The 2026 European Food Price Index: Where to Eat Well for Less
How much does it really cost to eat your way through Europe in 2026? We pulled current restaurant prices for 23 of the continent’s great food cities and turned them into a single, comparable index — so you can see exactly where your food budget stretches furthest and where a casual dinner quietly doubles.
The short version: a simple sit-down meal ranges from €9.35 in Istanbul to €25 in Florence — the same plate of “local lunch” costs nearly three times more depending on which city you land in. Below is the full ranked table, plus the patterns worth knowing before you book.
Key findings at a glance
- Cheapest for a casual meal: Istanbul (€9.35), Prague (€9.50) and Kraków (€11.28).
- Most expensive: Florence (€25), Amsterdam (€22) and Dublin (€20.50).
- The Cappuccino Index belongs to Italy: a coffee costs just €1.96 in Rome, €1.98 in Bologna and €2.02 in Florence — yet Florence has the priciest meals on the list. Tourist-menu economics in one city.
- Prague is the value champion: the beer capital of Europe also has the cheapest draught beer on the list (€2.68) and a sub-€10 meal.
- The Nordic tax is real: Copenhagen is the most expensive city in almost every category — €107 for dinner for two and €6.09 for a single cappuccino.
- The European average for a casual meal works out to roughly €16, and about €3.37 for a cappuccino.
The 2026 European Food Price Index
All prices are converted to euros and ranked by the cost of a meal at an inexpensive restaurant — the single number most travellers actually feel day to day. Sorted cheapest to most expensive.
| # | City | Casual meal | Dinner for two | Beer (0.5L) | Cappuccino |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Istanbul 🇹🇷 | €9.35 | €46.73 | €3.74 | €3.56 |
| 2 | Prague 🇨🇿 | €9.50 | €47.48 | €2.68 | €3.32 |
| 3 | Kraków 🇵🇱 | €11.28 | €46.53 | €4.19 | €3.86 |
| 4 | Porto 🇵🇹 | €12.00 | €50.00 | €3.00 | €2.32 |
| 5 | Budapest 🇭🇺 | €12.69 | €60.61 | €3.38 | €3.10 |
| 6 | Lisbon 🇵🇹 | €15.00 | €55.00 | €3.00 | €2.57 |
| 7 | Thessaloniki 🇬🇷 | €15.00 | €55.00 | €5.00 | €3.85 |
| 8 | Rome 🇮🇹 | €15.00 | €60.00 | €5.00 | €1.96 |
| 9 | Athens 🇬🇷 | €15.00 | €60.00 | €5.00 | €3.69 |
| 10 | Valencia 🇪🇸 | €15.00 | €60.00 | €3.00 | €2.43 |
| 11 | Berlin 🇩🇪 | €15.00 | €75.00 | €4.90 | €4.12 |
| 12 | Naples 🇮🇹 | €15.50 | €70.00 | €5.00 | €2.06 |
| 13 | Paris 🇫🇷 | €15.50 | €70.00 | €7.00 | €4.37 |
| 14 | Barcelona 🇪🇸 | €16.00 | €57.50 | €3.50 | €2.74 |
| 15 | Madrid 🇪🇸 | €16.00 | €60.00 | €3.50 | €2.75 |
| 16 | Munich 🇩🇪 | €17.00 | €80.00 | €4.90 | €3.82 |
| 17 | Vienna 🇦🇹 | €18.00 | €80.00 | €5.50 | €4.67 |
| 18 | Brussels 🇧🇪 | €20.00 | €80.00 | €5.00 | €3.83 |
| 19 | Bologna 🇮🇹 | €20.00 | €80.00 | €6.00 | €1.98 |
| 20 | Copenhagen 🇩🇰 | €20.10 | €107.19 | €8.04 | €6.09 |
| 21 | Dublin 🇮🇪 | €20.50 | €90.00 | €7.00 | €4.42 |
| 22 | Amsterdam 🇳🇱 | €22.00 | €80.00 | €6.60 | €4.03 |
| 23 | Florence 🇮🇹 | €25.00 | €66.50 | €6.00 | €2.02 |
Green rows = the five best-value cities; amber rows = the five priciest. Prices reflect Numbeo’s crowd-sourced restaurant data for July 2026, converted to euros (see methodology).
The five best-value food cities in Europe
If your trip is planned around eating well without watching every euro, these are the cities where the food is both cheap and genuinely worth travelling for.
