Head-to-Head · London

Alain Ducasse at The Dorchester vs Restaurant Gordon Ramsay

Two London three-stars: Ducasse for grand French ceremony on Park Lane, Gordon Ramsay for the most precise cooking in Chelsea. Book the £180 Ramsay lunch first.

Alain Ducasse at The Dorchester
London · French Haute Cuisine · 3 Michelin stars · Food 10 / Room 9 / Value 6
Alain Ducasse at The Dorchester full review →
vs
Restaurant Gordon Ramsay
London · Modern French · 3 Michelin stars · Food 9 / Room 9 / Value 7
Restaurant Gordon Ramsay full review →

The Verdict

Alain Ducasse at The Dorchester is the grand-occasion three-star. Chef Patron Jean-Philippe Blondet runs the kitchen inside The Dorchester on Park Lane, cooking contemporary French haute cuisine that the guide has rated at three stars since 2010. The room was rebuilt in January 2020 around a shimmering fibre-optic "Lumière" table, the cellar is one of the deepest in Mayfair, and the tasting menus reach into the high two hundreds of pounds. It scores a 10 for food and a 9 for the room, with value at 6 because the ceiling on price is real.

Restaurant Gordon Ramsay is the classicist's three-star. The Chelsea flagship on Royal Hospital Road opened in 1998 and has held three Michelin stars since 2001, the longest unbroken run in the United Kingdom. Chef de Cuisine Kim Ratcharoen cooks precise French technique under Ramsay's name, and the signatures endure: the ravioli of lobster, langoustine and salmon, and the pressed foie gras. The room seats only around forty-five, service is famously drilled, and the lunch menu near 180 pounds is the most reasonable way into a kitchen of this rank. It scores 9 for food and 7 for value.

Scores, Side by Side

ScoreAlain Ducasse at The DorchesterRestaurant Gordon Ramsay
Food10 / 109 / 10
Atmosphere9 / 109 / 10
Value6 / 107 / 10

Which One for Which Occasion

OccasionEditorial Pick
Milestone dinnerAlain Ducasse at The DorchesterThe Lumiere table and the grand Park Lane room make the most ceremonial three-star evening in Mayfair.
Value lunchRestaurant Gordon RamsayThe lunch menu near 180 pounds is the cheapest serious route into a London three-star kitchen.
Impress a clientRestaurant Gordon RamsayDrilled, near-silent service and a 25-year three-star record read as a safe, confident choice.
Wine-led nightAlain Ducasse at The DorchesterThe Mayfair cellar is built for a pairing assembled course by course around the tasting menu.
Classical FrenchRestaurant Gordon RamsayRatcharoen's kitchen keeps the founding signatures, from the lobster ravioli to the pressed foie gras.

Price Comparison

Both restaurants sit at the top of London's price ladder. Alain Ducasse at The Dorchester is the heavier bill, with tasting menus around 250 to 285 pounds before wine and a cellar that pushes the total higher still. Restaurant Gordon Ramsay matches it at dinner with a Menu Prestige near 260 pounds, but opens a genuine door at lunch close to 180 pounds, which buys the full classical experience for less than the evening rate. On pure value the Ramsay lunch wins; on grandeur and depth of cellar, Ducasse earns its tier. Weigh both against the wider field in our best French restaurants guide.

How to Book

Alain Ducasse at The Dorchester takes reservations several weeks out through its own site and OpenTable, and weekend dinners fill first; a weekday lunch is the easier seat. Restaurant Gordon Ramsay books through its own platform and sells out fastest for Friday and Saturday dinner, so target a midweek lunch if your dates are flexible. Plan either a month ahead for a Saturday. Start the wider map from the London dining guide, and read the Alain Ducasse at The Dorchester review and the Restaurant Gordon Ramsay review in full before you choose.

For occasion fit beyond this pairing, weigh them against our guides to the best anniversary restaurants and tables to impress clients. For more London match-ups see Gordon Ramsay vs The Ledbury and Helene Darroze vs Restaurant Gordon Ramsay, and browse the full set on the compare index.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which is better, Alain Ducasse at The Dorchester or Restaurant Gordon Ramsay?
Both hold three Michelin stars in the 2026 guide, so the choice is about style, not rank. Alain Ducasse at The Dorchester is the grander room, Jean-Philippe Blondet cooking contemporary French haute cuisine on Park Lane. Restaurant Gordon Ramsay is the tighter, more classical kitchen, with Kim Ratcharoen running a menu that has held three stars since 2001. Choose Ducasse for ceremony and the Mayfair setting, Ramsay for precision and the longest three-star record in Britain.
Is Alain Ducasse at The Dorchester or Gordon Ramsay more expensive?
They land close, both at the four-pound-sign tier. Alain Ducasse at The Dorchester runs tasting menus around 250 to 285 pounds before wine, with a deep cellar that lifts the total. Restaurant Gordon Ramsay charges about 260 pounds for the Menu Prestige at dinner, but opens a real door with a lunch menu near 180 pounds. For the lower entry price into a three-star kitchen, book the Ramsay lunch.
What is Restaurant Gordon Ramsay famous for?
Restaurant Gordon Ramsay opened on Royal Hospital Road in Chelsea in 1998 and has held three Michelin stars since 2001, the longest run of any restaurant in the United Kingdom. The kitchen, led by Kim Ratcharoen, is known for classical French technique and signatures such as the ravioli of lobster, langoustine and salmon, and the pressed foie gras. The room is small and formal, and service is among the most polished in London.
Where are Alain Ducasse at The Dorchester and Restaurant Gordon Ramsay located?
Alain Ducasse at The Dorchester sits inside The Dorchester hotel on Park Lane in Mayfair, overlooking Hyde Park. Restaurant Gordon Ramsay is at 68 Royal Hospital Road in Chelsea, near the Chelsea Physic Garden and the Thames. Both take reservations several weeks out, with weekend dinners the hardest seats; the Ramsay lunch and Ducasse weekday lunch are the easier ways in.