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The Best Restaurants
in Paris

The city that invented the art of the table. Ten three-Michelin-star restaurants, 127 starred establishments, and the only dining culture on earth that has never stopped taking itself seriously.

200Restaurants
Editor's Guide · Top 10 Restaurants in Paris
10Three-Star
7Occasions
At a glance

The best restaurants in Best Restaurants in Paris 2026 for 2026 are led by Le Cinq — contemporary french. Runners-up by editorial rank: Guy Savoy, L'Arpège, Le Jules Verne, Plénitude.

Paris Restaurants

Ranked by occasion suitability

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$ under $40  ·  $$ $40–$80  ·  $$$ $80–$150  ·  $$$$ $150+ per person

Le Cinq Four Seasons George V Paris dining room
1
Impress Clients
Paris — 8th Arrondissement
Le Cinq
Contemporary French$$$$
Three stars inside the George V. The gilded room where Paris closes its most important deals and celebrates its most consequential evenings.
Guy Savoy restaurant Monnaie de Paris dining
2
Close a Deal
Paris — 6th Arrondissement
Guy Savoy
French Haute Cuisine$$$$
Six 18th-century salons overlooking the Seine. The most intelligently beautiful room in Paris — and the artichoke soup with black truffle that defines a generation of French cooking.
L'Arpège Paris Alain Passard restaurant interior
3
Solo Dining
Paris — 7th Arrondissement
L'Arpège
Vegetable-Forward French$$$$
Alain Passard's three-star argument that vegetables deserve more reverence than protein. Thirty years of three Michelin stars, and still the most radical table in France.
Le Jules Verne Eiffel Tower Paris restaurant view
4
Proposal
Paris — 7th Arrondissement
Le Jules Verne
Contemporary French$$$$
Two Michelin stars on the Eiffel Tower's second floor. The most cinematically perfect setting in the world for the question she'll say yes to.
Plénitude Cheval Blanc Paris fine dining
5
Proposal
Paris — 1st Arrondissement
Plénitude
Contemporary French$$$$
Arnaud Donckele's three-star salon inside Cheval Blanc. Where the sauce is the philosophy, the Seine is the backdrop, and perfection is quietly non-negotiable.
Kei restaurant Paris French Japanese fusion
6
Impress Clients
Paris — 1st Arrondissement
Kei
French-Japanese$$$$
The first Japanese chef in history to earn three Michelin stars in France. An argument conducted entirely in flavour — and one that is impossible to refute.
Septime Paris restaurant Bastille bistronomic
7
First Date
Paris — 11th Arrondissement
Septime
Bistronomic French$$$
The most coveted reservation in Paris — and the most democratic. Bertrand Grébaut's World's 50 Best table where natural wine, seasonal genius, and zero pretension conspire to make every date feel like a discovery.
Alléno Paris Pavillon Ledoyen fine dining
8
Impress Clients
Paris — 8th Arrondissement
Alléno Paris
Contemporary French$$$$
Yannick Alléno's three-star laboratory at Pavillon Ledoyen. Modern French cuisine at its most technically ferocious, in the most storied address on the Champs-Élysées.
Épicure Le Bristol Paris luxury dining room
9
Impress Clients
Paris — 8th Arrondissement
Épicure
Contemporary French$$$$
Three stars in Le Bristol's garden salon — the most romantic room in the Triangle d'Or, presided over by Éric Fréchon, the chef whose macaroni stuffed with truffle and black truffle is Paris's most indelible single bite.
La Tour d'Argent Paris rooftop view Notre-Dame
10
Birthday
Paris — 5th Arrondissement
La Tour d'Argent
Classic French$$$$
Dining since 1582, with a view of Notre-Dame and 300,000 bottles in the cellar. The pressed duck — numbered since the 1890s — is France's most theatrical main course.
Pierre Gagnaire Paris avant-garde dining
11
Impress Clients
Paris — 8th Arrondissement
Pierre Gagnaire
Avant-Garde French$$$$
Three stars and a lifetime of wild invention. No other chef at this level takes risks like Gagnaire — and no other chef at this level lands them with such consistent brilliance.
Le Gabriel La Réserve Paris luxury dining
12
Proposal
Paris — 8th Arrondissement
Le Gabriel
Contemporary French$$$$
Three stars inside La Réserve Paris — Napoleon III splendour harnessed by chef Jérôme Banctel's cosmopolitan intelligence. The most opulent dining room currently operating in France.
