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Perched above the water metres from the Blue Grotto, Il Riccio is Anacapri's dedicated fine-dining address for fish and seafood. Holding a 2025 Michelin Plate and rated 4.3 across 754 Google reviews, it occupies the premium tier of Capri's coastal dining scene. The kitchen works exclusively with seafood, and the dessert buffet has become a fixture in its own right.

Where the Tyrrhenian Comes to the Table
The approach to Il Riccio sets expectations that the kitchen then has to meet. Via Grotta Azzurra curves along the northwestern flank of Capri toward the Blue Grotto, one of the Mediterranean's most visited natural spectacles, and the restaurant sits directly above the waterline at that same outcrop. Before a dish arrives, the view has already framed the meal: open water, limestone cliffs, the particular blue that gives the grotto its name. Few dining rooms on the island place you this physically close to the sea that supplies them.
That proximity is not incidental. On the Amalfi Coast and in the Campanian islands, the strongest seafood restaurants tend to locate themselves where the catch lands or passes, and Il Riccio's position on the water's edge belongs to that tradition. The restaurant holds a 2025 Michelin Plate, the Guide's signal of quality cooking without a star rating, and carries a 4.3 score across 754 Google reviews — a base large enough to suggest consistent delivery rather than a run of strong visits. Within Anacapri's dining tier, that places it alongside Caesar Augustus as one of the addresses that shapes the area's reputation for serious Mediterranean cooking.
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Get Exclusive Access →A Kitchen Built Around One Ingredient Category
The decision to focus a menu exclusively on fish and seafood is more consequential than it might appear. It removes the safety net of meat-based alternatives and forces the kitchen to hold quality across the full range of what the sea produces — from delicate raw preparations to more demanding cooked dishes. Southern Italian seafood cooking at this level draws on a tradition that treats the ingredient as primary: minimal interference, technical precision in timing and temperature, and sourcing that aligns with what the water yields rather than what a fixed menu demands.
The Tyrrhenian Sea around Capri operates on clear seasonal rhythms. Spring brings the first runs of sea bream and sea bass from warmer inshore waters. Summer is the peak period for ricci di mare , sea urchin, the ingredient the restaurant takes its name from , and for the cephalopods, squid and octopus, that the area has always done well. Autumn shifts the focus toward richer, meatier species as water temperatures drop. A kitchen working exclusively with seafood either tracks those shifts or produces a menu that feels disconnected from its geography. The seasonal tide, here, is the editorial through-line of the entire food program.
For comparison within the Capri seafood tradition, Quattro Passi in Marina del Cantone and Alici on the Amalfi Coast represent the same coastal fine-dining category from different geographic positions , all operating in a region where the sea is both setting and supplier. Further afield, Gambero Rosso in Marina di Gioiosa Ionica anchors the southern Italian seafood fine-dining conversation from Calabria. Il Riccio's position within that peer set is shaped by its location , the Capri address carries weight , and by the Michelin recognition that places it inside Italy's broader quality register.
The Dessert Counter as a Structural Choice
The dessert buffet at Il Riccio has developed into something the restaurant is specifically associated with, which makes it worth treating as a deliberate format decision rather than a generic amenity. Buffet presentation at fine-dining level is unusual precisely because it runs counter to the controlled-reveal logic of tasting menus and plated service. When it works, it turns the close of a meal into a different kind of experience: choice, visual abundance, the option to return. The format signals confidence in the pastry program and, more practically, suits the beach-club register that defines the daytime and early evening rhythm of this kind of Capri address.
Il Riccio operates as a beach club as well as a restaurant, which places it in a category that Capri does better than almost anywhere in the Mediterranean. The beach club model , where the same address handles sunbathing, lunch service, and a more formal dinner , demands range across formats and times of day. The restaurant holds together that range by keeping the kitchen's focus narrow (seafood only) while giving the dessert program room to perform.
