Best Restaurants to Close a Deal in Bordeaux: 2026 Guide
By Anaïs Laurent · Published · Updated
Pierre Gagnaire writes the menu at La Grande Maison Bernard Magrez, where the kitchen earned its second Michelin star in January 2022 under chef de cuisine Pierre Lecoutre. Gordon Ramsay's Le Pressoir d'Argent across the river inside the InterContinental holds the same two-star rating, awarded in 2017 and held continuously. Two two-star kitchens at the top of the deal-dinner map plus five more rooms across the Triangle d'Or, the Place de la Bourse, and the right bank fill out the working Bordeaux business-dining map for 2026 — and the wine list at every one of them is the point.
By Anaïs Laurent, Paris Bureau · Visited Q1 2026·12 min read
At a glance
The 2026 Bordeaux close-a-deal pick is La Grande Maison Bernard Magrez. Editorial runners-up: Le Pressoir d'Argent Gordon Ramsay, Le Gabriel, Le Chapon Fin, Maison Nouvelle.
Bordeaux's business-dining map runs across two banks and a single architectural axis. The Place de la Bourse and the Allées de Tourny anchor the left-bank Triangle d'Or — Le Gabriel facing the Bourse, Le Chapon Fin on the rue Montesquieu, La Grande Maison Bernard Magrez ten minutes north on rue Labottière. The InterContinental holds Gordon Ramsay's Le Pressoir d'Argent in the Grand Théâtre district. Across the Garonne, the right bank holds Maison Nouvelle in La Bastide. The remaining two rooms — Philippe Etchebest's brasserie Le Quatrième Mur and the historic southwest French institution La Tupina — sit just outside the Triangle. Each of the seven below is the room a wine-trade or legal client will recognise. The complete Bordeaux guide covers the wider scene.
Rue Labottière / Triangle d'Or · French Haute Cuisine · €€€€€ · Pierre Gagnaire menu, Pierre Lecoutre de cuisine
Close a DealImpress Clients
Pierre Gagnaire writes the menu at Bernard Magrez's hôtel particulier — two Michelin stars and a 12,000-bottle Bordeaux cellar. Fly in for it once.
Food10/10
Ambience10/10
Value7/10
Bernard Magrez, the Bordeaux wine magnate who owns four Grand Cru Classé estates including Château Pape Clément and Château Fombrauge, opened La Grande Maison inside his eponymous hôtel particulier on rue Labottière in 2013. The kitchen has run under Pierre Gagnaire's menu and direct supervision since opening; chef de cuisine Pierre Lecoutre has held the kitchen day-to-day since 2018. The first Michelin star arrived in 2017; the second in January 2022. The room sits across two formal dining rooms in a 19th-century townhouse with original parquet, a garden terrace for summer, and one of the most serious sommelier programmes in France.
The cooking is Gagnaire-codified — the chef's signatures translated by Lecoutre into Bordeaux ingredients. Signatures across the tasting (€295, eight courses): the langoustines royales au beurre noisette and the Gagnaire-style "five small plates" amuse course, both unchanged since opening; pigeonneau de Racan with smoked beetroot and corn purée (€85 a la carte); a Pacherenc-poached pear dessert that Lecoutre wrote in 2023. The wine list runs to 12,000 bottles managed by head sommelier Thomas Bouchet, with the deepest Pape Clément vertical anywhere outside the château itself.
Close-a-deal logic: La Grande Maison is the Bordeaux room for a deal where the client is a wine collector. Magrez himself takes the dining room one or two evenings a month and will join a table at the sommelier's suggestion. The private "salon Gagnaire" (8 seats, separately accessible, with its own service team) is the right business-dinner format — request the salon four weeks ahead. Brief the sommelier 72 hours in advance with the client's known cellars; Bouchet will plan the pairing accordingly. Lead time: four to six weeks main dining; six to eight for the salon.
