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The 8 Best Wine Bars in Lisbon 2026

The 8 best wine bars in Lisbon for 2026, from By The Wine and Prado to O Velho Eurico and Taberna da Rua das Flores. The verified Lisbon list.

The short answer

Our editors' №1 is By The Wine.

8 ranked rooms follow. How we picked is at the end of this guide.

Best overallBy The Wine
Third pickPrado

Lisbon in 2026 drinks wine the way the city always has, at the bar, standing or perched on a stool, from producers most of the world has yet to discover. Portugal's seven-DOC structure means a serious by-the-glass programme can run from a Vinho Verde alvarinho through an Alentejo antao vaz to a Douro touriga nacional without leaving the country, and the city's wine bars treat that vertical seriousness as the baseline rather than the destination. The last five years brought a generational shift, with younger sommeliers back from Copenhagen and Paris pouring small Dao and Bairrada producers like Filipa Pato, Antonio Madeira and Niepoort's Lagar de Baixo project that the older Chiado enotecas would never have listed.

This ranking draws on Lisbon's wine trade, local guides and the rooms the city's sommeliers point to, across Chiado, Bairro Alto, Principe Real, Alfama and Mouraria. We weight by-the-glass depth and Portuguese-producer integration most heavily, then room and service, then value. Tascas earn their place on the honesty of the pour rather than the length of the list, since the format calls for working wine over curatorial display. The bars below are where the Lisbon wine trade actually drinks, not the Time Out Market tourist circuit.

The 8 best wine bars in Lisbon

Editor's №1

By The Wine

By The Wine fills a Chiado room on Rua das Flores where roughly 3,000 Periquita bottles line the vaulted ceiling, all of it Jose Maria da Fonseca's own house. The pour stays Portuguese end to end, glasses matched to plates of cheese and presunto. Go early evening before the Chiado crowd lands. For drinkers who want the whole country in one family list. Travelers' Choice 2025.

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Tasca do Chico

Tasca do Chico packs a tiny Bairro Alto room where amateur and professional fadistas take turns through the night and the whole room hushes for every voice. The wine is honest house Portuguese, the petiscos plain, the feeling all heart. Arrive before 10pm to claim a stool near the singers. For drinkers who came for the song as much as the glass.

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Prado

Prado works out of a former fish factory in Mouraria, high ceilings and Roman ruins underfoot, where chef Antonio Galapito builds an all-natural Portuguese list around organic and biodynamic growers. The smaller Prado Mercearia nearby pours the same philosophy for walk-ins. Book the dining room for dinner, drop into the mercearia for an afternoon glass. For drinkers chasing Portugal's new wave.

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A Cova Funda

A Cova Funda keeps the old Lisbon tasca alive, grilled octopus and sardines arriving beside a deep, cheap Portuguese wine list. Plates run around 10 to 15 euros and nobody rushes the table. Go for a long weekday lunch when the regulars hold court and the carafe keeps coming. For drinkers who want working wine, not a curated shelf.

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O Velho Eurico

O Velho Eurico opened in 2019 on Largo de Sao Cristovao and became one of Lisbon's hardest reservations, chef Ze Paulo Rocha cooking a modern neo-tasca off a daily chalkboard. The wine leans small Portuguese growers. Book through Instagram weeks out or join the waitlist at opening. Best on a Tuesday before the week fills. For drinkers who treat dinner as the main event.

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Taberna da Rua das Flores

Taberna da Rua das Flores hides in plain sight on the Chiado lane it is named for, a cramped counter where Andre Magalhaes built his reputation on a daily handwritten menu and a Portuguese-first list. There is no booking, so the queue forms before the door opens. Arrive at opening or eat late. For drinkers happy to wait for petiscos and a serious glass.

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A Camponesa

A Camponesa carries Andre Magalhaes' second Bairro Alto act, around 15 tables of inventive Portuguese cooking and a wine list with real range. The room runs warmer and roomier than his taberna, the pours more adventurous. Come for a slow dinner and let the floor steer the bottle. Best midweek when the tables turn slower. For drinkers who want food and wine to argue as equals.

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Belcanto Bar

Belcanto holds two Michelin stars in Chiado, Jose Avillez's flagship and a fixture on the World's 50 Best Restaurants list at No.42. The cellar is among the city's deepest, pairings built course by course around Portuguese and global bottles. Reserve well ahead and surrender to the tasting menu. For a milestone night when the wine is meant to match the kitchen.

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Weekly picks

The bars worth going to, weekly.