Anacapri's Fine-Dining Tier in Context
Anacapri sits above the main town of Capri and carries a slightly quieter character, though the distinction matters less at the upper end of the price tier. Il Riccio's €€€€ pricing aligns with L'Olivo, the two-Michelin-star Italian contemporary address that anchors Anacapri's leading dining bracket. Both operate at the island's premium level; they occupy different culinary registers, with L'Olivo's starred modern Italian program sitting above Il Riccio in awards terms, while Il Riccio's seafood-only focus and waterfront position give it a distinct rationale. Da Gelsomina, at the €€ tier, represents the regional alternative for visitors who want Capri's agricultural and island-cooking tradition rather than its fine-dining seafood.
Italy's broader fine-dining scene provides useful framing. Restaurants like Osteria Francescana in Modena, Enoteca Pinchiorri in Florence, and Enrico Bartolini in Milan operate in the starred tier that represents Italy's recognised summit. Il Riccio's Michelin Plate places it in a different but serious bracket , acknowledged quality, strong location credentials, and a peer set defined by Campanian coastal cooking rather than northern Italian innovation. For the full range of that coastal tradition, Dal Pescatore in Runate, Le Calandre in Rubano, and Piazza Duomo in Alba mark what Italy's most awarded kitchens look like across different regions and disciplines.
Planning a Visit
Il Riccio sits on Via Grotta Azzurra in Anacapri, metres from the Blue Grotto entrance. Getting there from Capri town involves the funicular to Anacapri followed by a local taxi or bus along the coast road , factor in 30 to 40 minutes from the main piazza depending on traffic, which on the island in high summer can be considerable. The restaurant operates at €€€€ pricing, placing it at the upper end of what Capri charges for serious dining. Given the location and the Michelin recognition, advance booking is advisable, particularly for lunch in July and August when the Blue Grotto area draws significant visitor numbers. The dessert buffet is a noted feature; arriving with appetite for the full progression of the meal is the practical implication of that.
For a broader read of what Anacapri and Capri offer beyond this address, the full Anacapri restaurants guide covers the range of the island's dining. The Anacapri hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide map the rest of what the island offers at this level. For the wider Italian fine-dining conversation, Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler in Brunico represents how Italy's mountain kitchens are reframing the seasonal sourcing question from the opposite geographic end of the country.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What should I order at Il Riccio?
- The kitchen works exclusively with fish and seafood, so the menu is built entirely around the sea's seasonal output. Given the restaurant's name and location , riccio means sea urchin in Italian, and the Blue Grotto marks one of the Tyrrhenian's most productive coastal zones , urchin-based preparations are the natural starting point when in season (peak summer months). The dessert buffet is a noted feature that the Michelin Guide specifically references; plan for it at the end of the meal rather than treating it as optional. The 2025 Michelin Plate and 4.3 rating across 754 reviews suggest consistent delivery across the menu.
- Should I book Il Riccio in advance?
- Yes. Il Riccio holds Michelin Plate recognition, carries €€€€ pricing, and sits at one of Anacapri's most visited natural landmarks. In July and August, the Blue Grotto area draws considerable visitor numbers and the restaurant's beach club format attracts both day guests and dinner bookings. Reserving ahead, particularly for lunch during the peak summer months, is the practical approach. Capri as a whole operates at high occupancy from June through September, and the island's leading dining addresses fill accordingly.
- What's the standout thing about Il Riccio?
- The physical position is the most immediate distinction: the restaurant sits directly above the water metres from the Blue Grotto, which places the Tyrrhenian Sea as both the view and the source of what arrives on the plate. Within Anacapri's dining tier, that combination of location, exclusive seafood focus, and Michelin Plate recognition (2025) gives Il Riccio a specific identity that neither L'Olivo's starred modern Italian program nor Da Gelsomina's regional cooking replicates. The dessert buffet has become a structural feature of the experience rather than an afterthought.
Style and Standing
A fast peer set for context, pulled from similar venues in our database.
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Il Riccio | Seafood | Situated just a few metres from the Blue Grotto and perched right above the wate… | This venue |
| L'Olivo | Italian Contemporary | Michelin 2 Star | Italian Contemporary, €€€€ |
| Caesar Augustus | Italian Mediterranean | Italian Mediterranean | |
| Da Gelsomina | Regional Cuisine | Regional Cuisine, €€ |
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