The Cotswolds List
5 editorial picks, ranked by the only filter that matters: why you are dining.
Restaurant Hywel Jones by Lucknam Park
Twenty-one consecutive Michelin stars — the ballroom of a Palladian mansion, completely refurbished for 2026.
The Dining Room at Whatley Manor
Green Star, one Michelin star, twelve acres of formal garden — Ricki Weston's zero-waste cooking is the most thoughtful in the region.
Bybrook at The Manor House
A Michelin star every year since 2017 — Castle Combe's 14th-century manor house, seven courses, and Robert Potter's quietly confident cooking.
Le Champignon Sauvage
David Everitt-Matthias has held this Cheltenham star since 1995 — the longest single-chef Michelin tenure in the UK.
Lumière
Jon Howe's 26-seat Cheltenham room — a Michelin star that took fourteen years of quiet cooking before the Guide caught up.
Best for First Date in Cotswolds
Intimate, conversation-friendly rooms. Impressive without being intimidating. The tables where first impressions are made.
Le Champignon Sauvage
David Everitt-Matthias has held this Cheltenham star since 1995 — the longest single-chef Michelin tenure in the UK.
Lumière
Jon Howe's 26-seat Cheltenham room — a Michelin star that took fourteen years of quiet cooking before the Guide caught up.
Best for Business Dinner in Cotswolds
Power tables, private rooms, considered wine lists. Where the deal gets done.
Restaurant Hywel Jones by Lucknam Park
Twenty-one consecutive Michelin stars — the ballroom of a Palladian mansion, completely refurbished for 2026.
The Dining Room at Whatley Manor
Green Star, one Michelin star, twelve acres of formal garden — Ricki Weston's zero-waste cooking is the most thoughtful in the region.
Bybrook at The Manor House
A Michelin star every year since 2017 — Castle Combe's 14th-century manor house, seven courses, and Robert Potter's quietly confident cooking.
The Top 5 in Cotswolds
Our editorial ranking. A single punchy line per restaurant. Click through for the full read.
Restaurant Hywel Jones by Lucknam Park
Twenty-one consecutive Michelin stars — the ballroom of a Palladian mansion, completely refurbished for 2026.
The Dining Room at Whatley Manor
Green Star, one Michelin star, twelve acres of formal garden — Ricki Weston's zero-waste cooking is the most thoughtful in the region.
Bybrook at The Manor House
A Michelin star every year since 2017 — Castle Combe's 14th-century manor house, seven courses, and Robert Potter's quietly confident cooking.
Le Champignon Sauvage
David Everitt-Matthias has held this Cheltenham star since 1995 — the longest single-chef Michelin tenure in the UK.
Lumière
Jon Howe's 26-seat Cheltenham room — a Michelin star that took fourteen years of quiet cooking before the Guide caught up.
The Cotswolds Dining Guide
The Cotswolds is England's densest Michelin belt outside London — more than a dozen starred restaurants across a 750-square-mile Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty stretching from Bath in the south to Stratford-upon-Avon in the north. The stars are not concentrated in a single town. They are scattered across honeyed-stone villages and country estates, which makes the region feel more like a circuit than a city dining scene.
What unites the Cotswolds kitchens is a supplier economy built around the region itself. Evesham asparagus in spring. Newburgh lamb from across the Severn. Estate venison from Lucknam Park's own herd. Cotswold Estate trout from the Coln. The menus at Bybrook, Lucknam, and Whatley Manor circulate the same ingredients — what distinguishes them is technique and room.
The defining format here is the country-house hotel restaurant. Three of the region's Michelin stars sit inside hotel dining rooms (Lucknam Park, Whatley Manor, Dormy House); the other pairs — Le Champignon Sauvage, Lumière, Bybrook — are village-high-street restaurants with a single-chef model. Both traditions matter. The hotel rooms excel at occasion dining and private events; the village restaurants hold the most loyal critics.
Neighbourhoods
Reservations & Practical Notes
For a deeper editorial read, see our ongoing Editorial coverage — including pieces on the Best Restaurants for Every Occasion, and our Impress Clients and First Date occasion guides.