Taillevent Paris classic French restaurant dining room
13
Close a Deal
Paris — 8th Arrondissement
Taillevent
Classic French$$$$
Open since 1946 and still holding two Michelin stars without vanity or trend. The Parisian institution where boards vote to celebrate, executives bring clients, and the wine cellar is worth the trip alone.
L'Abysse Paris omakase Japanese Pavillon Ledoyen
14
Solo Dining
Paris — 8th Arrondissement
L'Abysse
Japanese Omakase$$$$
Two Michelin stars and a counter at Pavillon Ledoyen where Japanese precision meets French service. The finest omakase experience in Europe that isn't in Tokyo.
Verjus Paris Palais Royal intimate dining
15
First Date
Paris — 1st Arrondissement
Verjus
Contemporary French-American$$$
Tucked behind the Palais-Royal, Braden Perkins's intimate tasting counter changes its menu almost daily. The kind of first date restaurant that creates a story worth telling for years.
Le Grand Véfour Paris historic dining room Palais-Royal
16
Birthday
Paris — 1st Arrondissement
Le Grand Véfour
Classic French$$$$
The most beautiful dining room in Paris — a protected monument unchanged since Napoleon dined here. One Michelin star, two centuries of unbroken service, and a birthday setting that makes every other restaurant feel recent.
Le Pré Catelan Paris Bois de Boulogne three star
17
Proposal
Paris — Bois de Boulogne
Le Pré Catelan
Contemporary French$$$$
Three Michelin stars inside a Second Empire pavilion in the Bois de Boulogne. Frédéric Anton's most refined work in a setting so removed from Paris's noise it feels like a private world.
Le Train Bleu Paris Gare de Lyon Belle Époque brasserie
18
Birthday
Paris — 12th Arrondissement
Le Train Bleu
Classic French Brasserie$$$
A protected historic monument inside Gare de Lyon — gold leaf ceilings, painted murals, and chandeliers that have greeted departing Parisians since 1901. The birthday dinner that makes you feel like a character in a novel.
Frenchie Paris restaurant rue du Nil contemporary
19
First Date
Paris — 2nd Arrondissement
Frenchie
Contemporary French$$$
Gregory Marchand's one-star table that single-handedly revived the Montorgueil neighbourhood. The dinner that impresses without telegraphing effort — a first date that reveals taste without shouting.
L'Ami Jean Paris 7th bistro Stéphane Jégo
20
Team Dinner
Paris — 7th Arrondissement
L'Ami Jean
Basque French Bistro$$
The loudest, most generous, most alive bistro in Paris. Stéphane Jégo's Basque kitchen feeds tables like they're family, and the rice pudding dessert is a religious experience.
Allard Paris bistro Saint-Germain-des-Prés Alain Ducasse
21
Close a Deal
Paris — 6th Arrondissement
Allard
Classic French Bistro$$$
Alain Ducasse's preservation of Paris's last authentic grand bistro. Duck confit, sole meunière, and a private dining room for 35 that has heard more confidential agreements than any conference room in Saint-Germain.
Brasserie Bofinger Paris Bastille Art Nouveau
22
Team Dinner
Paris — 4th Arrondissement
Brasserie Bofinger
Alsatian Brasserie$$
Paris's oldest brasserie — open since 1864 under a magnificent Art Nouveau glass dome. Sauerkraut, shellfish, and Alsatian riesling for a group that wants ceremony without stratospheric prices.
Le Bon Georges Paris bistro South Pigalle
23
First Date
Paris — 9th Arrondissement
Le Bon Georges
Classic French Bistro$$
The perfectly calibrated neighbourhood bistro that SoPi residents guard like a secret. Classic dishes with modern precision, a wine list of rare natural bottles, and no need to dress up or perform.
Fouquet's Paris Champs-Élysées historic brasserie
24
Birthday
Paris — 8th Arrondissement
Fouquet's
French Brasserie$$$
Glamour, theatre, and steak tartare since 1899. The Champs-Élysées institution whose terrace has watched a century of cinema stars, heads of state, and Parisian high society. A birthday here announces your arrival.
Le Comptoir du Relais Paris Odéon bistro Camdeborde
25
Solo Dining
Paris — 6th Arrondissement
Le Comptoir du Relais
Gastro Bistro$$
Yves Camdeborde's carrefour de l'Odéon counter that created the bistronomie movement. Lunch for solo travellers is Paris's greatest democratic luxury — counter seat, no reservation, extraordinary cooking.

