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Traditional German Brewpub
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Bitburg, Germany

Zum Simonbräu

CuisineGerman
Price€€
Dress CodeCasual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseLively
CapacityMedium
Michelin

A Michelin Plate-recognised Gasthaus on Bitburg's central market square, Zum Simonbräu holds a consistent position in the Eifel region's mid-range dining tier. The kitchen draws on German regional cooking traditions, and the setting reflects the town's brewing heritage. With a 4.5 Google rating across 567 reviews, it functions as both a reliable local anchor and a reference point for visitors exploring the Eifel.

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Address
Am Markt 7, 54634 Bitburg, Germany
Phone
+49 6561 3333
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Zum Simonbräu restaurant in Bitburg, Germany
About

A Market-Square Gasthaus in Bitburg's Brewing Heartland

Bitburg's Marktplatz has the unhurried character common to small Eifel towns: low-slung stone buildings, a central open square, and the kind of foot traffic that slows in the afternoon and quickens again around dinner. Am Markt 7 places Zum Simonbräu at the civic centre of this scene, a position that in German regional towns typically signals institutional standing rather than novelty. The name itself carries the weight of local brewing culture, Bitburg is, after all, the home of Bitburger, one of Germany's most exported lagers, and the Simonbräu identity connects the restaurant to that tradition without needing to explain it to any local who walks through the door.

This is not a destination in the way that Waldhotel Sonnora in Dreis or Victor's Fine Dining by Christian Bau in Perl function as destinations, venues that draw guests from across the region for a single meal. Zum Simonbräu operates on a different register: it is the kind of place that anchors a town's dining culture, sits in the mid-range price tier (€€), and earns its recognition through consistency rather than ambition. The Michelin Plate in 2025 confirms exactly that, the Plate designation marks kitchens producing good cooking, not necessarily cooking that redefines anything.

What the Eifel Produces and Why It Matters Here

The Eifel plateau runs through Rhineland-Palatinate and into the Belgian border region, and its agricultural profile is specific: game from densely forested uplands, freshwater fish from the rivers and reservoirs, root vegetables and brassicas from cooler highland soils, and dairy traditions that differ from the Rhine valley further east. Restaurants anchored in this landscape, when they cook well, reflect an ingredient logic shaped by altitude, season, and proximity. The gap between what arrives in a kitchen at this latitude and what a chef puts on the plate is shorter than in a city, and that compression tends to show up in the cooking as directness rather than elaboration.

German regional cooking at the Gasthaus level rarely courts the kind of creative distance that defines kitchens like Aqua in Wolfsburg or CODA Dessert Dining in Berlin. The €€€€ tier of contemporary German cooking, represented also by JAN in Munich and Vendôme in Bergisch Gladbach, operates with a different set of ambitions and a different cost structure. The mid-range German Gasthaus tradition functions as the connective tissue between those two worlds: it keeps regional ingredients in rotation, keeps cooking methods readable, and keeps price points accessible without defaulting to the anonymous comfort food that fills the lower end of the market.

In the Eifel specifically, that means roasted and braised meats, preparations built around seasonal vegetables, and, in appropriate months, game dishes that draw on the region's hunting culture. The Michelin recognition and the 4.5 rating across 584 Google reviews together suggest a kitchen that earns its position in that tradition. For comparison, the broader Rhineland-Palatinate fine-dining tier, including Schanz in Piesport along the Mosel, shows how regional sourcing can be taken to a different level of precision. Zum Simonbräu occupies the more accessible end of that same regional spectrum.

Positioning in the Local and Regional Dining Picture

Bitburg is not a dining city in the sense that Trier is. Trier, 25 kilometres to the south, carries the historical and cultural infrastructure of a Roman imperial city and has dining options that reflect that scale, including Bagatelle. Bitburg functions differently: it is a small town with a brewing identity and a market square, and its dining options serve a local population and a modest tourist flow rather than a regional gastronomic circuit. In that context, a Michelin Plate restaurant at the centre of the Marktplatz is a genuine anchor for the town's culinary standing.

The €€ price range places Zum Simonbräu firmly in accessible mid-market territory. This is not the price tier of Schwarzwaldstube in Baiersbronn or Restaurant Haerlin in Hamburg, and it is not trying to be. The competitive set here is other regional Gasthäuser in the Eifel, not the Michelin-starred fine dining tier of western Germany. Against that peer group, two consecutive Michelin Plate recognitions mark a kitchen that takes its craft seriously. For readers curious about how German cooking at this level compares internationally, Sühring in Bangkok and CARLS Brasserie an der Elbphilharmonie in Hamburg represent how German cooking traditions translate into different formats and markets.

Planning Your Visit

Zum Simonbräu sits at Am Markt 7, directly on Bitburg's central market square, a location that makes it easy to find on foot from anywhere in the town centre. The €€ price range signals that a full meal here will land in the comfortable mid-range bracket, appropriate for a relaxed dinner or a longer lunch without the financial commitment of a tasting menu format. Reservations are recommended. The ES:SENZ in Grassau offers a reference point for what Michelin-recognised German regional cooking looks like in a more destination-focused format, should the comparison be useful in calibrating expectations before travelling.

Signature Dishes
JägerschnitzelWiener SchnitzelCordon bleu
Frequently asked questions

At-a-Glance Comparison

Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Cozy
  • Rustic
  • Lively
Best For
  • Casual Hangout
  • Family
Experience
  • Terrace
  • Historic Building
Drink Program
  • Beer Program
Sourcing
  • Local Sourcing
Dress CodeCasual
Noise LevelLively
CapacityMedium
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingStandard

Pleasantly lively atmosphere with solid wooden tables, picture-decorated walls, and modern details in a cozy brewpub setting.

Signature Dishes
JägerschnitzelWiener SchnitzelCordon bleu