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Lisbon · Alfama

Santo António de Alfama

Family-run restaurant serving traditional Alfama cuisine - grilled sardines (summer), bacalhau, arroz de polvo.

Santo António de Alfama, Lisbon · Alfama
Category
Restaurant
Duration
1h 30m
Best Time
Afternoon
Entry
€€
Rating
4.6 (2,523)
The place

About Santo António de Alfama

Family-run restaurant serving traditional Alfama cuisine - grilled sardines (summer), bacalhau, arroz de polvo. The tile-covered dining rooms climb three floors of a narrow building. Friendly service, generous portions, neighborhood prices (EUR 12-18 mains). No reservations - arrive at opening.

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The place

Getting there

Address
R. do Milagre de Santo António 10, 1100-351 Lisboa, Portugal
Neighborhood
Alfama
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Good to know

Tips, answered

The rooftop terrace on the third floor has Alfama views but fills first - send someone up to claim a table while others wait at the door.

Plan for about 1h 30m.

Santo António de Alfama is in the Alfama neighborhood of Lisbon. The address is R. do Milagre de Santo António 10, 1100-351 Lisboa, Portugal. The area is well-served by metro.

This works well at any time of day, though mornings tend to be quieter. Weekdays are less crowded than weekends.

Around the corner

Nearby in Alfama

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Alfama

Alfama survived the 1755 earthquake because the Moors built it right - twisting lanes that absorb rather than amplify seismic waves. You'll spend 2-3 hours wandering streets so narrow that residents chat between third-floor windows, past doorways where fado singers rehearse and courtyards where old men play cards. The neighbourhood flows from the castle walls down to the cathedral, with two excellent viewpoints (Miradouro de Santa Luzia and Portas do Sol) marking the transition from residential maze to river views. The experience feels like walking through someone's living room that happens to be outdoors. Laundry hangs overhead, cats nap on warm stones, and every corner reveals another postcard moment. The cobblestone streets reflect centuries of foot traffic, worn smooth as marble. You'll hear fragments of conversation, clinking glasses, and the occasional guitar from open taverna doors. The light changes dramatically as you move between sun-soaked squares and shadowy passages. Most guides oversell the formal fado houses - the spontaneous music in neighborhood tascas is more authentic and costs the price of a drink (€3-5 vs €25-40 minimum elsewhere). The Feira da Ladra flea market (Tuesdays/Saturdays) has genuine finds if you arrive early, but skip the overpriced tourist shops on the main drag. Focus your time on the upper section near Largo do Chafariz de Dentro where tour groups rarely venture.

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