Best for First Date in Paris

All First Date →

Paris rewards first dates more generously than any city on earth. Verjus, tucked behind the Palais-Royal, changes its menu almost daily — a tasting counter that creates a story without trying. Septime on rue de Charonne requires three weeks of planning and rewards it with the most exciting food in the Bastille. For something less strategic and more cinematic, Le Train Bleu at Gare de Lyon delivers Belle Époque grandeur and a setting that simply cannot fail.

Verjus
1st · Contemporary French · $$$
Septime
11th · Bistronomic · $$$
Le Train Bleu
12th · Classic Brasserie · $$$

Best for Close a Deal in Paris

All Close a Deal →

Paris's power dining culture is among the most ritualised on earth. Guy Savoy at the Monnaie de Paris positions every dinner as a monument to French excellence — the perfect frame for a negotiation that needs to feel historic. Taillevent has closed deals across decades with its impeccable discretion and a wine cellar that signals seriousness. For private dining without the palace price, Allard's 40-seat room in Saint-Germain is where Paris's dealmakers meet out of sight.

Guy Savoy
6th · Haute Cuisine · $$$$
Taillevent
8th · Classic French · $$$$
Allard
6th · Classic Bistro · $$$

Best for Proposal in Paris

All Proposal →

No city in the world has more proposal-perfect restaurants per square kilometre than Paris. Le Jules Verne is the most cinematically obvious choice — two Michelin stars inside the Eiffel Tower, with a private elevator and a view that removes all other arguments. Plénitude inside Cheval Blanc offers a more interior kind of romance: the Seine below, the Pont Neuf ahead, and food so beautiful it constitutes its own declaration. Le Pré Catelan in the Bois de Boulogne removes you from the city entirely — the Second Empire pavilion is Paris's most intensely private setting.

Le Jules Verne
7th · Contemporary French · $$$$
Plénitude
1st · Contemporary French · $$$$
Le Pré Catelan
Bois de Boulogne · French · $$$$

Best for Solo Dining in Paris

All Solo Dining →

Paris is the world's greatest city for eating alone with intention. L'Abysse at Pavillon Ledoyen offers an omakase counter of such refinement that solitude becomes a gift — the chef's work demands your full attention. L'Arpège at lunch is the ultimate solo Parisian pilgrimage: a single table at Alain Passard's counter, watching a three-star kitchen in motion. Le Comptoir du Relais at carrefour de l'Odéon requires no reservation at lunch — counter only, extraordinary cooking, and the pleasant anonymity of a neighbourhood that has no interest in your status.

L'Abysse
8th · Japanese Omakase · $$$$
L'Arpège
7th · Vegetable French · $$$$
Le Comptoir du Relais
6th · Gastro Bistro · $$

The Paris Dining Guide

Paris is not merely the world's most celebrated dining city. It is the city that invented the concept. The restaurant — a public establishment serving meals at individual tables, with menus, service, and a bill — was born in Paris in the 1760s. Everything that followed, everywhere on earth, is a descendant of that moment. To eat seriously in Paris is to participate in a tradition of almost unbroken refinement, and to do so with the knowledge that the city has never once stopped caring.

The current state of Parisian gastronomy is, by the evidence of the 2026 Michelin Guide, the most competitive in the city's modern history. One hundred and twenty-seven starred restaurants now operate within the périphérique. Ten carry three stars — a concentration of culinary excellence unmatched by any city on earth, including Tokyo. The top echelon operates at a level of ambition and technical accomplishment that justifies every superlative applied to it: Plénitude at Cheval Blanc, Épicure at Le Bristol, Le Gabriel at La Réserve, Guy Savoy at the Monnaie de Paris, Arpège on rue de Varenne — these are not merely restaurants. They are arguments about what cooking can be.

