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CuisineModern Cuisine
Executive ChefDeni Srdoč
LocationRijeka, Croatia
Michelin
The Best Chef

Nebo by Deni Srdoč earned its first Michelin star in 2025, placing it among a small cohort of Croatian restaurants rethinking what regional cooking can achieve at this level. Set on the fifth floor of the Hilton Rijeka Costabella with open views across the Adriatic to the island of Cres, the tasting menu draws on traditional Croatian ingredients and Mediterranean influences through a modern, colour-forward lens.

Nebo by Deni Srdoč restaurant in Rijeka, Croatia
About

A View That Sets Expectations High

From the fifth floor of the Hilton Rijeka Costabella, the Adriatic stretches west toward the unspoilt outline of Cres island, the Kvarner coastline framing the scene in either direction. That elevation — both physical and culinary — is not incidental. It signals the register Nebo operates in: a modern Croatian tasting menu with Michelin recognition, sitting above the casual konoba tradition of the city and placing Rijeka into a national conversation about fine dining it has not historically led.

The setting matters here as context, not spectacle. Rijeka is Croatia's third-largest city, a working port with an industrial past, and for years it has been overshadowed in the fine-dining conversation by Dubrovnik, Split, and Zagreb. Nebo's arrival at this address, and its first Michelin star awarded in 2025, marks a meaningful shift in how that conversation is distributed across the country.

Croatian Cooking Read Through a Modern Frame

The kitchen's editorial position is worth understanding before you arrive. Croatia's culinary tradition divides roughly into two arcs: the Adriatic coast, with its Venetian-influenced seafood and olive oil culture, and the continental hinterland, where heavier Central European textures dominate. Nebo sits at the intersection of both, pulling ingredients and references from across the country rather than anchoring itself to any single region. That approach places it alongside restaurants like Pelegrini in Sibenik and Agli Amici Rovinj in Rovinj in a tier of Croatian fine dining that treats local tradition as a starting point rather than a constraint.

Chef Deni Srdoč's tasting menu , available in varying lengths , uses traditional ingredients and regional specialities as primary material, then moves them through a Mediterranean-influenced, modern technique. The Michelin inspectors cited colour and flavour as defining characteristics of the menu, alongside sea bass matured for several days, then marinated before searing and served with a Hokkaido pumpkin and kale pie. That dish illustrates the kitchen's working method: a local fish, a non-native ingredient used deliberately, and a preparation that slows down and rethinks a product most Croatian restaurants would present more simply.

This approach to maturation and timing reflects a wider shift in how serious Croatian kitchens are engaging with European fine-dining technique. What distinguishes Nebo's application is the Mediterranean-Kvarner framing: the sea bass in question is a product of these specific waters, and the Adriatic coastal context gives the menu a geographical coherence that prevents it from reading as mere international technique transplanted onto local ingredients.

Where Nebo Sits in Croatia's Michelin Tier

Croatia now holds a meaningful cluster of Michelin-starred restaurants, with the recognition spread across the coast and islands rather than concentrated in a single city. Restaurant 360 in Dubrovnik occupies the highest-profile address in the country; Boskinac in Novalja and Alfred Keller in Mali Lošinj represent the island tier. Dubravkin Put in Zagreb and Korak in Jastrebarsko anchor the continental tradition. Krug in Split and LD Restaurant in Korčula represent Dalmatia's contribution to the tier.

Nebo's addition from 2025 fills a gap: Rijeka and the Kvarner Gulf had been absent from the starred map despite the region's strong culinary identity, built on Istrian proximity and its own seafood traditions. At €€€€ pricing, Nebo sits at the leading of the local market and within the standard band for Croatian Michelin tables, where tasting menus command prices that require deliberate planning but remain competitive against comparable starred formats in Italy or Slovenia across the border.

The wine program, described by Michelin as an international list, represents another marker of seriousness. Star Wine List recognised Nebo with a White Star designation in September 2023, ahead of its Michelin award, which suggests the wine offering was ahead of the food's formal recognition curve. For a city not previously on wine-destination itineraries, this dual recognition carries weight. For context on how Nebo compares internationally within the Modern Cuisine category, Frantzén in Stockholm and FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai represent the upper bracket of the format globally.

Rijeka as a Dining City in Motion

Rijeka spent 2020 as a European Capital of Culture, a designation that accelerated investment in hospitality infrastructure across the city. The Hilton Rijeka Costabella, where Nebo operates, was described in Michelin's entry as brand-new at the time of inspection, confirming that Nebo is part of a broader upgrade cycle rather than a long-established institution. That context is relevant: the restaurant's Michelin recognition arrived quickly relative to its opening, which suggests the kitchen was operating at a high level from an early stage.

For visitors to the Kvarner region, Rijeka now offers a credible fine-dining anchor alongside its existing strengths in casual seafood and market-driven cooking. Bistro Grad represents the contemporary mid-tier, and Hidden Wine Bistro covers the farm-to-table register. Nebo sits above both in ambition and price. Together, they suggest a city developing a layered dining offer rather than a single flagship. Our full Rijeka restaurants guide maps the broader scene across price tiers and formats.

Planning a Visit

Nebo is located at Opatijska ul. 9 in Rijeka, within the Hilton Rijeka Costabella. The restaurant carries a four-euro-sign price designation, placing it firmly at the premium end of the Croatian dining market, where tasting menus at this level warrant booking well in advance, particularly across the summer season when the Kvarner coast draws its largest visitor numbers. The tasting menu is available in varying lengths, allowing some flexibility in commitment and spend. Given the restaurant's Michelin status and the relatively small pool of comparable formats in the region, confirmed reservations are the only reliable approach. Dress expectations at this level in Croatia tend toward smart-casual at minimum, though the hotel setting and formal table service suggest erring toward the more composed end of your wardrobe. For accommodation planning, the Rijeka hotels guide covers the full range of options across the city and surrounding coastline. Those looking to extend their visit through the region can also consult our guides to Rijeka bars, Rijeka wineries, and Rijeka experiences.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Nebo by Deni Srdoč okay with children?
At €€€€ pricing with a formal tasting menu format in Rijeka, Nebo is structured for adult dining rather than family meals.
Is Nebo by Deni Srdoč better for a quiet night or a lively one?
Nebo sits at the leading of Rijeka's dining tier, with a single Michelin star, €€€€ pricing, and a tasting menu format that sets the pace. The experience is calibrated for focused attention rather than noise. This is a restaurant for a deliberate evening rather than a spontaneous one, closer in register to how Croatia's other top-tier addresses handle the room.
What's the leading thing to order at Nebo by Deni Srdoč?
The tasting menu is the format the kitchen is built around, and the Michelin inspection specifically highlighted the matured-and-seared sea bass with Hokkaido pumpkin and kale pie as a representative example of what Chef Deni Srdoč's Modern Cuisine approach delivers. Given the menu changes with the broader Croatian and Mediterranean seasonal arc, the tasting menu in full is the most complete expression of what the kitchen does with its ingredients.
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