Address: 10 Rue Labottière, 33000 Bordeaux
Price: €295–€485 per person with pairing
Cuisine: French Haute Cuisine
Dress code: Smart; jacket required for dinner
Reservations: Book 4–6 weeks ahead; direct + Relais & Châteaux; closed Sun–Mon
InterContinental Bordeaux Le Grand Hôtel · French · €€€€€ · Sylvain Constans
Close a DealAnniversary
Gordon Ramsay's two-star inside the InterContinental — silver-press lobster, a Grand Théâtre view, a Brigade-of-eight kitchen. Worth a flight.
Food10/10
Ambience10/10
Value7/10
Le Pressoir d'Argent opened inside the InterContinental Bordeaux Le Grand Hôtel in 2015 — the hotel sits directly across from the Grand Théâtre, the 1780 neoclassical opera house at the centre of the Triangle d'Or. Gordon Ramsay consulted on the menu; chef de cuisine Sylvain Constans has run the kitchen since opening. The first Michelin star arrived in 2016; the second in 2017 — making Le Pressoir d'Argent the fastest two-star award in Bordeaux history. The room seats forty-eight across a single formal dining room with a brigade of eight working an open passe at the rear.
The kitchen is built around the eponymous silver press — a 19th-century French silver lobster press that runs tableside, used to extract the lobster's juices and roe into a sauce served with the meat. The "homard à la presse" course is €185 as a single course on the a la carte (or €295 with the pairing for the dish alone) and is the order. The tasting menu runs eight courses at €295 with a pairing at €185 across a 1,200-bottle Bordeaux-heavy list managed by chef sommelier Aurélien Farrouil. Recent dishes outside the lobster: pigeonneau royal with cocoa and smoked carrot (€75 a la carte); a single pearl-oyster amuse.
Close-a-deal logic: the silver press itself is the deal-dinner moment — the dish is plated tableside in front of the client by Constans or his sous-chef, with the press operated mechanically across about ninety seconds while the dining room watches. It is the most theatrical single-course presentation in Bordeaux. Book a window-side table facing the Grand Théâtre (request table P-12) four to six weeks ahead for Friday and Saturday. The hotel concierge handles a pre-dinner cocktail at the Night Beat bar and a private car back to the airport.
Address: 2-5 Place de la Comédie, 33000 Bordeaux
Price: €295–€485 per person with pairing
Cuisine: French Haute Cuisine
Dress code: Smart; jacket appreciated
Reservations: Book 4–6 weeks ahead; OpenTable + InterContinental concierge
Place de la Bourse · Modern French · €€€€ · Alexandre Baule
Close a DealAnniversary
The Place de la Bourse Michelin-starred room above the Miroir d'eau — Alexandre Baule's tasting and the city's most famous square view. Book it.
Food9/10
Ambience10/10
Value8/10
Le Gabriel opened in 2014 on the first floor of an 18th-century townhouse directly above the Miroir d'eau — the 3,450-square-metre water mirror at the centre of the Place de la Bourse and Bordeaux's most-photographed urban feature. Chef Alexandre Baule took over the kitchen in 2017 after seven years at Le Cinq in Paris and earned the restaurant's first Michelin star in March 2018, retained continuously since. The room seats forty across a single dining room with floor-to-ceiling windows facing directly across the square; the view at dusk with the Miroir d'eau lit is the city's working business-dinner photograph.
The cooking is modern French with strong Aquitaine sourcing — Baule writes a tasting menu (six courses at €145, eight at €185) that runs through Arcachon oyster (the Marennes-Oléron-and-Cap-Ferret comparison plate as a starter, €38 a la carte); turbot from the Bay of Biscay with vin jaune sauce (€48); pigeonneau de Racan with smoked beetroot (€68). The wine list is, predictably, deep Bordeaux — 800 bottles managed by sommelier Anaïs Buisson, with the strongest Right Bank Pomerol section in the city and a serious Sauternes-with-foie-gras pairing programme.