The geography of Parisian dining has its own logic. The 8th arrondissement — the Triangle d'Or — remains the centre of institutional excellence: Le Cinq at the George V, Taillevent on rue Lamennais, Pierre Gagnaire on rue Balzac, Épicure at the Bristol, the Pavillon Ledoyen with Alléno Paris and L'Abysse operating within the same building. This is where power eats, where clients are impressed, where the city's most enduring culinary institutions have survived regime changes, recessions, and fashion with their ambitions intact.

The Left Bank offers a different grammar. The 7th arrondissement — Arpège on rue de Varenne, Le Jules Verne above the Trocadéro skyline, L'Ami Jean on rue Malar — is quieter, more residential, more intimate. The 6th gives you Saint-Germain-des-Prés: Allard, Le Comptoir du Relais, the ghosts of Sartre and de Beauvoir arguing over côte de veau. The 11th, once working-class, is now the home of Paris's most exciting contemporary cooking: Septime on rue de Charonne changed European dining when it opened in 2011 and has held that position every year since.

What Paris rewards above all other cities is preparation. The city does not improvise gracefully. The table at Septime that requires three weeks of deliberate action, the counter at L'Abysse that books out the day it opens, the window table at Le Jules Verne that needs ninety days' notice — these are not inconveniences. They are the price of admission to the world's most consequential dining scene, and they are worth every effort.

Reservations
Septime opens its booking diary online precisely at 10am three weeks ahead — be ready at that moment or accept defeat gracefully. Le Jules Verne takes reservations ninety days in advance; sunset tables disappear on the first day. The major three-star tables — Le Cinq, Guy Savoy, Plénitude, Épicure — are available but require weeks of advance planning and often work through hotel concierges. L'Arpège is open Monday to Friday only; dinner is harder than lunch. For spontaneous Paris dining, the bistros of the 11th and 6th remain your best option: Allard, L'Ami Jean, and Le Bon Georges accept walk-ins with varying probability.
Dress Code & Tipping
Paris's three-star restaurants expect smart dress without exception. Le Cinq and Guy Savoy are jacket environments for men; check restaurant websites for current guidance before arrival. The upper-tier brasseries — Le Train Bleu, Fouquet's, La Tour d'Argent — expect smart casual. Neighbourhood bistros are relaxed. Service compris — service included — is standard across Paris; the 15% service charge is built into the bill. An additional tip of €5–€20 for exceptional service is welcome but never obligatory. Unlike the US, Paris waiters are professionals with career salaries; gratitude, not guilt, should govern your decision.

Frequently Asked

Dining in Paris

How many restaurants does Restaurants for Kings rank in Paris?

Our Paris editorial covers the city's top tier — Michelin-starred rooms, flagship chef-driven restaurants, iconic institutions, and the best new openings. Every restaurant listed has been personally reviewed by a named editor and scored on Food, Ambience, and Value.

How do I get a reservation at a top Paris restaurant?

For the highest-demand rooms in Paris, book 4-8 weeks in advance via OpenTable, Resy, Tock, or SevenRooms depending on the restaurant. For flagship tasting menus, reservations often open on the 1st of the month for the following month — set a calendar alert. Concierge services at Amex Centurion, Quintessentially, and top hotels can pull tables at shorter notice for $200-500.

What's the best restaurant in Paris for closing a business deal?

Our Paris editors rank deal-closing restaurants on the same criteria site-wide: acoustic privacy, power-table visibility, service pace, and discreet check handling. See our 'Best for Closing a Deal' section above for the current top picks in the city, with editorial scores and reservation difficulty ratings.

Which Paris restaurant is best for a first date?

First-date restaurants in Paris are scored on conversation-friendly acoustics, impression without intimidation, and menu flexibility. The city's top first-date rooms are listed in our 'Best for First Date' section — all have banquette or semi-private seating, under-75-dB acoustics, and service that retreats after ordering.

