38 Best Restaurants in London, England

Background Illustration for Restaurants

British food hasn't always had the best reputation, but nowhere in the country is that reputation being completely upturned more than in London. The city has zoomed up the global gastro charts, and can now seriously compete with the world’s top culinary heavyweights. The truth is that no other city—barring New York—has the immense range of global cuisines that London has to offer. Standards have rocketed at all price points, and every year it seems like the London restaurant scene is better than ever.

Feel like eating the most-tender Kagoshima Wagyu beef on planet Earth? It can be yours for £150 at CUT at 45 Park Lane. Want to try old English gastronomy from the time of Henry VIII with an ultramodern twist? Ashley Palmer-Watts is your man at Dinner by Heston Blumenthal. Do you only eat Sri Lankan hoppers? No worries, we’ve got just the thing: Hoppers in Soho will give you a taste of the Sri Lankan pancake, for £4.50 a pop. Can’t stand any more snobby culinary nonsense? The low-key British wild game is so good at The Harwood Arms in Fulham that they’ve earned London’s first gastro-pub-based Michelin star.

To appreciate how far London has risen in the food game, just look back to the days of Somerset Maugham, who was once justified in warning, "To eat well in England you should have breakfast three times a day." Change was slow after World War II, when it was understood that the British ate to live, while the French lived to eat. When people thought of British cuisine, fish-and-chips—a greasy grab-and-gulp dish that tasted best wrapped in yesterday's newspaper—first came to mind. Then there was always shepherd's pie, ubiquitously found in smoke-filled pubs, though not made, according to Sweeney Todd, "with real shepherd in it."

These days, standards are miles higher and shepherd’s pie has been largely replaced by the city's unofficial dish, Indian curry. London’s restaurant revolution is built on its extraordinary ethnic diversity, and you’ll find the quality of other global cuisines has grown immeasurably in recent years, with London becoming known for its Chinese, Japanese, Indian, Thai, Spanish, Italian, French, Peruvian, and west African restaurants. Thankfully, pride in the best of British food—local, seasonal, wild, and foraged—is enjoying quite the renaissance, too.

Andrew Edmunds

$$$ | Soho Fodor's choice

Candlelit at night, with a haunting Dickensian vibe, Andrew Edmunds is a permanently packed, old-school Soho dining institution. Tucked away behind Carnaby Street in a creaky but charming 18th-century town house, it's a cozy favorite whose unpretentious and keenly priced dishes draw on the tastes of Ireland, the Mediterranean, and the Middle East. Desserts like warm treacle tart or bread-and-butter pudding offer few surprises, but the wine list is always superb and famously reasonable. It could be larger, less creaky underfoot, and its wooden church pew seats more forgiving, but it's a deeply romantic way to get a taste of what Soho was like in bygone days. 

Balthazar

$$$ | Covent Garden Fodor's choice

British restaurateur Keith McNally re-creates his famed New York Parisian–style grand brasserie at this bustling spot off Covent Garden. The soaring grand café setting creates an enchanting backdrop to enjoy the reassuringly classic French brasserie menu, including standbys like fruit de mare platters, lemon sole meunière (with capers and parsley), côte de boeuf, and grilled lobster. A fitting treat for pre- and posttheater meals, spoil yourself with classy rock oysters and steak tartare before polishing off a pile of profiteroles for dessert.

Berenjak

$$$ | Soho Fodor's choice

At this always-packed Persian kebab hole-in-the-wall, it's best to sit at the raised counter overlooking the tandoor grill and clay oven and indulge in the expansive meze spreads, hot taftoon flatbreads, and richly flavored coal-cooked marinated lamb, chicken, and poussin kebabs. With exposed brick walls, hanging plants, and a delightfully edgy atmosphere, you can sip nonalcoholic cocktails and sharbat cordials in cozy side booths or hide out in the green foliage-strewn backroom snug. A favorite with global stars like Dua Lipa and Bella Hadid, be sure to book ahead. 

