30 Best Restaurants in Provence, France

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We've compiled the best of the best in Provence - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Alexandre

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Double Michelin–starred chef Michel Kayser adds a personal touch both to the elegant modern dining room and library sitting room where you can enjoy a drink before tucking into local specialties and seasonal menus transformed into delicious works of art. Scallops from the Camargue coast served with a luscious ravioli stuffed with celery cream and black garlic; plump white asparagus from the sands of Aigues Mortes with a sabayon and elderberry vinegar; and thyme-infused Aveyron lamb with carrots, turnip, and kumquat may not leave room for tender local strawberries from the Gard infused with kaffir lime served with sage sorbet. The terrace opens to an extensive park with century-old trees, and often apricots and peaches plucked from the overhanging branches will appear on your plate, magically transformed into some delicious creation. Though the restaurant is outside Nîmes proper, it's a favorite Provence pilgrimage spot. 

Brasserie du Corton

$$$ Fodor's choice

Though this brasserie is less formal (and less expensive) than its sister restaurant, three-star La Villa Madie, its dishes are no less tasty. Depending on what's in season and available from local growers and fishermen, the menu in the handsome dining room or on the terrace might include artisanal sausages and braised fennel with squid-ink gnocchi; tandoori monkfish medallions with asparagus, lime crème Chantilly, and Indian spices; or the catch of the day straight from the wood-fired oven. The three-course €60 lunch menu is a steal, and, unlike many area restaurants, this one is open year-round.

Duende

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Duende, that irresistible magnetic force radiated by a performer to transport an audience, is precisely what two Michelin–star chef Nicolas Fontaine (channeling Pierre Gagnaire who designed the menus) conjures in the dining room of the Art Deco–era Hotel L'Imperator. A sophisticated spot to be sure, but it's also expressive of Nîmes's earthy, independent spirit in dishes that pair the exotic with the local: Mediterranean jumbo shrimp à l'Amontillado with local Camargue rice and mango in a passion fruit emulsion or a butter-poached catch of the day with camus artichokes, green olives, and a parsley-anchovy sauce. Lamb comes from the nearby Alpilles, and produce is sourced from the Gard's top organic farmers.

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Jérôme Nutile

$$$$ Fodor's choice

The vaulted dining room provides an excellent backdrop for camera-ready "haute couture" dishes that taste as good as they look and have garnered the chef a Michelin star. For an atmosphere that's a little less formal, the colorful Bistr'AU offers a fine prix-fixe menu; both restaurants are part of the Jérôme Nutile empire—which also includes a hotel and a boutique—that's set on a pretty old farm just outside the city.

L'Agape

$$$ Fodor's choice

At this gastropub hot spot in the heart of the city, chef Julien Gleize applies light, playful, modern touches to dishes that are steeped in French tradition, made with local ingredients, and beautifully presented. Options might include rabbit farci perfumed with wild cèpes and served over a cloud of whipped potatoes and shallot confit or wild salmon caramelized in olive oil with watercress, black sesame seeds, and luscious cream of corn.

La Mère Germaine

$$$$ Fodor's choice

The dazzling new La Mère Germaine restaurant earned a Michelin star within seven months of reopening as part of the hotel of the same name, and now, with two-star Belgian chef Christophe Hardiquest at the helm, it has further refined its locavore offerings. Dishes on the seasonal, five-course menus (€98 at lunch, €118 at dinner) might include celery root and shredded truffle ravioli with fermented shiitake or melt-in-your-mouth quail suprème with almond hummus and artichoke hearts. Settle in for an afternoon or evening, either in the dining room with its charming frescoes or out on the terrace with its sweeping views.

La Table des Amis

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Chef Christophe Bacquié spent a dozen years at the renowned Hotel & Spa de Castellet, where he earned three Michelin stars, before he and his wife, Alexandra, set off on their own in 2022. Now Alexandra presides over their welcoming restaurant and chambres d'hôtes (guest rooms), set amid vineyards and lavender fields, and the chef is just as likely to serve your amuse-bouche as he is to whisk away your plate—and then ask you what you thought. You'll visit the cellar to choose your wine before feasting on a succession of sophisticated dishes made with ingredients like trout from the nearby Sorgue River, vegetables straight from the kitchen garden, or Alpilles lamb raised on garrigue herbs. Though the menu is prix-fixe only, the chef is happy to adapt dishes as needed.

