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Regensburg, Germany

Kreutzer's

CuisineInternational
LocationRegensburg, Germany
Michelin

Kreutzer's holds a Michelin Plate (2024) and a 4.7 Google rating across more than 1,000 reviews, placing it among the more consistent mid-range tables in Regensburg. The kitchen takes an international approach in a city whose dining scene skews toward regional Bavarian tradition. At the €€ price point, it occupies a practical tier below Regensburg's three Michelin-starred counters.

Kreutzer's restaurant in Regensburg, Germany
About

Regensburg's International Table in a City of Regional Kitchens

Prinz-Ludwig-Straße sits on the eastern side of Regensburg's old town grid, a few streets removed from the UNESCO-listed medieval core that draws visitors to the city's Roman heritage and stone-arch bridge. The approach to Kreutzer's puts you in a quieter residential-commercial corridor rather than the tourist-facing centre, which signals something about its primary audience: this is a room that serves Regensburg's own residents at least as much as it serves visitors passing through.

That positioning matters when reading the Michelin Plate the restaurant received in 2024. The Plate designation, introduced by Michelin in 2016, recognises kitchens that produce consistently good cooking without necessarily operating in the starred tier. In a city where Storstad and Ontra's Gourmetstube both hold full stars at the €€€€ price point, the Plate at €€ places Kreutzer's in a different but clearly defined bracket: recognised quality at a price that does not require the same level of financial commitment as Regensburg's top tier.

International Cooking in a Bavarian City

The cuisine classification at Kreutzer's is international, and that distinction carries weight in Regensburg specifically. The city's culinary identity has historically been rooted in southern German and Bavarian tradition: pork roasts, river fish from the Danube, white sausage, and the kind of hearty regional cooking that anchors the older establishments near the Steinerne Brücke. An international kitchen operating at a recognised level within that context represents a deliberate departure from the dominant local grammar.

International cooking in German mid-sized cities tends to mean one of two things: either a broad, eclectically sourced menu that draws from European and global influences without committing to a single national tradition, or a tighter focus on a non-German cuisine executed with enough discipline to earn critical attention. The Michelin Plate suggests Kreutzer's falls into the latter category rather than the former. Plates are not awarded to restaurants that simply offer a wide menu; they recognise kitchens demonstrating genuine craft, whatever the register. For a broader picture of where Kreutzer's fits among Regensburg's dining options, our full Regensburg restaurants guide maps the city's full range.

Across Germany, the international category at the mid-price tier has expanded considerably over the past decade. Cities like Berlin and Munich now host international kitchens at every price point, from the €€ level represented by places like Loumi in Berlin to the upper end of the starred tier. In Bavaria's smaller cities, the category is sparser, which amplifies the significance of a Michelin recognition in this space. For comparison, Haubentaucher in Rottach-Egern occupies a broadly similar international-at-€€ position in the Bavarian lake district.

Where It Sits in the Regensburg Market

Regensburg's dining scene splits fairly cleanly between a Michelin-starred upper tier and a much larger informal tier that includes traditional Bavarian restaurants, student-facing casual spots, and market-adjacent eateries. The middle ground, where recognised quality meets accessible pricing, is comparatively thin. Kreutzer's occupies that gap alongside Ontra, the farm-to-table operation also at the €€ price point, which takes a contrasting approach by grounding its menu in local sourcing and regional produce relationships.

The 4.7 Google rating across 1,029 reviews is a meaningful data point at this price tier. High review volume at a sustained rating typically indicates a kitchen that delivers consistently rather than one that peaks on good nights. At €€, a restaurant accumulates that kind of review count by appealing to repeat visitors, not just occasion diners. The contrast with Regensburg's starred tables is instructive: ROTER HAHN by Maximilian Schmidt and Storstad operate in a different frequency of visit, where guests return for anniversaries and special occasions rather than regular midweek dinners.

For context on what the starred tier looks like in Germany more broadly, consider the spread from Aqua in Wolfsburg and Vendôme in Bergisch Gladbach at the three-star level down through single-star kitchens like JAN in Munich and ES:SENZ in Grassau. Kreutzer's sits well below that register in price and format, but the Plate recognition places it in a defined relationship to that hierarchy.

The Cultural Logic of an International Menu in a Heritage City

Regensburg's UNESCO World Heritage status, awarded in 2006 for its remarkably intact medieval urban fabric, gives the city a specific kind of cultural gravity. The old town functions as a living document of pre-modern European urbanism, and the food scene that clusters around it reflects both that heritage and the pressures that tourism and a university population bring to any such environment. The university, with its student body numbering in the tens of thousands, creates consistent demand for non-Bavarian cooking at accessible price points.

An international kitchen at Kreutzer's address, roughly midway between the university district and the historic centre, addresses a genuine demand rather than imposing a novelty onto the market. In German culinary culture, the Michelin Plate carries an implicit endorsement of that market fit: the guide recognises kitchens that are doing their job well within their chosen register, not just those aiming for the highest tier. The Plate at Kreutzer's says, in effect, that this is a kitchen worth seeking out within its own terms, not just relative to the starred competition nearby.

For diners who want to build a fuller picture of Regensburg beyond restaurants, our Regensburg hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide cover the city's other verticals in the same depth.

Planning Your Visit

Kreutzer's is at Prinz-Ludwig-Straße 15a, 93055 Regensburg, roughly a ten-minute walk from the old town centre and the main train station at Regensburg Hbf. The €€ price point means a meal here sits comfortably below the commitment level of Regensburg's starred tables, making it a practical choice for a weeknight dinner as much as a considered outing. With over 1,000 Google reviews sustaining a 4.7 rating, tables do move; booking ahead is advisable, particularly on weekends. Phone and online booking details are leading confirmed through current search listings, as direct contact information was not available at time of writing. The restaurant's Michelin Plate recognition means it will appear in the 2024 guide, which functions as a reliable secondary booking reference for international visitors planning ahead.

FAQ

Is Kreutzer's suitable for children?
At the €€ price point and with an international rather than a tasting-menu format, it reads as a genuinely family-accessible option by Regensburg standards, though the Michelin Plate recognition suggests a room that takes its cooking seriously enough that very young children may be better suited to the city's more casual Bavarian alternatives.
Is Kreutzer's better for a quiet night or a lively one?
The combination of a €€ price point, over 1,000 Google reviews, and a Michelin Plate in a mid-sized German city points to a room that runs at moderate energy most evenings: not the hushed formality of Storstad or Ontra's Gourmetstube, but not a loud bar-restaurant either. Regensburg's dining culture tends toward the convivial rather than the theatrical.
What do regulars order at Kreutzer's?
The international cuisine classification and Michelin Plate recognition together suggest the kitchen has strength across its menu rather than a single signature dish; Plate awards are given to restaurants demonstrating consistent quality rather than one standout course. For specific current dishes, checking recent guest reviews or contacting the restaurant directly gives the most reliable picture, as menu details were not available in the source data.

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