Close-a-deal logic: Le Gabriel is the right answer for a deal-dinner where the client wants the Place de la Bourse view without the two-Michelin-star formality (or the lead time) of La Grande Maison and Le Pressoir d'Argent. Window tables at the south-west corner (request table G-3) face the Miroir d'eau directly. The price is materially below the two two-star rooms — a full eight-course tasting with pairing runs €295, against €480+ at La Grande Maison. Lead time: three to four weeks for Friday and Saturday.
Address: 10 Place de la Bourse, 33000 Bordeaux
Price: €145–€295 per person with pairing
Cuisine: Modern French
Dress code: Smart; jacket appreciated
Reservations: Book 3–4 weeks ahead; direct + The Fork; closed Sun
Triangle d'Or · French Classical · €€€€ · Nicolas Frion
Close a DealImpress Clients
The 1825-founded room with a grotto dining hall and a 1,500-bottle Bordeaux list — institutional choice when the deal is generational. Book it.
Food8/10
Ambience10/10
Value8/10
Le Chapon Fin opened on rue Montesquieu in 1825 — 201 years ago — and has run continuously through five family generations and two world wars. The current chef Nicolas Frion took the kitchen in 2010 after fifteen years at Le Cinq in Paris under Eric Briffard and Christian Le Squer; the Michelin star (held continuously from 1934) survived the Bib Gourmand-only era of the 1980s and is back at one star as of 2024. The dining room is the 1901 "rocaille" interior — an extraordinary plaster-and-stone grotto wall built by sculptor Camille Bordes that runs the room's full eastern wall.
The cooking is French-classical, with Frion's training showing in the technique — sole meunière deboned tableside (€88, the order); a Bayonne ham tartare with Espelette pepper and pickled shallot (€32); a Charolais filet with bone-marrow reduction and Pommes Anna (€72); the signature crêpe Suzette flambéed tableside (€32). The wine list runs to 1,500 bottles, almost entirely Bordeaux, with bottles dating to the 1928 and 1945 vintages still in the cellar (priced accordingly). Sommelier Marc Hervé has been at the restaurant since 1998.
Close-a-deal logic: Le Chapon Fin is the institutional Bordeaux deal-dinner room — the right answer when the client is a generational wine-trade family, a senior partner at a Bordeaux law firm, or a négociant. The grotto room reads as the most architecturally distinct dining room in the city; the table closest to the rocaille wall (request table CF-1) is the iconic seat. The kitchen takes private bookings for the Salon Bordes — eight seats in a separate room with the grotto entrance — four to six weeks ahead.
Address: 5 Rue Montesquieu, 33000 Bordeaux
Price: €95–€185 per person with wine
Cuisine: French Classical
Dress code: Smart; jacket appreciated
Reservations: Book 3 weeks ahead; direct; closed Sun–Mon
Bastide · Modern French · €€€€ · Philippe Etchebest
Close a DealAnniversary
Philippe Etchebest's Michelin-starred Bastide room across the Garonne — the chef's personal project, modern and pointed. Try it once.
Food9/10
Ambience9/10
Value8/10
Philippe Etchebest — Meilleur Ouvrier de France 2000, the public face of Cauchemar en Cuisine (the French Kitchen Nightmares) since 2011, formerly chef at Château des Reynats and Hostellerie de Plaisance — opened Maison Nouvelle in 2022 on the Quai des Queyries on the right bank of the Garonne, in the Bastide neighbourhood directly opposite the Place de la Bourse. The Michelin star arrived in January 2024. The room seats forty across a single dining room with floor-to-ceiling windows facing the river and the left-bank facade beyond.
The cooking is contemporary French — Etchebest writes a five-course tasting at €145, seven at €195, both built around a core of southwest French ingredients and a sustained focus on dry-aging and live-fire technique. Signatures: a langoustine carpaccio with caviar de Neuvic and a finger-lime emulsion (€42 a la carte); a Bayonne ham course aged 30 months by Pierre Ibaialde (€38); the dry-aged pigeon flambéed tableside in armagnac (€78); a Pacherenc soufflé that takes 40 minutes (€28). The wine list runs to 600 bottles with a stronger Madiran and Jurançon selection than the left-bank rooms — a southwest French statement.