Le Galoubet

$$ Fodor's choice

Tucked away under a canopy of green, this cozy local favorite serves contemporary French fare far above the usual offerings. Relax in a vintage armchair while enjoying appetizers like creamy burrata cheese with perfectly ripe heirloom tomatoes or grilled sardines with arugula and olives and entrées such as succulent guinea fowl or steak smothered in fresh morels with a side of golden frites. Seafood also factors large on the menu, and there are plenty of vegetarian choices, too. The top-notch wine list emphasizes natural, small-producer options.

18 rue du Dr. Fanton, Arles, 13200, France
04–90–93–18–11
Known For
  • Excellent seafood dishes
  • Terrific natural wines
  • Bistro vibe
Restaurant Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon.

Le Saint Estève

$$$$ Fodor's choice

A short drive from Aix over scenic Route Cézanne, this elegant restaurant on the grounds of Les Lodges hotel has an inspired menu—and who wouldn't be inspired with these breathtaking views of Cézanne's beloved mountain? Michelin-starred chef Julien Le Goff doesn't have far to look for the locally sourced products such as wild trompette de la mort mushrooms for a luscious dish of langoustines, mussels, and lemon-infused bouillon or line-caught turbot with French caviar, crispy potatoes, and a Champagne emulsion. Heads turn as virtuosic dishes, one more beautiful than the next, are flourished at the table. Finish with an ethereally light pavlova of Granny Smith apples with a cloud of meringue flecked with gold and paired with a sweet local wine. There is a shady outdoor terrace overlooking olive groves, woods, and the mountain.

Mickaël Féval

$$$ Fodor's choice

This is the kind of place that young cooks dream of working in to learn the ropes, and Féval, quite young himself, has trained many a Michelin-acclaimed chef. After earning his fame in Paris, Féval opened this casual-elegant dining room, tucked away on a typically picturesque Aix side street, with a menu of dishes so masterful and flavorful that the restaurant soon became a local benchmark. Olivia Féval charmingly presides over the dining room to ensure that every moment is impeccable.

Beam! Kitchen

$$

Under the soaring beams of Le Telegraph, a cultural space in Toulon's old central post office, this trendy new restaurant delivers the food and the fun. After a frothy cocktail apéro, you can tuck into dishes like Toulon bay oysters with tomato cubes and crisp nori seaweed flecked with fennel flowers or a rich tartiflette made with reblochon cheese and pancetta. Vegetables also play an important role on the menu, and prices for the tantalizing selection of wines by the glass start at an amazing €5. 

2 rue Hippolyte Duprat, Toulon, 83000, France
06–27–54–27–06
Known For
  • Menu changes daily
  • Imaginative cocktails
  • Vegetarian friendly
Restaurant Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon. No dinner Tues. and Wed. No lunch Sat., Reservations essential

Bèou Bistrot

$

Set in a quiet, leafy courtyard a few steps from the Collection Lambert, this is a good place to enjoy fresh, unfussy, reasonably priced dishes paired with local wines and served by a friendly staff. The pretty dining room's bucolic frescoes set the tone for a cuisine based on whatever's fresh, and you can eat outside in nice weather.

Bibendum

$$$

The more elegant sister to Mathieu Desmaret's locavore mecca, Pollen, this dining room set in a 14th-century cloister attracts a chic, upscale crowd that fits right in with the stunning decor. You'll find all the flair and precision that put this talented chef on the foodie map, but with an Asian touch in dishes like candied beets with miso yogurt and kumquat or roasted pollack with lemongrass, ginger, and lacquered leeks. For a more casual meal of appetizers and wine, with many options available by the glass, head to the wine bar and grab a seat inside or out on the beautiful cobbled terrace; there's also a cocktail bar with a menu of creative libations.

