Il Pagliaccio Restaurant
Il Pagliaccio is a two-Michelin-star restaurant in the historic centre of Rome, near Campo de’ Fiori, led by chef Anthony Genovese. One of the capital’s most internationally recognised fine-dining addresses, it combines a cosmopolitan culinary vision rooted in French technique with Mediterranean and Asian influences, served in an intimate room within a centuries-old Roman building.
At a glance
- Type
- Fine dining restaurant, two Michelin stars
- Location
- Via dei Banchi Vecchi, Rome, Lazio, Italy
- Coordinates
- 41.8979° N, 12.4673° E
- Chef
- Anthony Genovese
- Style
- Contemporary Mediterranean with French and Asian influences
Overview
Il Pagliaccio — “the clown” in Italian, a name chosen with deliberate irony — is one of the few restaurants in Rome to have sustained two Michelin stars over many years, a remarkable achievement in a city whose cuisine is famously populist and tradition-bound. Chef Anthony Genovese, French-born and of Italian heritage, trained in Paris, Tokyo and across Southeast Asia before settling in Rome, and his cooking reflects this cosmopolitan biography. The restaurant is set in a narrow Renaissance street near Campo de’ Fiori, metres from the Tiber bend.
History
Il Pagliaccio opened in 2003 and rapidly became a reference point for Rome’s fine-dining scene. Genovese’s unusual profile — a French chef of Italian origin cooking international cuisine in Rome — gave the restaurant a distinctive identity that set it apart from both the traditional Roman trattoria and the standard Italian fine-dining model. The restaurant earned its first Michelin star in 2006 and its second in 2009. Its longevity in Rome’s demanding restaurant market reflects consistent culinary vision and loyalty from both local and international clientele.
What you see
The dining room at Il Pagliaccio is deliberately small — only a handful of tables — creating an atmosphere of focused intimacy unusual in a city of Rome’s scale. The decor is elegant without ostentation: warm tones, fine tableware and attentive service define the experience. Tasting menus reveal Genovese’s signature approach: unexpected combinations of Italian produce with Japanese or Southeast Asian techniques, presented with Gallic precision. The wine cellar emphasises Italian producers, with strong representation from central and southern Italy.
Cultural significance
Rome’s gastronomic identity has historically resisted the influence of fine-dining internationalism, making Il Pagliaccio’s sustained success all the more notable. The restaurant represents a bridge between Roman culinary heritage and global contemporary cooking, and has helped to build Rome’s credibility as a destination for international gastronomic tourists — a role the city now embraces alongside its unrivalled cultural heritage.
Practical information
- Address
- Via dei Banchi Vecchi 129a, 00186 Roma RM, Italy
- Reservations
- Essential; book in advance via official website
- Format
- Tasting menus; à la carte available (check current offering)
Getting there
The restaurant is in the historic centre of Rome, reachable from Termini station by metro (line A to Spagna or Barberini, then taxi) or by bus lines along Corso Vittorio Emanuele II. The nearest metro stop is Spagna or Barberini; a taxi from Termini takes approximately 15 minutes. Rome Fiumicino (FCO) and Ciampino (CIA) airports are both served by rail and bus transfers to the city centre.