Close-a-deal logic: Maison Nouvelle is the right answer for a deal-dinner where the client wants the Bordeaux view rather than the Bordeaux interior — the room faces directly across the Garonne to the lit Place de la Bourse facade. Etchebest himself takes the room two or three nights a week. The river-facing two-tops (request table MN-4 at the south-east corner) are the right deal seats. Lead time: four to five weeks for Friday and Saturday; the river-facing tables go six to eight.
Address: 11 Rue Rode (Cour Mably) / 16 Quai des Queyries side, 33100 Bordeaux Bastide
Price: €145–€245 per person with pairing
Cuisine: Modern French / Southwest
Dress code: Smart
Reservations: Book 4–6 weeks ahead; direct + SevenRooms; closed Sun–Mon
Grand Théâtre · French Brasserie de Luxe · €€€€ · Philippe Etchebest
Close a DealImpress Clients
Etchebest's Grand Théâtre brasserie — the easier booking, the same kitchen DNA, a quicker deal-dinner. Book it.
Food8/10
Ambience9/10
Value8/10
Le Quatrième Mur opened in 2014 inside the Grand Théâtre de Bordeaux — the 1780 neoclassical opera house directly opposite Le Pressoir d'Argent at the InterContinental. The restaurant occupies the theatre's former ballroom and runs as Philippe Etchebest's casual brasserie format — Etchebest holds the executive-chef role and is on-site one to two evenings a week. The kitchen day-to-day is run by Mathieu Bourget, who trained under Etchebest at Maison Nouvelle through 2023. The room seats 150 across a single dining room with the original 1780 mirrors and chandeliers.
The cooking is Etchebest-codified southwest French brasserie — onion soup gratinée with Comté and Cantal (€18); a foie gras-and-Pacherenc terrine with toasted brioche (€22); the signature canard de Challans roasted on the bone with a five-pepper jus and Pommes Sarladaises (€42); a Pacherenc soufflé Grand Marnier shared between two (€28). The wine list runs to 380 bottles — a more focused Bordeaux selection than the Etchebest gastronomic Maison Nouvelle list, with most bottles in the €45–€95 range.
Close-a-deal logic: Le Quatrième Mur is the right answer for a deal-dinner where the booking is inside two weeks, the brigade-dinner formality of La Grande Maison or Le Pressoir d'Argent is too much for the client, and the Grand Théâtre setting still reads as a Bordeaux occasion. The price is half the two-Michelin-star tier. Tables on the mezzanine (request table M-8) face the chandelier-lit main floor. Lead time: 10–14 days for Friday and Saturday.
Address: 2 Place de la Comédie, 33000 Bordeaux
Price: €55–€110 per person with wine
Cuisine: French Brasserie
Dress code: Smart casual to smart
Reservations: Book 10–14 days ahead; direct + The Fork
Saint-Michel · Southwest French · €€€€ · Jean-Pierre Xiradakis
Close a DealImpress Clients
Jean-Pierre Xiradakis's southwest French institution since 1968 — open-fire roasting, Bayonne ham aged on the wall, a wine list of 600 Bordeaux bottles. Book it.
Food8/10
Ambience10/10
Value8/10
Jean-Pierre Xiradakis opened La Tupina in 1968 on rue Porte-de-la-Monnaie in the Saint-Michel quarter, a five-minute walk south of the Place de la Bourse. The restaurant is built around an open central hearth where chickens, ducks, and lambs are roasted on a vertical spit, with a Bayonne ham hanging on the wall (replaced approximately every fourteen days). Xiradakis is still the chef-patron at age 81 and is on-site most evenings; his son Marc Xiradakis has co-run the kitchen since 2010. The room is a single 60-seat dining room with the open hearth at the centre.