How expensive is fine dining in Paris?

Top-tier restaurants in Paris run $200-500 per person for a la carte at a flagship room; $350-800 per person for tasting menus at Michelin-starred or chef's-counter rooms. We score every restaurant on Value separately from Food and Ambience — a $680 tasting can score 10/10 on Value if the experience delivers at that price.

Does Restaurants for Kings take money from Paris restaurants to rank them?

No. We do not accept payment, PR hospitality, or sponsorships that influence rankings. Every restaurant in our Paris directory was visited anonymously and reviewed on the editor's own tab where possible. Any hospitality extended is disclosed on the individual restaurant page. Sponsored content is labelled separately and sits outside the editorial ranking grid.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best restaurant in Paris?
For 2026, our editorial pick is Kei. Editorial runners-up: Septime, Alléno Paris, Épicure, La Tour d'Argent.
Where should I eat in Paris tonight?
For a same-night booking, the casual and mid-tier picks above are reachable. La Tour d'Argent typically takes walk-ins; Épicure accepts day-of reservations. The splurge picks (Kei, Septime) need 3–5 weeks notice.
How much does dinner cost in Paris?
At the splurge picks (Kei, Septime), expect $200–$400 per person without wine — full tasting menus. Mid-tier rooms run $80–$140. Casual but excellent neighborhood spots in Paris sit at $40–$70.
What is the most expensive restaurant in Paris?
Kei sits at the top of the Paris dining list — full tasting menu with wine pairings runs $400+ per person. Other splurge-tier rooms (Septime, Alléno Paris) cluster at $250–$350.
Which Paris restaurants have Michelin stars?
The top of our Paris list is anchored by Michelin-starred and globally-recognized rooms. Kei, Septime and Alléno Paris are the rooms most frequently cited in international guides.
Do I need a reservation for restaurants in Paris?
For the splurge and mid-tier picks: yes, always. Splurge tier needs 3–6 weeks notice; mid-tier 1–2 weeks. Casual rooms in Paris take walk-ins early evening (5:30–6:30pm) and last-minute cancellations open up regularly through the booking apps.
What's the best neighborhood for restaurants in Paris?
Paris's strongest dining clusters around the central business district and the high-end residential quarters — that's where the splurge picks (Kei, Septime) sit. Casual options spread further; bookmark this guide and use the city map view above.
Where do locals eat in Paris?
The casual and mid-tier picks above are local-frequented — fewer tourists, better pricing, and the rooms where Paris-based diners have weekly tables. The splurge picks attract a mix of locals (anniversary, business) and international visitors.

Editorial Guides Paris

In-depth editorial guides from the journal.

Editorial
Best Japanese Restaurants in Paris 2026
Best Japanese restaurants in Paris 2026: from two-Michelin-star kaiseki to the city's finest omakase counters. The definitive guide for solo…
Editorial
Best Restaurants in Le Marais Paris
The best restaurants in this iconic neighbourhood — ranked by occasion, with editorial verdicts, scores, and reservation tips for 2026.'Ambr…
Editorial
Best Saint-Germain Restaurants Paris
Best restaurants in Saint-Germain-des-Prés Paris 2026 — three-Michelin-star institutions, historic brasseries, and intimate bistros. The ess…

Read More about Paris

Editorial guides from the journal — neighbourhoods, cuisines, occasions.

Neighbourhood Guides

Neighbourhood Guides
Best Restaurants in Le Marais Paris
The best restaurants in this iconic neighbourhood — ranked by occasion, with editorial verdicts, scores, and reservation tips for 2026.'Ambr
Neighbourhood Guides
Best Restaurants in Montmartre Paris 2026 — Not a Tourist Trap in Sight
Explore Montmartre's finest restaurants: 6 essential dining destinations from the secretive Hôtel Particulier to historic brasseries, perfec
Neighbourhood Guides
Best Restaurants in the 8th Arrondissement: Paris Dining Guide 2026
The definitive guide to the best restaurants in Paris's 8th Arrondissement. Six exceptional establishments spanning three Michelin stars to
Neighbourhood Guides
Best Saint-Germain Restaurants Paris
Best restaurants in Saint-Germain-des-Prés Paris 2026 — three-Michelin-star institutions, historic brasseries, and intimate bistros. The ess
Neighbourhood Guides
Latin Quarter Restaurants Paris 2026
Latin quarter restaurants Paris: 5 handpicked tables for a first date, from La Tour d'Argent's Notre-Dame views to intimate candlelit bistro

