds consecutive Michelin Plate recognition for 2024 and 2025 under chef Francesca Fucci. The kitchen operates Tuesday through Saturday from 6:30 pm, with a menu shaped by what arrives fresh each day rather than fixed seasonal cycles. For a city that skews heavily French and Italian at the €€€ tier, the Scandinavian register is a deliberate departure worth seeking out.

Fiskebar restaurant in Geneva, Switzerland
About

Where the Rhône Meets the North Atlantic

Quai du Mont-Blanc runs along the northern shore of Lake Geneva, a boulevard of grand facades facing the water where the Alps announce themselves on clear evenings across the lake. Most of the dining rooms on this stretch tend toward the classic French-Swiss register: white tablecloths, lake fish prepared with cream, wines drawn from the Valais or Lavaux. Fiskebar, at number 11, reads differently from the moment you step inside. The name is borrowed from the Nordic word for fish bar, and the interiors signal that Scandinavian framing before the menu arrives: clean lines, cooler material palettes, a deliberate restraint that separates it from the ornate hotel dining rooms a few doors along.

Geneva's restaurant scene at the €€€ price tier has several well-established anchors. Arakel holds a Michelin star in the modern cuisine category. L'Aparté operates in the modern French register. La Micheline takes a Mediterranean approach at the same price point. Fiskebar occupies a narrower specialty niche within that tier: Nordic-inflected seafood with a market-driven structure, which means the kitchen's direction changes with what the suppliers and fishmongers bring in each morning rather than holding to a fixed printed card.

A Menu That Moves with the Catch

The Nordic-seafood category has a broader European context worth understanding. In Copenhagen, Oslo, and Stockholm, the leading fish-forward restaurants have built reputations around supply chain transparency: the name of the boat, the port of landing, the hours between water and plate. That discipline migrated southward and westward as chefs trained in Scandinavian kitchens opened elsewhere. When a kitchen identifies itself in this lineage, the operative question is not just what cuisine it claims but how faithfully the daily sourcing logic actually drives the menu.

At Fiskebar, the editorial angle of the cooking appears to be exactly that: what arrives determines what gets served. For a Geneva diner accustomed to menus printed weeks in advance, this is a different proposition. The fish on a Tuesday in March is not the same as the fish on a Friday in October, and that variability is structural rather than incidental. Chef Francesca Fucci leads the kitchen, and while biographical detail on her trajectory is limited in the public record, the Michelin Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025 indicates consistent execution of the concept rather than an opening-year anomaly. The Plate designation within Michelin's framework signals that inspectors found the cooking worthy of attention without yet awarding a star, placing Fiskebar in a holding tier occupied by many restaurants that subsequently gain starred status.

Comparing the Michelin footprint across Switzerland gives useful calibration. At the three-star level, Hotel de Ville Crissier in Crissier and Schloss Schauenstein in Fürstenau represent the country's apex. At two stars, Cheval Blanc by Peter Knogl in Basel anchors the French-Swiss fine dining tradition. More recent starred additions like Memories in Bad Ragaz and 7132 Silver in Vals show that the guide's Swiss coverage extends well beyond the major cities. Fiskebar's consecutive Plate recognitions in 2024 and 2025 suggest it is on the radar of inspectors who return.

The Seafood Counter in a Landlocked City

Geneva's geography creates a particular context for a seafood specialist. The city is roughly 500 kilometres from the nearest Atlantic coastline and nearly as far from the Mediterranean, which means every piece of ocean fish in the kitchen has travelled to arrive there. This is not unusual for northern European landlocked cities, but it does raise the bar on sourcing discipline: the margin between a fish-forward menu that works and one that doesn't is narrower when every ingredient represents a logistics decision. The restaurants that make it work in similar situations, from Paris fish rooms to Munich seafood specialists, tend to be the ones with direct supplier relationships rather than spot-market purchasing.

For Geneva diners comparing across categories at the same price tier, the city's Italian options include Il Lago, which carries a Michelin star and operates at the €€€€ level, and the French Contemporary end of the market runs from L'Atelier Robuchon with two Michelin stars at €€€€ down to more accessible options. Fiskebar at €€€ positions itself as the city's primary Nordic-seafood representative, without a direct competitor in the same niche at any price point that appears in the current Michelin or review record.

The international reference frame for this kind of cooking points toward places like Le Bernardin in New York City, where the seafood-focused tasting format has operated at the highest critical tier for decades, or Atomix in New York City, which demonstrates how a tightly defined concept and consistent execution can sustain multi-year critical recognition. Fiskebar is not operating at that scale of recognition yet, but the structural similarities in concept discipline are relevant for understanding where it sits in a broader taxonomy of serious seafood restaurants.

Planning a Visit

The restaurant opens Tuesday through Saturday from 6:30 pm, with last bookings at 10 pm. It is closed Sunday and Monday. The address is Quai du Mont-Blanc 11, placing it on the lakefront in the 1st arrondissement, within walking distance of the main train station and most of the central hotel stock. Given the Michelin Plate recognition and the relatively compact format typical of Nordic-inflected kitchens, booking ahead is advisable, particularly for Thursday through Saturday. The €€€ price designation aligns with the broader mid-to-upper tier of Geneva dining, consistent with what the city charges across serious modern-cuisine restaurants.

For context on the wider Geneva scene, our full Geneva restaurants guide maps the city's categories in detail. If you're planning a full trip, our Geneva hotels guide, our Geneva bars guide, our Geneva wineries guide, and our Geneva experiences guide cover the remaining verticals. Further afield, Colonnade in Lucerne rounds out a Switzerland itinerary for those moving between cities.

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the vibe at Fiskebar?

The address on Quai du Mont-Blanc places it among Geneva's more formal lakefront institutions, but Fiskebar's Nordic design register pulls in the opposite direction from that neighbourhood's default grandeur. At the €€€ tier in a city that treats dining as a serious occasion, expect a composed atmosphere rather than a casual one, but without the ceremony that defines the starred rooms nearby. The consecutive Michelin Plate recognitions in 2024 and 2025 indicate that inspectors read it as a focused, deliberately edited operation rather than a broad crowd-pleaser.

What should I order at Fiskebar?

Because the menu follows daily sourcing rather than a fixed structure, specific dish recommendations would be out of date the following week. The more useful frame is the Nordic-seafood cuisine type, which, under Michelin Plate-recognised chef Francesca Fucci, points toward preparations where the fish is the argument rather than a vehicle for sauce or accompaniment. In kitchens working in this tradition, the question to ask when you arrive is what came in that morning, and the menu will answer it directly.

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