Copains

$ | Cours Julien

We'd love to keep this friendly restaurant a secret, but the chefs craft dishes of such rare subtlety and sophistication (especially at this price range) and the wine list has such a dazzling array of affordable options by the bottle or the glass, that it seems wrong not to share among copains. Though à la carte is possible, opt for the excellent-value prix-fixe menus to try dishes like panfried octopus and soppressata ham, hay-smoked Aubrac steak with parsnip purée and anchovy condiment, or foie gras with trout caviar and passion fruit. For dessert, consider the caramelized puff pastry with fig compote and vanilla cream. Note, too, that the chefs here are happy to accommodate special requests, making this a great place for finicky eaters or those with allergies.

93 rue de Tilsit, Marseille, 13006, France
09–53–60–99–91
Known For
  • Friendly atmosphere
  • Great price-to-quality ratio
  • Chefs who accommodate special requests
Restaurant Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch Tues.–Thurs., Reservations essential

Gaodina

$$

If you have a car and feel like a long, leisurely lunch or dinner in the countryside, this leafy spot 7 km (4 miles) from Aix is a good choice. On nice days, you can sip the local wines under tall plane trees and take in the bucolic views before enjoying fresh local specialties prepared with care and precision. On cooler days, having a meal in the pretty dining room or atrium is almost as pleasant as dining en plein air. Afterward, you're welcome to try your hand at pétanque court over a digestif. If the local wines have proven too tempting, you can stay at the on-site Gaogaïa Hotel.

1075 Chem. du Mont Robert, Aix-en-Provence, 13290, France
06–65–67–53–26
Known For
  • Lovely country setting
  • Reliably fresh
  • Sustainable and eco-friendly
Restaurant Details
Rate Includes: No dinner Sun., Reservations essential

Inari

$$

Franco-Vietnamese chef Céline Pham, a talented veteran of top restaurants in Paris, headlines at this chic bistro set in a 13th-century chapel. This is a food lover's destination, not only for the seasonal dishes with subtle and surprising combinations but also for the excellent-value menus (three courses at lunch, €41; dinner, €55 or €85 with wine pairings).

16 pl. Voltaire, Arles, 13200, France
09–82–27–28–33
Known For
  • Watch the chef work in the open kitchen
  • Chic dining room
  • Spacious terrace
Restaurant Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues. No lunch Wed., Reservations essential

Islo

$$

This bright, elegant-modern dining room, tucked away behind the church in the vieille ville, is a real find for a market-fresh gourmet meal you won't soon forget. Beautifully presented dishes include a parfait of local wild mushrooms and poached egg to start, followed by perfectly poached dorade with roasted citrus-infused fennel or succulent guinea hen with oregano polenta. A superb cheese plate and the best local wines complement an exceptional, well-priced menu, including a prix-fixe dinner for €49.

3 rue Molière, L'Isle-sur-la-Sorgue, 84800, France
04–90–20–18–21
Known For
  • Excellent cheese plates
  • Local wines
  • Good value prix-fixe dinner menu
Restaurant Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch

L'Impé Brasserie

$$$$

The chic little sister brasserie to the Hôtel L'Imperator's gastronomic Duende restaurant is your best bet in the city for a memorable meal that won't break the bank. What's more, Duende's Michelin-starred chef presides over the kitchen, putting out perfectly executed comfort food made with ingredients sourced from the Occitane. You can eat in the relaxed dining room or outdoors under towering plane trees and serenaded by a gurgling fountain The three- and four-course prix-fixe menus cost €38–€68.

La Marmite

$

On nice days, the lively scene in the dining room spills out onto a spacious terrace, though both are lovely places to enjoy something from the short menu of home-style dishes that's made even more irresistible by the fact that nothing on it costs more than €17 (three-course lunch menu, €16). Look for such comfort foods as spelt risotto with veal and cèpes or pork caillettes (meatballs) with chard and pickles; for dessert, consider the melting chocolate mousse cake that's just like the one grandmère makes.