Recommended Fodor's Video

Bocca di Lupo

$$$ | Soho Fodor's choice

This upscale Italian institution is always crowded and the tables are jammed too close together, but everyone still adores the glorious spread of regional Italian small plates found here. Located off Theaterland's Shaftesbury Avenue, the famous trattoria offers magnificent peasant-based pasta, stews, fritti, salumi, and raw crudi, spanning from Naples to the Veneto. Try the fine Romani fried sage leaves with anchovy, the salt-baked fossil fish from Lazio, or roast suckling pig from northern Italy's Emilia-Romagna. Start with an Aperol spritz before enjoying the majestic all-Italian wine list, which weaves from Super Tuscans to punchy Barolos.

12 Archer St., London, W1D 7BB, England
020-7734–2223
Known For
  • Open chef's counter serving a medley of rustic Italian small plates
  • Magnificent all-Italian wine list
  • Crowd-pleasing Sicilian lobster and pappardelle pasta with rich venison ragù
Restaurant Details
Reservations essential

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Casse-Croûte

$$$ | Bermondsey Fodor's choice

This bistro on Bermondsey Street near the Fashion and Textile Museum is as French as a pack of Gauloises, from the yellow walls and red-and-white checked tablecloths to the perfectly executed classics like lapin à la moutarde (rabbit in a creamy mustard sauce), suprême de volaille aux mousserons (chicken breast stuffed with mushrooms), escargots, and raspberry soufflé. The daily changing menu offers three reasonably priced options per course, and the wine list (French, of course) goes off the beaten path with discoveries from small local producers. The limited amount of space means that diners are in close proximity, but everyone is usually too busy scarfing down the excellent food to notice.

109 Bermondsey St., London, SE1 3XB, England
020-7407–2140
Known For
  • Beautifully prepared bistro classics
  • Authentic French atmosphere in tight quarters
  • Reservations necessary for dinner
Restaurant Details
No dinner Sun.
Reservations essential

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Clipstone

$$$ | Fitzrovia Fodor's choice

Flavorful, inventive dishes elevate this hipster casual joint to the top rank of London's midrange gastro titans. With a focus on in-house curing, pickling, smoked meats, and heritage vegetables, expect a cavalcade of unlikely combinations and classic gastronomy specialties. The food is modern European with an emphasis on British produce; their beautifully delicate Cornish halibut with shrimp butter sauce and sea herbs is a prime example.

The Delaunay

$$$ | Holborn Fodor's choice

It's all fin de siècle Vienna at this evocative Art Deco–style grand café on Aldwych near Covent Garden. Dishes on the majestic Middle European menu would do the Austro-Hungarian Empire proud—think Wiener schnitzel, Hungarian goulash, beef Stroganoff, and wonderful würstchen (frankfurters and hot dogs) served with sauerkraut and onions. Savor other goodies like borscht, kedgeree and lamb shank sauerbraten, while desserts include a sinfully indulgent Sacher torte.

Duck & Waffle

$$$ | City of London Fodor's choice

Zoom up to the 40th floor of 110 Bishopsgate and head straight for the cult signature dish of confit duck leg, Belgium waffle, fried duck egg, and mustard maple syrup for a taste of foodie bliss. Open 24/7, with spectacular panoramas of The City, you might satisfy the munchies with a foie gras breakfast, served all day, alongside streaky bacon and homemade Nutella or an Elvis PB&J waffle with banana brûlée. Look, too, for the bag of spiced pigs ears and the big-as-tennis-balls spicy ox cheek doughnuts dusted with smoked paprika sugar. There's always a party vibe and you'll often find live music in the dining room.

