Head-to-Head · London
Alain Ducasse vs Ikoyi
Two London peaks: Ducasse for three-star French ceremony at The Dorchester, Ikoyi for two-star spice-driven invention on the Strand — book Ducasse for the formal occasion.
The Verdict
Alain Ducasse at The Dorchester is the classical one. Jean-Philippe Blondet cooks the Ducasse canon in a formal Park Lane dining room that holds three Michelin stars in 2026, threading the master's naturalite philosophy through outstanding produce, intense and fresh at once. The room is grand, the service is full French, and it scores a 10 for food and a 10 for the room, with value at 7 because the ceremony and the address are part of the bill.
Ikoyi is the radical one. Founder Jeremy Chan, who opened with James Lowe alumnus roots in 2017 and relocated to 180 Strand, sends a surprise tasting that runs British produce through a pantry of West African and global spices, scotch bonnet, grains of selim, smoked jollof rice, with no obvious peer in the city. It holds two Michelin stars in 2026, won its second in 2022, and scores a 10 for food and an 8 for the room, with value at 7 for a single high-tariff tasting.
Scores, Side by Side
| Score | Alain Ducasse | Ikoyi |
|---|---|---|
| Food | 10 / 10 | 10 / 10 |
| Atmosphere | 10 / 10 | 8 / 10 |
| Value | 7 / 10 | 7 / 10 |
Which One for Which Occasion
| Occasion | Editorial Pick |
|---|---|
| Formal milestone | Alain DucasseA three-star Park Lane dining room with full French service for an anniversary or a landmark birthday. |
| Impress a client | Alain DucasseThe Dorchester address and the classical canon read as serious across any table. |
| Adventurous diner | IkoyiJeremy Chan's spice-driven surprise tasting is the most original meal of the two by a distance. |
| Best value entry | Alain DucasseIts lunch menu from around 100 pounds is the cheaper way into a three-star room. |
| Modern celebration | IkoyiThe sleek Strand space and bold flavours suit a younger, design-led night out. |
Price Comparison
Both sit at the top of London's tariff. Ikoyi serves a single dinner tasting at about 380 pounds a head, with a lunch menu near 170 pounds, all built around the surprise format. Alain Ducasse at The Dorchester opens softer, a lunch menu from around 100 pounds, then climbs through dinner tastings into the high-200s and beyond once wine is added. Lunch is the value route at both rooms; for the full experience they land in a similar bracket. Weigh them against the wider field in our best French restaurants worldwide guide.
How to Book
Ikoyi is the tighter table: a tasting-only room with a cult following, booked through its own site and SevenRooms, where prime weekend seats clear weeks ahead. Alain Ducasse at The Dorchester carries more covers as a grand-hotel dining room, so a midweek lunch or early dinner is often gettable inside two weeks, with weekends wanting three to four. Plan either around the weekend well in advance, and start the wider map from the London dining guide.
For occasion fit beyond this pairing, weigh them against our guides to the best rooms to impress clients and the best first-date restaurants. For more London match-ups see The River Cafe vs Trullo and Aqua Shard vs Aulis, and browse the full set on the compare index.