Solo dining is a normal part of European travel. Some cities make it easier than others.
Tier 1 — actively solo-dining-friendly
- Tokyo (technically Asia): The model — many restaurants designed for solo diners.
- Madrid + Spanish tapas cities: Bar-counter dining is standard. Pintxos in San Sebastián is solo-friendly.
- Naples pizzerias: Bar-counter pizza is fast and solo-fine.
- Vienna coffee-houses: Solo reading + coffee tradition is centuries old.
- Lisbon + Porto: Tasca counter dining + pastel de nata bakeries.
Tier 2 — workable solo dining
- London gastropubs: Bar-side dining standard.
- Paris brasseries: Counter (zinc) dining traditional.
- Berlin imbisses: Quick-service standing/sitting fast food.
- Copenhagen smørrebrød lunch counters.
- Helsinki cafeterias.
Tier 3 — possible but takes effort
- Italian trattorias outside lunch: Family-meal context can feel awkward solo.
- French Michelin restaurants: Doable but you'll feel watched.
- Greek tavernas in evening: Family-meal context.
Strategy
- Lunch as main meal: Less social-pressure context.
- Bar-side over table: Standing or counter dining is faster and less awkward.
- Bring a book or notebook: Standard solo-traveler signal.
- Tasting menus: Some cities (Tokyo, Lisbon, Madrid) excel for solo.
- Avoid romantic-couples restaurants: Verify before booking.