13 rue de l'Agau, Nîmes, 3000, France
04–66–29–98–23
Known For
  • Fresh, home-cooked dishes
  • Great value
  • Central location
Restaurant Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon. No dinner Tues. and Wed., Reservations essential

Le 46

$$$

A 200-plus wine list is a big highlight of this restaurant and bar à vins, yet the main focus is squarely on the food. Beautiful to behold and even better to eat, the Mediterranean-inspired dishes flaunt the bounty of Provence in options like beef carpaccio, sliced razor-thin and served with shaved Parmesan and crispy house frites; a tender zucchini tartlette with chèvre and herbes de Provence; or a salad of heirloom tomatoes, bufala mozzarella, Serrano ham, and basil sorbet. A laid-back atmosphere, friendly staff, spacious outdoor terrace, and excellent prices make this a top choice.

46 rue de la Balance, Avignon, 84000, France
04–90–85–24–83
Known For
  • Loved by the locals
  • Accommodating to different diets and food allergies
  • Lovely outdoor terrace
Restaurant Details
Rate Includes: Closed Wed. and Sun., Reservations essential

Le Chabanais

$

This under-the-radar cave à manger, for people who want to eat and drink well without the fuss of a fancier place, specializes in small plates with big flavors. Try the morteau sausage with lentils and pickled onions, the briny oysters in an herb-infused broth, or the tender pork cheeks with sweet corn cream—all accompanied by a feisty natural wine. Plates are intended to be shared, but that's up to you.

13 rue de l'Étoile, Nîmes, 30000, France
06–64–85–77–03
Known For
  • Big selection of wines for any budget
  • Sidewalk dining
  • Gently priced
Restaurant Details
Rate Includes: No lunch. Closed Sun. and Mon. Sept.–June and weekends July–Aug.

Le Comptoir de la Mère Germaine

$$

This chic new bistro, a hit among locals, was designed with all the care and taste as the nearby Hôtel La Mère Germaine. On cool days, you can relax in its light-filled dining room and watch preparations in the open kitchen; in warm weather, you can sit on the terrace and take in the endless vineyard views. Chef Clément Peine's pleasing dishes rely on seasonal, local products, and the superb wine list offers all the highlights from this wine-centric region.

Le Gibolin

$

This classic wine bar is ever popular for its great location and reliably good French food. The menu features modern riffs on the classics—pigs’ feet (and ears if you're lucky), ricotta-spinach dumplings with mushrooms spiked with pecorino cheese, or asparagus eggs Benedict—and the owners also have a tender spot for vegetarians. The long and well-priced list of biodynamic and organic wines by the bottle or glass makes sampling the local options a cinch.

13 rue des Porcelets, Arles, 13200, France
04–88–65–43–14
Known For
  • Cozy atmosphere
  • Sidewalk terrace
  • Easy walk to sights (five-minute walk from the Fondation Vincent Van Gogh)
Restaurant Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch Tues., Reservations essential

Le Greenstronome

$$$$

Visionary Jean-Luc Rabanel is the culinary success story of the region—he was one of the first organic chefs in France to merit two Michelin stars and is renowned for the fresh, garden-inspired cuisine that he features in this stylish restaurant and cooking school. Menus are prix-fixe only, and the seven-dish tapas-style lunch (€65) and six-course "Emotion" dinner (€145) are unforgettable. To experience all of Rabanel's flourishes, though, try the "Signatures" eight-course extravaganza (€185; wine pairings €45 or €65). A chic, Japanese-style reception area features the five elements—water, fire, earth, air, and spirit—and ensures a harmonious meal.

Maison du la Truffe et du Vin

$$

If wine and truffles are your thing, get thee to this temple of gastronomic bliss in the form of tuber melanosporum or aestivum, depending on the season. Fresh dishes at this lunch-only restaurant exalt the fungi-perfumed bounty of Provence. Start with a velvety pumpkin velouté with truffle butter followed by ravioli stuffed with succulent wild cèpes or a truffle-flecked omelet. Even the cheese course (truffled chèvre chaud) and desserts (caramelized apple with black truffle) are shroomy. Prices are reasonable, with a two-course €27 menu, and two three-course all-truffle menus for €47 and €59. Wines are a big deal here, too: the lovely 17th-century stone building serves as a school for oenephiles, a wine library, a museum, and a boutique where local wines can be purchased. Tastings and courses on wine and truffles are held daily; check website for details.

