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CuisineModern Cuisine
Executive ChefWilliam Gleave
LocationMargate, United Kingdom
Michelin
The Good Food Guide

On Margate's Harbour Arm, Sargasso occupies a former boat shed with direct sightlines to the sands and the Old Town. The kitchen runs a sharing-plate format built on seasonal seafood, clean Mediterranean-leaning flavours, and a natural wine list. Two consecutive Michelin Bib Gourmand awards (2024 and 2025) confirm what the queue outside most weekends already suggests.

Sargasso restaurant in Margate, United Kingdom
About

A Harbour Shed With Intent

Walk out along Margate's Harbour Arm on any warm afternoon and the sequence of buildings tells a story about the town's last decade: gallery, street food stalls, a craft drinks kiosk, and then, at the far end where the wall meets open water, a small brick box that once stored fishing equipment. The building hasn't changed much. Inside Sargasso, the walls are bare, the seating runs along high counters and stools, the kitchen is visible, and the room is loud in the way that places with no soft furnishings and a full reservation list always are. The view through the windows — Margate Sands stretching toward the Old Town roofline — does more decorative work than any interior scheme could.

That deliberate spareness is a design statement about priorities. In British coastal dining, the dominant mode for decades ran toward pine panelling, nautical prints, and the sort of safe menu that treated geography as a selling point rather than a working brief. What has emerged in Margate since the mid-2010s is something different: a cluster of restaurants that treat the harbour not as backdrop but as supply chain, and that apply the same ingredient-led rigour you'd find in a city neighbourhood to a seaside postcode. Sargasso sits at the sharper end of that shift.

Where the Menu Comes From

The cultural reference point for Sargasso's cooking is Mediterranean rather than traditionally British coastal. Small plates designed for sharing, produce-forward rather than technique-forward, a wine list weighted toward natural and biodynamic bottles from France and Italy: these are the markers of a particular strand of London restaurant culture that arrived in Margate and found, if anything, a more convincing home. The proximity to fresh seafood makes the approach less theoretical. When the day's fish comes off a boat a short distance from the kitchen, restraint in preparation isn't an aesthetic choice so much as the logical one.

The connection to London is structural as well as stylistic. Sargasso shares DNA with Angela's, Margate's longer-established seafood address, in its commitment to seasonal sourcing, though the two restaurants occupy distinct positions: Angela's leans more classically British, while Sargasso's register is looser and more Mediterranean in its flavour logic. The relationship to Brawn, the well-regarded east London wine bar and restaurant, is explicit , Sargasso operates as a sister site, which explains both the wine philosophy and the cooking's point of view. Chef William Gleave, who came through Hill & Szrok in Hackney, brought to Margate the kind of CV that signals a specific approach: butchery-led, produce-obsessive, comfortable with bold flavour in pared-back presentations.

Dishes that have drawn attention , fried squid in a brioche-style roll, roasted Tropea onions with romesco, lemon sole served on the bone with a lemon and olive sauce , are not complicated in construction. Their appeal is in sourcing and calibration. The Cantabrian anchovy on fried courgette is an anchovy worth knowing. The lemon sole, when the day's catch merits it, is the kind of dish that renders the menu redundant: you order it and stop deliberating. This is cooking that places quality of raw material above the ambition of transformation, which in a harbour-adjacent kitchen makes complete sense.

The Bib Gourmand Signal and What It Means Here

Michelin awarded Sargasso a Bib Gourmand in both 2024 and 2025. The Bib designation , given to restaurants offering good cooking at moderate prices, distinct from the star tier occupied by places like The Fat Duck in Bray, The Ledbury in London, or L'Enclume in Cartmel , is particularly meaningful in a coastal town context. It confirms that the cooking clears a consistent technical threshold, not just an atmospheric one. For Margate, which has been accumulating serious restaurant credentials alongside its art-scene reputation, consecutive Bib recognition places the town in a different conversation than the typical English seaside destination.