The cooking is southwest French at the most traditional — open-fire roasted chicken (€38 for half a bird); a Pyrenean lamb shoulder slow-cooked on the rotating spit (€48); the signature pommes de terre Sarladaises cooked in duck fat over the embers (€12 as a side); a cassoulet aux haricots tarbais with Toulouse sausage (€36); the open-hearth grilled entrecôte with béarnaise (€48). The wine list runs to 600 Bordeaux bottles with the strongest Pomerol and Saint-Émilion sections at the mid-price tier (€60–€120) of any restaurant on this list.
Close-a-deal logic: La Tupina is the right answer for a deal-dinner where the client wants the southwest French food the wines were made for — a Pomerol with the spit-roasted lamb, a Sauternes with the foie gras, a Pacherenc with the duck. The room is the most photographable historical interior in Bordeaux outside Le Chapon Fin's grotto. The chef's table by the hearth (six seats, separately bookable) is the strongest seat in the room. Lead time: two to three weeks for Friday and Saturday; chef's table goes four to six.
Address: 6 Rue Porte-de-la-Monnaie, 33800 Bordeaux
Price: €85–€165 per person with wine
Cuisine: Southwest French
Dress code: Smart casual
Reservations: Book 2–3 weeks ahead; direct; chef's table 4–6 weeks
What Makes the Right Close-a-Deal Restaurant in Bordeaux?
Bordeaux's close-a-deal map is wine-list-led in a way no other French city of comparable size is. Every one of the seven rooms on this list runs a Bordeaux-deep cellar; six of them keep verticals of the local Grand Cru Classé properties unavailable in Paris at any price. La Grande Maison's Pape Clément verticals, Le Pressoir d'Argent's 1,200-bottle list managed by Aurélien Farrouil, Le Gabriel's deep Right Bank Pomerol selection, Le Chapon Fin's 1928-and-1945-vintage library, La Tupina's mid-tier Pomerol-and-Saint-Émilion breadth at the €60–€120 tier — the wine programme is the actual differentiation. The food, at all seven, is the support act.
For a deal-dinner where the client is a wine-trade actor (négociant, courtier, château proprietor), the practical move is to call the sommelier directly 72 hours in advance with the client's known cellar and let the sommelier plan the pairing. Bouchet at La Grande Maison, Farrouil at Le Pressoir d'Argent, and Buisson at Le Gabriel all run this protocol routinely; Hervé at Le Chapon Fin and the La Tupina sommelier team handle it on shorter notice. The pairings will run €40–€60 more per head than the published menu but the conversation it triggers at the table is the deal-dinner.
Pricing across the seven rooms runs €60 at La Tupina lunch through €485 at La Grande Maison with the full pairing. The Bordeaux business-dinner sweet spot — €145–€295 a head — covers Le Gabriel's tasting, Maison Nouvelle's seven-course menu, Le Chapon Fin's a la carte, and Le Pressoir d'Argent's tasting at the lower tier. The €295+ tier (La Grande Maison and Le Pressoir d'Argent with pairings) is the room for a deal-dinner with a single major client where the wine programme is the meeting agenda.
How to Book and What to Expect in Bordeaux
Reservation infrastructure runs through SevenRooms (Maison Nouvelle), OpenTable (Le Pressoir d'Argent, Le Quatrième Mur), direct phone (La Grande Maison, Le Chapon Fin, La Tupina), and The Fork (Le Gabriel, Le Quatrième Mur). For the gastronomic rooms — La Grande Maison, Le Pressoir d'Argent, Maison Nouvelle, Le Gabriel — the practical move is direct phone for any deal-dinner with a sommelier pairing requirement, because the booking confirmation needs to flow to the sommelier in advance of service.
High season runs three windows specific to the Bordeaux wine trade. Vinexpo (June every odd year — June 2027 is the next edition) takes the gastronomic rooms off the market for non-credentialed guests; en primeur tasting week (typically the first ten days of April) does the same for La Grande Maison, Le Pressoir d'Argent, and Le Chapon Fin. Harvest is mid-September through mid-October — La Tupina runs full almost every night in this window. Outside these windows, lead times drop by half across every room on this list.