Racines

$$

Locals appreciate this cozy, contemporary dining room, set in an old stone house a 10-minute walk from the town center, so a table here is one of Uzès's most coveted. After training in top Parisian kitchens, chef Axel Grousset-Bachelard traveled the world tasting as he went, so expect a touch of the exotic in his seasonal dishes made with market-fresh produce (if you're here in winter, order any of the dishes featuring the local black truffles) and meat and fish sourced from the finest Occitane and Provence purveyors. Service is top-notch (and very friendly), and the wine list favors local growers.

1 rue Masbourguet, Uzès, 30700, France
04–66–63–30–59
Known For
  • True culinary genius
  • Fancy without the fuss
  • Good-value prix-fixe menus
Restaurant Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch Tues., Reservations essential

Regards Café

$ | Rive Neuve

Nearby yet removed from the bustle of the Vieux Port and MuCEM's crowded cafés, this luminous, lunch-only dining room in the Musée Regards de Provence has panoramic new port and city views. Chef Thierry Lennon's cooking is worthy of the setting and features dishes like roasted cod with saffron risotto or tender duck breast with honeyed red cabbage. If you've forgotten to reserve, don't worry: there's a cafeteria-style buffet with fresh gourmet sandwiches, salads, and desserts that you can enjoy on one of two terraces. Open until 6, it's a nice place for an afternoon pick-me-up or an apéro before heading off somewhere else for dinner.

Allée Regards de Provence, Marseille, 13002, France
04–96–17–40–45
Known For
  • Perfect spot for a quick coffee, lunch, or apéro
  • Beautiful views of the boats leaving for Corsica and Sicily
  • Reservations needed (unless you want to enjoy the buffet out on the terrace)
Restaurant Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon. No dinner

Restaurant "René 'Sens par Jean-François Bérard"

$$$$

Chef Jean-François has taken the reins from his illustrious father, René (who consults on the menu), but the Mediterranean-inspired Provençal cuisine that put this restaurant on the map is as scrumptious as ever. The menu emphasizes local seafood, and the dishes—perhaps ravioli stuffed with goat cheese, sorrel, and Parmesan in a lemon chicken broth or red mullet wrapped in seaweed, lightly grilled, and topped with peas and rosemary—often use ingredients from the kitchen's own garden.

6 rue Gabriel-Péri, La Cadière-d’Azur, 83740, France
04–94–90–11–43
Known For
  • Good-value set menus
  • Michelin-starred cuisine
  • Lovely setting
Restaurant Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues. mid-Sept.–mid-July., Reservations essential

Sépia & Julis

$$ | St-Charles

In a leafy garden perched at the heights of Marseille, the stylish Sépia eatery and lively Julis terrace bar make the perfect stop on your descent from Sainte-Marie Majeure cathedral or after exploring the chic up-and-coming St-Victor neighborhood. Chef Paul Langlère sources local ingredients to create such masterful dishes as rich cuttlefish stew; poached cod with leeks braised in red wine; and, for dessert, the ethereal mille-feuille filled with pastis cream. At Julis, the local wines, craft beers, and gourmet plates are perfect on summer nights.

2 rue Vauvenargues, Marseille, 13007, France
09–83–82–67–27
Known For
  • Magical small seafood plates to share (or not)
  • Natural and organic wines
  • Spectacular setting with sea and city views
Restaurant Details
Rate Includes: Closed weekends, Reservations essential

Ten

$

This favorite spot in the center of town draws crowds, especially after the morning market, for its excellent French comfort food with a twist. It's a great place to relax—inside the cheerful dining room or outdoors in the garden or under the 16th-century building's beautiful stone vaulting—and feast on rotisserie chicken with crispy frites, fresh oysters on the half shell, jumbo shrimp with mango and avocado, or a charcuterie plate.

10 pl. Dampmartin, Uzès, 30700, France
04–66–22–10–93
Known For
  • Always lively and fun
  • Super welcoming
  • Delicious small plates
Restaurant Details
Rate Includes: Reservations essential