Skip to Main Content
← Collection
Split, Croatia

PiNKU fish & wine

CuisineSeafood
LocationSplit, Croatia
Michelin

A twice Michelin Plate-recognised seafood address on the edge of Split's Diocletian Palace quarter, PiNKU fish & wine combines a focused Adriatic seafood menu with a considered wine list at the €€€ price tier. With a 4.7 Google rating across 325 reviews, it sits comfortably among Split's most consistent fine-dining options for those who want proximity to the Old City without sacrificing kitchen seriousness.

PiNKU fish & wine restaurant in Split, Croatia
About

Where the Adriatic Ends and the Plate Begins

Split's relationship with the sea is architectural as much as culinary. The city grew outward from a Roman emperor's retirement palace pressed against the coast, and the dining culture that developed in its shadow has always treated the Adriatic as both larder and backdrop. On Obrov 4, a short walk from the palace walls, PiNKU fish & wine operates within that tradition while positioning itself at a more considered tier than the casual konoba circuit that lines the waterfront further south.

The address sits in the compact grid of lanes that connects the Old City to the Riva promenade. Arriving from the palace side, the transition is abrupt in the way Split's oldest quarter always is: stone underfoot, walls that predate the restaurant industry by sixteen centuries, and then the contained atmosphere of a room that has committed to a single subject — fish, treated carefully, alongside wine chosen to match it.

The Adriatic as Curriculum

Dalmatian seafood dining has a clear internal hierarchy. At the informal end, grilled fish by weight at a family-run konoba requires little from the kitchen beyond sourcing discipline. The more demanding tier — where PiNKU fish & wine has twice earned Michelin Plate recognition, in 2024 and again in 2025 , involves technique applied to the same coastal ingredients without losing the directness that makes Adriatic cooking legible in the first place. The Michelin Plate is not a star, but its two-year consistency signals that inspectors found the cooking worth returning to evaluate: that is a meaningful data point in a city with significant seasonal restaurant turnover.

The Adriatic's proximity shapes what kitchens at this level can credibly offer. The Dalmatian coast produces sea bass, sea bream, John Dory, and shellfish that move quickly from boat to table in a way that menus in landlocked cities cannot replicate by logistics alone. A seafood-specialist restaurant at the €€€ price tier in Split is implicitly making a claim about sourcing proximity, and the coastal setting enforces that claim or undermines it with every service. PiNKU's sustained recognition suggests the sourcing holds.

Among Split's Michelin-acknowledged addresses, the wine-pairing dimension is built into the restaurant's name and presumably its format , a relatively rare explicit commitment in a city where wine lists at comparable restaurants tend to be competent rather than curated. Croatia's wine regions, particularly the Dalmatian varieties built around Plavac Mali and Pošip, offer a natural coastal pairing vocabulary that a fish-and-wine specialist is positioned to use more deliberately than a generalist Mediterranean kitchen.

Where PiNKU Sits in Split's Upper Dining Tier

Split's fine-dining category has expanded and stratified over the past decade as the city's international profile has grown beyond package tourism. The restaurants now drawing serious attention operate across a range of culinary registers: Zrno Soli has established itself as a reference point for the city's most ambitious cooking, while Krug and BÒME represent the Mediterranean-cuisine tier at different price points. Dvor brings setting to the equation with its terrace position, and K.užina works a more regional register. PiNKU's distinction within this group is specificity: a seafood-and-wine focus, sustained Michelin attention, and a 4.7 Google rating across 325 reviews place it in a peer set defined by consistency over novelty.

At the €€€ price tier, PiNKU is priced in line with Krug and the upper end of Split's restaurant market. For context within the broader Croatian coastal dining scene, the country's Michelin-recognised seafood and Mediterranean addresses extend from Agli Amici Rovinj in Istria and Alfred Keller on Lošinj to LD Restaurant on Korčula. PiNKU operates at the recognised but not starred end of that spectrum , a category that rewards visitors who want reliable quality without the lead-time and pricing of a full tasting menu experience.

For those comparing Adriatic seafood specialists across the broader Mediterranean, Gambero Rosso in Marina di Gioiosa Ionica and Alici Restaurant on the Amalfi Coast represent the Italian coastal equivalent of the format , each anchored to a specific body of water and a specific catch. The logic is consistent across these addresses: proximity to the source, restraint in the kitchen, and a wine list built around the same geography as the fish.

Planning a Visit

PiNKU fish & wine sits at Obrov 4, within walking distance of Diocletian's Palace and the Riva waterfront , an address that requires no transport and fits naturally into an evening structured around the Old City. At the €€€ price point with two consecutive Michelin Plate recognitions and a 4.7 rating from over 300 reviews, demand during Split's high season (June through September) warrants booking ahead. The restaurant's position within a high-footfall historic district means walk-in availability becomes unreliable once summer tourism peaks. Contacting the restaurant directly to reserve a table, particularly for Friday and Saturday evenings, is the practical approach for anyone visiting between May and October.

For a fuller picture of what Split's dining scene offers across all categories and price tiers, our full Split restaurants guide covers the range. Those building a wider trip itinerary can also find curated recommendations in our Split hotels guide, our Split bars guide, our Split wineries guide, and our Split experiences guide. For those extending beyond Split into the wider Croatian fine-dining circuit, Boskinac in Novalja, Dubravkin Put in Zagreb, and Korak in Jastrebarsko round out a strong national picture across different regions and registers.

Frequently Asked Questions

How It Stacks Up

A quick peer reference to anchor this venue in its category.

Collector Access

Need a table?

Our members enjoy priority alerts and concierge-led booking support for the world's most difficult tables.

Get Exclusive Access