Service is included in the bill at all seven rooms (the French service compris). For a deal-dinner with a sommelier pairing, a €40–€80 cash tip directly to the sommelier at the end of service — separately from the bill — is the well-mannered local pattern, particularly if the pairing went outside the published list. The maître d' at La Grande Maison and Le Pressoir d'Argent is the right contact for a follow-up reservation; both keep informal guest histories and will reserve the same table on a return visit. Browse close-a-deal restaurants worldwide for cross-French comparison.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best restaurant to close a deal in Bordeaux?
La Grande Maison Bernard Magrez on rue Labottière is the 2026 Bordeaux close-a-deal pick — two Michelin stars (second awarded January 2022), a Pierre Gagnaire menu executed by chef de cuisine Pierre Lecoutre, and a 12,000-bottle cellar managed by Thomas Bouchet with the deepest Pape Clément vertical anywhere outside the château itself. The private Salon Gagnaire (8 seats) is the right business-dinner format. Lead time: four to six weeks main; six to eight for the salon. Read the full review.
Which Bordeaux restaurant has the deepest Bordeaux wine list?
La Grande Maison Bernard Magrez at 12,000 bottles is the deepest on this list — but the depth is heavily Magrez-estate-weighted (Pape Clément, Fombrauge, Tour Carnet). For breadth across Bordeaux at the Grand Cru Classé and Pomerol tiers, Le Pressoir d'Argent's 1,200-bottle list (managed by Aurélien Farrouil) is the broader Bordeaux selection. For library-vintage Bordeaux at price tiers below the major-classified-growth tier, Le Chapon Fin's 1,500-bottle list (including the 1928 and 1945 vintages) is unique on this list.
How does Bordeaux compare to Paris for business dinners?
Bordeaux wins decisively on the wine programme — every room on this list keeps a deeper local-region cellar than the equivalent Parisian Michelin room, with library-vintage Bordeaux available at multiple price tiers that Paris simply does not stock at the equivalent rate. The food at the two-star tier is genuinely comparable (La Grande Maison and Le Pressoir d'Argent run kitchens at the Le Cinq / L'Ambroisie standard). Paris wins on the breadth of cuisine; Bordeaux wins when the deal is a wine-trade, legal, or Aquitaine industrial deal where the wine list is the meeting.
Where is the best private dining room in Bordeaux?
Two right answers depending on the brief. For the formal version: the Salon Gagnaire at La Grande Maison Bernard Magrez (8 seats, separate access, dedicated brigade) at €295+ a head. For the historical version: the Salon Bordes at Le Chapon Fin (8 seats, separate access through the rocaille-grotto entrance) at €145+ a head. For 12–18 seats, the practical move is a partial buy-out of the Le Gabriel main dining room facing the Place de la Bourse — direct request to the manager, 4–6 weeks ahead.
How far in advance should I book Bordeaux's top business restaurants?
La Grande Maison Bernard Magrez wants four to six weeks for Friday and Saturday in the main dining room; six to eight for the Salon Gagnaire. Le Pressoir d'Argent Gordon Ramsay runs four to six. Le Gabriel takes three to four. Le Chapon Fin three weeks. Maison Nouvelle four to five for the dining room; six to eight for the river-facing tables. Le Quatrième Mur 10–14 days. La Tupina two to three. During Vinexpo (June odd years) and en primeur week (early April), double these lead times across all seven; the gastronomic rooms are essentially unbookable inside ten weeks.
Should I order a Bordeaux pairing or pick the bottle myself?
For a deal-dinner with a wine-trade client, ask the sommelier 72 hours in advance to write a tailored pairing — Bouchet at La Grande Maison, Farrouil at Le Pressoir d'Argent, Buisson at Le Gabriel, and Hervé at Le Chapon Fin all run this protocol routinely. The pairings will reach into the deeper cellar in a way the by-the-glass programme cannot, and the conversation at the table when a sommelier explains a 2005 Cheval Blanc pour will close the deal faster than any bottle the client could have selected from the published list. Tip the sommelier separately, €40–€80 in cash.