Istanbul tops the list at €9.35 for a sit-down meal — and that number barely captures how far money goes across a city built on street food, from balık ekmek to a full kebab spread. Prague is the European value benchmark: a sub-€10 meal, the cheapest beer on the entire list (€2.68), and a food scene that has quietly grown well beyond goulash. Kraków (€11.28) delivers Poland’s hearty comfort food for a fraction of Western European prices, while Porto (€12) offers the best value in Western Europe — francesinhas and port for the price of a snack in Amsterdam. Rounding out the five, Budapest (€12.69) pairs cheap meals with a thermal-bath-and-ruin-bar culture that keeps a whole weekend affordable.
Where a meal costs the most
At the other end, four cities stand out — and the reasons differ. Copenhagen is expensive by design: high wages and high taxes push dinner for two to €107, the only city on the list over €100. Amsterdam (€22) and Dublin (€20.50) reflect tourist-dense centres and pricey drinks. The most revealing entry is Florence at €25 — the single most expensive casual meal on the list, in a city where a cappuccino is only €2.02. That gap is the clearest signal of tourist-menu pricing anywhere in Europe: locals still pay Italian prices for coffee, while visitors pay a premium at the table.
The Cappuccino Index: Italy in a cup
Coffee tells its own story. The four cheapest cappuccinos in Europe are all Italian — Rome (€1.96), Bologna (€1.98), Florence (€2.02) and Naples (€2.06) — a direct reflection of a café culture where an espresso at the bar is a daily right, not a treat. Compare that to Copenhagen (€6.09), Vienna (€4.67) or Dublin (€4.42), where the same cup costs three times more. If your travel days are powered by coffee, Italy is not just the most delicious option — it’s the cheapest.
The Beer Index and dinner for two
Draught beer follows the same north-south split. Prague is cheapest at €2.68 — fitting for the country with the highest beer consumption per capita on earth — followed by Lisbon, Porto and Valencia at €3. The priciest pints are in Copenhagen (€8.04), Dublin and Paris (€7). For a full dinner for two, the cheapest nights out are in Kraków (€46.53), Istanbul (€46.73) and Prague (€47.48); the most expensive by a wide margin is again Copenhagen at €107.
The pattern: eat east and south, splurge north and west
Across every category, the map is consistent. Eastern and Southern Europe — Turkey, Czechia, Poland, Portugal, Hungary, Greece — deliver the best food value on the continent. Northern and Western Europe — the Nordics, Ireland, the Netherlands, France — cost the most. The outlier worth remembering is Italy, which manages both extremes at once: some of the cheapest coffee in Europe and, in tourist-heavy Florence, some of the priciest meals. The lesson for food travellers is simple — where you go matters as much as what you order.
Methodology & sources
Prices are drawn from Numbeo’s crowd-sourced cost-of-living database (Restaurants category) as of July 2026. We recorded four data points per city: a meal at an inexpensive restaurant, a three-course dinner for two at a mid-range restaurant, a 0.5 litre domestic draught beer, and a regular cappuccino. Prices in non-euro currencies (Czech koruna, Hungarian forint, Danish krone, Turkish lira, Polish złoty) were converted to euros using reference exchange rates from 8 July 2026 (1 EUR = 24.22 CZK, 354.75 HUF, 7.46 DKK, 53.49 TRY, 4.30 PLN). Because Numbeo data is contributor-reported, treat figures as reliable directional estimates rather than menu-exact prices.
Cite or share this study
Writers, bloggers and journalists are welcome to reference this index with attribution. Please credit FoodTourTrails.com and link back to this page as the source. Republishing the table? A link to FoodTourTrails is all we ask.
Frequently asked questions
What is the cheapest European city for food in 2026?
Based on the cost of a casual restaurant meal, Istanbul (€9.35) and Prague (€9.50) are the cheapest of the 23 cities in our index, followed by Kraków, Porto and Budapest — all under €13.
What is the most expensive European city to eat in?
Florence has the most expensive casual meal (€25), while Copenhagen is the most expensive overall, with dinner for two at €107 and the priciest beer and coffee on the list.
Which European city has the cheapest coffee?
Rome, at €1.96 for a cappuccino. Italy holds the four cheapest coffee spots in Europe — Rome, Bologna, Florence and Naples — thanks to its everyday café culture.
How much should I budget for food per day in Europe?
As a rough guide, a casual meal averages about €16 across these 23 cities. In value cities like Prague or Porto you can eat well on €25–35 a day; in Copenhagen or Amsterdam, budget €60 or more for the same experience.
Frequently Asked Questions
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