Itzuli

Positioned at the summit of Mount Igueldo within the Luze San Sebastián boutique hotel, Itzuli brings Chef Íñigo Lavado's two-decade Basque career to a Belle Époque dining room with panoramic sea views. The restaurant operates dual tasting menus — one dedicated to mentor Luis Irizar, one more contemporary — alongside a selection drawing from both. The name translates as 'to return', and the format is built around exactly that promise.

The Approach: Dining at Altitude in San Sebastián
Getting to Itzuli requires a deliberate act. The restaurant sits inside the Luze San Sebastián boutique hotel at the leading of Mount Igueldo, the promontory that anchors the western edge of the city's bay. Whether you arrive by car along the winding road or via the century-old funicular that still operates from the base, the ascent itself sets the pacing for what follows. By the time you reach the Belle Époque dining rooms — with their large windows framing the Cantabrian coastline — the city below has become scenery, and the meal has already begun its work of separation from everyday rhythm.
That physical remove is not incidental. In the Basque Country, where dining culture is built around ritual and repetition , the pintxo bar crawl as daily ceremony, the txoko as communal institution , a restaurant that names itself after the act of returning signals something specific about its ambitions. Itzuli is the Basque word for 'to return' or 'to come back', and that frame shapes how the kitchen and dining room approach the meal.
Two Menus, One Lineage
Spanish fine dining has long operated through a dialogue between tradition and progression, and that tension is especially charged in the Basque Country, where restaurants like Arzak in San Sebastián and Mugaritz in Errenteria have staked out positions at opposite ends of that spectrum. Itzuli sits somewhere in the middle, and does so consciously by running two distinct tasting menus under the same roof.
The first carries the name of Luis Irizar, a figure central to the professionalisation of Basque cuisine in the latter half of the twentieth century. Dedicating a menu to a mentor is an unusual structural choice , it anchors the kitchen's lineage in public, making the transmission of technique a named part of the dining experience rather than mere biographical background. The second menu, which Lavado calls Cocina de Emociones (Emotional Cuisine), is described as more contemporary and personal. For guests who want access to both registers, a third option draws selected dishes from each. This architecture gives the meal an uncommon clarity of purpose: you are not simply choosing a price point but a culinary position.
Across the broader Spanish fine dining category , which includes properties as technically ambitious as El Celler de Can Roca in Girona, as conceptually rigorous as Azurmendi in Larrabetzu, and as overtly progressive as DiverXO in Madrid , the dual-menu approach is relatively rare. Most restaurants at this level commit to a single editorial voice. Itzuli's choice to hold two in conversation reflects a kitchen that views culinary memory as an active ingredient rather than mere context.
The Dining Ritual and the Room
The service structure at Itzuli is a family operation in the literal sense. The dining room is overseen by Arantxa Martínez, and the wine programme is led by Julen Lavado, a professional sommelier. This kind of tightly consolidated front-of-house team tends to produce a specific register of hospitality , more conversational than formally distant, more willing to explain the reasoning behind a dish than to simply present it. In the Basque fine dining tradition, where the table is understood as a place of sustained, unhurried engagement, that relational warmth reads as native rather than affected.
The Belle Époque rooms themselves carry the weight of the hotel's architectural period without becoming a museum piece. Large windows mean the view is a constant presence throughout the meal , the light shifting over the bay, the city's roofline below. For a kitchen whose stated themes include time and emotional memory, the setting does a portion of the atmospheric work before a single plate arrives.
Reported dish that prompted particular attention was the Ostra al natural: a natural oyster with pickled vegetable cream and suckling pig jus. That combination , briny, acid-cut, enriched with pork , sits at the intersection of Basque coastal tradition and the kind of composed contrast more associated with progressive menus. It is, in miniature, what the dual-menu structure promises: not a choice between old and new but a sustained conversation between them.
San Sebastián's Fine Dining Geography
San Sebastián has operated as one of Europe's most concentrated fine dining cities for several decades, a status built on a culinary culture that runs from street-level pintxos to multi-Michelin destination restaurants within a few kilometres. Itzuli's position at the leading of Mount Igueldo places it physically outside the urban core where much of that density is concentrated, but it situates within the hotel dining tier , a category that has grown in significance across Spain as properties like the Luze invest in serious kitchen programmes rather than treating the restaurant as an amenity.
For visitors building a broader itinerary across the city's dining offer, the range is substantial. Artean Barra Abierta and Bruno Oteiza represent different registers of the local scene. For the broader Spanish context, comparisons extend to Martin Berasategui in Lasarte-Oria, Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María, Quique Dacosta in Dénia, and Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona. For international comparison in the tasting-menu format, the precision-led approaches of Le Bernardin in New York City and Atomix in New York City offer a useful frame for understanding what serious culinary ambition looks like when anchored in a specific cultural tradition.
Planning Your Visit
Itzuli operates within the Luze San Sebastián hotel at Gudamendi Bidea, 21, on Mount Igueldo. Given the restaurant's dual-menu architecture and its position inside a boutique hotel, reservations are advisable well in advance , particularly during the summer months when the city's visitor numbers peak and hotel dining rooms at this level book quickly. Contacting the hotel directly is the recommended approach for reservations. Guests staying at the Luze have the natural advantage of proximity; those visiting from elsewhere in the city should factor in the journey to the summit when timing their arrival. The restaurant is part of a wider San Sebastián food scene with strong depth across categories: see our full Donostia / San Sebastián restaurants guide, hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide for broader itinerary planning.
Frequently Asked Questions
Cuisine and Recognition
A fast peer set for context, pulled from similar venues in our database.
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Itzuli | Inside the Luze San Sebastián boutique hotel, at the top of Mount Igueldo, this… | This venue | |
| Aponiente | Progressive - Seafood, Creative | Michelin 3 Star | Progressive - Seafood, Creative, €€€€ |
| Arzak | Modern Basque, Creative | Michelin 3 Star | Modern Basque, Creative, €€€€ |
| DiverXO | Progressive - Asian, Creative | Michelin 3 Star | Progressive - Asian, Creative, €€€€ |
| El Celler de Can Roca | Progressive Spanish, Creative | Michelin 3 Star | Progressive Spanish, Creative, €€€€ |
| Quique Dacosta | Creative | Michelin 3 Star | Creative, €€€€ |
Need a table?
Our members enjoy priority alerts and concierge-led booking support for the world's most difficult tables.
Get Exclusive Access