By Cuisine

By Cuisine
Best French Restaurants in Paris 2026
Best traditional French restaurants in Paris ranked for 2026. Ten three-Michelin-star kitchens, the great bistros, and every occasion from c
By Cuisine
Best Japanese Restaurants in Paris 2026
Best Japanese restaurants in Paris 2026: from two-Michelin-star kaiseki to the city's finest omakase counters. The definitive guide for solo

By Occasion

By Occasion
Best Anniversary Dinner Restaurants in Paris 2026 — Unforgettable & Worth It
The best anniversary dinner restaurants in Paris for 2026. Five romantic, special-occasion picks with what to order, how to book, and what t
By Occasion
Best Birthday Dinner Restaurants Paris 2026
Best birthday dinner restaurants in Paris 2026: three-star palatial dining, intimate bistros and celebratory tables that match the city's am
By Occasion
Best Business Dinner Restaurants in Paris 2026
Best business dinner restaurants in Paris 2026: 7 power dining tables where deals are closed, clients are impressed, and the food matches th
By Occasion
Best Corporate Dinner Restaurants in Paris 2026 — Close Deals Over Exceptional Food
The best corporate dinner restaurants in Paris for 2026. Private dining, sommelier service, and the rooms where deals actually close.
By Occasion
Best Date Night Restaurants in Paris 2026 — Romantic Picks for Every Budget
The best date night restaurants in Paris for 2026. Five picks across price tiers, with what to order and how to book — curated, honest, no t
By Occasion
Best First Date Restaurants in Paris
Best first date restaurants in Paris for 2026. Seven tables ranked by intimacy, atmosphere, and the ability to sustain a conversation that m
By Occasion
Best Proposal Restaurants in Paris 2026
Best proposal restaurants in Paris: 7 Michelin-starred and historic venues. Private tables, views, perfect service. Complete guide 2026.
By Occasion
Best Restaurants to Impress Clients Paris 2026
Best restaurants to impress clients in Paris 2026: 7 Michelin-starred power tables from Le Cinq to Guy Savoy. Paris finest client entertainm
By Occasion
Best Solo Dining Restaurants in Paris 2026
Best solo dining restaurants in Paris 2026. Seven zinc bars, chef counters & market-driven kitchens where eating alone is a Parisian art
By Occasion
Best Team Dinner Restaurants in Paris 2026
Top team dinner restaurants in Paris — sharing menus, long tables, private rooms, and venues that turn colleagues into collaborators.
By Occasion
Most Romantic Restaurants in Paris 2026 — For the Night That Matters
The most romantic restaurants in Paris for 2026. Five picks for the night that matters — what to order, how to book, and which booth to ask

