Head-to-Head · Paris
Alléno Paris vs L'Arpège
Two Paris three-stars: Alléno for technical fireworks at Ledoyen, Passard for vegetables at their peak. Book L'Arpège for a garden lunch.
The Verdict
Alléno Paris is the technician's three-star. Yannick Alléno runs the kitchen at Pavillon Ledoyen on the principle that the sauce carries the plate, and his extraction method gives those sauces a clarity that defines modern French cooking. The dining room sits in the gardens off the Champs-Élysées at 8 avenue Dutuit, the cellar is vast, and the contemporary French tasting menu reaches into the high hundreds of euros. It scores a 10 for food and a 9 for the room, with value at 6 because the ceiling on price is real.
L'Arpège is the gardener's three-star. Alain Passard removed red meat from the menu in 2001 and rebuilt the restaurant around vegetables from his three farms, and he has held three stars across three decades. The dishes that made his name are still here: the vegetable couscous, the hot-cold egg, the tarts cut to order. The room on rue de Varenne seats about twenty-five, Passard works the pass himself, and the roughly 185-euro lunch is the most reasonable way into a kitchen of this rank. It scores 9 for food and 7 for value.
Scores, Side by Side
| Score | Alléno Paris | L'Arpège |
|---|---|---|
| Food | 10 / 10 | 9 / 10 |
| Atmosphere | 9 / 10 | 8 / 10 |
| Value | 6 / 10 | 7 / 10 |
Which One for Which Occasion
| Occasion | Editorial Pick |
|---|---|
| Milestone dinner | Alléno ParisThe full tasting menu and the grand Ledoyen room make the most ceremonial Paris three-star evening. |
| Value lunch | L'ArpègeThe 185-euro lunch is the cheapest serious route into a Paris three-star kitchen. |
| Solo dining | L'ArpègeA smaller room and Passard working the line reward a single diner paying attention. |
| Wine-led night | Alléno ParisThe Pavillon Ledoyen cellar is one of the deepest in the city for a pairing built course by course. |
| Vegetable cooking | L'ArpègeNo kitchen in Paris treats vegetables with more authority, from the couscous to the seasonal tarts. |
Price Comparison
Both restaurants sit at the top of the Paris price ladder. Alléno Paris is the heavier bill, with tasting menus in the high hundreds of euros and a cellar that pushes the total higher still. L'Arpège matches it at dinner but opens a real door at lunch near 185 euros, which buys several courses of Passard's vegetable cooking for a fraction of the evening rate. On pure value the lunch at L'Arpège wins; on grandeur and depth of cellar, Alléno earns its tier. Weigh both against the wider field in our best French restaurants guide.
How to Book
Alléno Paris takes reservations several weeks out through its own site and platform, and weekends at Pavillon Ledoyen fill first because the dining room is the larger of the two. L'Arpège books by phone and online, and the lunch service is easier to land than dinner. Plan either a month ahead for a Saturday. Start the wider map from the Paris dining guide, and read the Alléno Paris review and the L'Arpège review in full before you choose.
For occasion fit beyond this pairing, weigh them against our guides to the best anniversary restaurants, rooms for solo dining and tables to impress clients. For more Paris match-ups see Alléno Paris vs Guy Savoy and Alléno Paris vs Kei, and browse the full set on the compare index.