The price range sits at ££, which in the context of the Harbour Arm format , small plates, shared, with wine , means a meal that reflects the sourcing without demanding fine-dining spend. Compared to starred restaurants in the broader UK firmament, including Moor Hall in Aughton, Gidleigh Park in Chagford, or Le Manoir aux Quat' Saisons in Great Milton, Sargasso operates in a different register entirely , less ceremony, less formality, but no less seriousness about the core product. The Bib is the mechanism Michelin uses to acknowledge exactly that distinction.

Margate's Restaurant Moment and Sargasso's Place In It

Margate's dining scene has developed alongside, and partly because of, its wider cultural regeneration. The Turner Contemporary gallery, the resurgent Old Town independent retail strip, and the influx of Londoners seeking coastal proximity have collectively created an audience that expects more from a seaside restaurant than the traditional offer of battered fish and a sea view. That audience now has several addresses worth serious attention. Sète brings a modern British approach; Bottega Caruso anchors the Italian end; Angela's handles the classic seafood position. Sargasso's particular contribution is the Mediterranean small-plates format applied with consistency and backed by the Brawn lineage , a London credential that carries weight with the demographic making weekend trips down the A2.

The broader EP Club Margate restaurants guide maps this scene in full. For visitors building a longer stay, the Margate hotels guide covers accommodation across the relevant price tiers, while the bars guide and experiences guide extend the picture beyond the table. The wineries guide is relevant given Kent's expanding wine production, which intersects naturally with the natural-leaning list at Sargasso.

For those situating Margate within a wider circuit of serious British regional cooking, the comparison set extends far beyond the southeast: Hand and Flowers in Marlow, Restaurant Andrew Fairlie in Auchterarder, and internationally, Frantzén in Stockholm or FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai represent the higher-ceremony end of the European modern cuisine spectrum. Sargasso is not competing in that tier and doesn't need to. Its proposition , the right fish, the right day, harbour light, a glass of something natural , is complete on its own terms.

Planning Your Visit

Sargasso is located at Stone Pier, Margate CT9 1AP, on the Harbour Arm. The format is sharing plates, so arriving hungry and ordering broadly is the correct strategy. The wine list tilts natural and biodynamic with a French and Italian bias, which suits the food's flavour register. The room is small and the tables are in demand, particularly at weekends and through the summer months, so planning ahead is advisable. The seasonal menu shifts with what is available, which means the specific dishes described in coverage from one visit may not appear on the next , the approach and the sourcing philosophy remain constant, but the specific offer follows the catch and the growing calendar. Given the Harbour Arm setting and outdoor seating availability, an early evening in spring or a warm autumn afternoon represents the visit at its most coherent: food, light, and location aligned without the peak-summer crowds that compress the space and test the kitchen's pace.

Frequently Asked Questions

What dish is Sargasso famous for?
Sargasso doesn't anchor itself to a single signature dish in the way that tasting-menu restaurants do , the sharing-plate format and seasonal sourcing mean the menu moves with the market. That said, the seafood preparations have drawn the most consistent praise, with whole fish served on the bone and the kitchen's handling of Cantabrian anchovies repeatedly noted in coverage. The lemon sole with lemon and olive sauce has appeared across multiple reviews as the dish that leading demonstrates the kitchen's approach: sourcing-led, technically clean, and built around one well-chosen flavour pairing rather than complexity for its own sake. Order whatever the kitchen is foregrounding as a daily special; that is where the freshest catch will appear.
Do they take walk-ins at Sargasso?
Given two consecutive Michelin Bib Gourmand awards (2024 and 2025) and a small room on one of Margate's most visited public walkways, walk-in availability is limited, particularly at weekends and during summer. The practical position is: walk-ins are more viable midweek or outside peak season, but for a weekend visit or any Friday evening, attempting to secure a reservation in advance is the more reliable approach. At ££ pricing in a Bib-recognised room, demand consistently outpaces capacity , a pattern shared with other small high-value venues along this stretch of the Kent coast.

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