Overall City Guides

Overall City Guides
Best Restaurants in Paris 2026
Best restaurants in Paris 2026: the complete guide to three-star dining, neighbourhood bistros and every occasion from proposal to power din
LE GRAND RESTAURANT
26
Close a Deal
Paris
LE GRAND RESTAURANT
Contemporary French$$$$
Jean-François Piège's one-starred personal statement on the Faubourg Saint-Honoré — the most chef-driven of the 8th arrondissement's starred kitchens, where the tasting menu changes daily and the service operates with the warmth that Piège's personality communicates directly.
LASSERRE
27
Close a Deal
Paris
LASSERRE
Classic French$$$$
The 8th arrondissement's most theatrical dining room — Lasserre's retractable roof, open to the Paris sky on warm evenings, and its classic French kitchen have been producing the city's most romantically engineered dinners since 1942.
Le Moulin de la Galette
28
Close a Deal
Paris
Le Moulin de la Galette
$$$
Le Moulin de la Galette sits in the centre of Paris's evolving dining map. The room reads as the city's response to a category that Paris has long left to other capitals — fine, considered cooking that respects ingredient and technique without performing for the room. The result …
SUBSTANCE
29
Close a Deal
Paris
SUBSTANCE
Contemporary French$$$$
One Michelin star steps from the Trocadéro for Matthias Marc's kitchen — the most technically evolved of the 16th arrondissement's contemporary French rooms, where fermentation and natural wine have been integrated into a haute cuisine format without the precariousness that the c…
VIRTUS
30
Close a Deal
Paris
VIRTUS
Contemporary French$$$
One Michelin star in the 12th arrondissement for the Argentinian chef duo whose French kitchen represents Paris's most geographically improbable culinary synthesis — Argentine sensibility applied to French classical technique, producing food that is simultaneously more precise an…
YAM'TCHA
31
Close a Deal
Paris
YAM'TCHA
French-Chinese$$$
One Michelin star for the French-Chinese synthesis that Paris's food community considers its most intellectually rigorous — Chef Adeline Grattard pairs each course with a specific Chinese tea whose aromatic chemistry she has spent years mapping against the food's flavour architec…
AU PIED DE COCHON
32
Close a Deal
Paris
AU PIED DE COCHON
Classic French / Brasserie$$$
The Les Halles brasserie that has been open 24 hours since 1947 — the post-theatre supper, the 3am French onion soup, the oysters at dawn that the Paris night life culture has been relying upon since the market was still delivering produce to this exact address.
AUX LYONNAIS
33
Close a Deal
Paris
AUX LYONNAIS
Lyonnais Bouchon$$$
Alain Ducasse's restoration of the Lyonnais bouchon in Paris — one Michelin star for the quenelles, the gratins, and the salade lyonnaise served in an Art Nouveau room that communicates what the Lyon kitchen means when it has been taken to Paris's highest culinary level.
CAFÉ DE LA PAIX
34
Close a Deal
Paris
CAFÉ DE LA PAIX
Classic French$$$
The Opéra grand café whose terrace looks directly onto Charles Garnier's baroque masterpiece — a room where Napoleon III's architect designed both the building and the café, making it the most architecturally coherent expression of Second Empire Paris available at a café table.
CHEZ OMAR
35
Close a Deal
Paris
CHEZ OMAR
Moroccan / North African$$
The Rue de Bretagne Moroccan restaurant whose couscous has been feeding the Marais's creative community since 1979 — where the fashion designers, the gallerists, and the models queue alongside the neighbourhood's long-term residents for the best couscous in Paris.
COMICE
36
Close a Deal
Paris
COMICE
Contemporary French$$$
One Michelin star in the 16th for the Canadian-French couple's restaurant whose natural wine cellar and contemporary French cooking represent the most romantically complete dining experience in the Passy neighbourhood — and whose foie gras and natural wine pairing has become Pari…
LAPÉROUSE
37
Close a Deal
Paris
LAPÉROUSE
Classic French$$$$
One Michelin star for the Seine-side restaurant that has been conducting the most private dinners in Paris since 1766 — the private dining rooms whose walls are scratched with diamond rings by courtesans verifying their gifts, where the city's most discreet entertaining has occur…
MAISON DE LA TRUFFE
38
Close a Deal
Paris
MAISON DE LA TRUFFE
French / Truffle-Focused$$$$
The Place de la Madeleine truffle house that has been the city's most serious source for black and white truffles since 1932 — the restaurant, the épicerie, and the direct sourcing from Périgord and Alba that makes the Maison the reference point for anyone who wants to understand…
POLIDOR
39
Close a Deal
Paris
POLIDOR
Classic French Bistro$
Open since 1845 — Verlaine's and Rimbaud's neighbourhood bistro, Joyce's Paris canteen, the room where French literary history was conducted on a budget — still serving the plat du jour at prices that the 19th century's impoverished writers would have recognised.
LE RELAIS DE L'ENTRECÔTE
40
Close a Deal
Paris
LE RELAIS DE L'ENTRECÔTE
Steak-Frites$$
The Paris restaurant that serves only one dish — steak-frites with the secret sauce — to a queue that stretches down the Rue Saint-Benoît regardless of the day or season, and does it with the conviction that one dish perfected is more interesting than any menu.