The Ivy

$$$ | Covent Garden Fodor's choice

London's onetime most famous celebrity haunt and West End landmark is still so popular it receives more than a thousand calls a day. Established as an Italian café in 1917, today it's still a top destination to dine on deep-fried haddock and chips, Thai-baked sea bass, and evergreen English classics like shepherd's pie and baked Alaska. Madonna famously once ate sticky toffee pudding with Hollywood actor Tom Cruise and British playwright Harold Pinter here back in the day. Perch at the coral onyx dining bar in pink mohair-backed seats, kick back with an Old Fashioned, and enjoy some of the best free theater and people-watching in town.

Joe Allen

$$$ | Covent Garden Fodor's choice

Seemingly everyone involved in West End theater world hangs out at this legendary subterranean spot for its alluring blend of New York brasserie comfort food (think posh hot dogs, shrimp burgers, and mac n' cheese). Established elsewhere in Covent Garden in 1977, enduring classics include Joe's finger-licking slow-braised smoked baby back ribs, New York strip steak and chips, a not-so-secret off-menu hamburger, and a PB&J ice-cream sandwich.

Kinaara

$$$ | Greenwich Fodor's choice

When you arrive at Kinaara, the ambient lighting, aroma of spices, and very warm welcome tell you instantly that there is something special about this Indian eatery. With its extensive menu, it's best to let the professional and knowledgeable staff guide you, and a tasting menu is undoubtedly the best way to sample the divine flavors that head chef Imamuddin Khan conjures up. Start with crispy, shredded duck, watermelon, cashew nuts, and black radish, followed by salmon and prawn cooked in the tandoor oven and accompanied by the delectable coriander with mint, tomato, and mustard sauces. The lamb biriyani comes to the table covered with its own pastry top, which is peeled back dramatically to provide both aromatic theater and something to dip into the rich sauce. A chili mandarin palate-cleansing sorbet is wonderful before the chocolate and ginger dessert. With wine pairings for every course and a stunning vista from its elegant and elevated position at the InterContinental London O2, the gilded setting is as sumptuous as the food is. It's very smart to book a table ahead of time.

Noble Rot

$$$ | Bloomsbury Fodor's choice

There's an old Amsterdam coffeehouse vibe at this dark and creaky wine bar and restaurant on historic Lamb's Conduit Street in Bloomsbury. Run by two wine buffs and cult wine magazine publishers, you'll find deceptively simple ingredient-driven British dishes like roast Yorkshire pheasant with bread sauce and quince. There's an ever-changing French and British cheese plate menu, fantastic focaccia, sourdough, and soda bread, and an ambrosial wine list.

51 Lamb's Conduit St., London, WC1N 3NB, England
020-7242–8963
Known For
  • Paradise for oenophiles
  • Unpretentious seasonal British and French wine-friendly fare
  • Excellent value two- and three-course set lunch menu
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.

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Noble Rot Soho

$$$ | Soho Fodor's choice

Fans of French bistro cuisine and fine wine flock to this glorious wood-paneled Georgian town house for masterful dishes like roast chicken with morel mushrooms and creamy vin jaune sauce alongside a marvelous 28-page French-focused wine list. Set in what used to be a famed Hungarian dining and left-wing political salon known as the Gay Hussar, these days diners bliss out on boudin noir and one of London's finest and most accessible wine lists, with numerous rare gems available by the glass.

The Palomar

$$$ | Soho Fodor's choice

It's Jerusalem meets Beirut at this pan-Arab-Israeli spot on Rupert Street off Chinatown. Sit at the zinc open-kitchen counter and down shots of arak while trading quips with the brilliant Middle Eastern chefs, who offer an exuberant medley of Levantine delights, including Yemenite Jewish kubaneh (a light, fluffy pull-apart bread), Persian oxtail stew, Jerusalem truffled mushroom polenta, and paprika-rich pork belly tajine with Israeli couscous. Look, too, for the lavish Kurdish-style mussels inspired by the head chef's beloved grandmother.

Rabbit

$$$ | Chelsea Fodor's choice

Owned by three brothers who grew up on a farm (which supplies the restaurant with its produce and livestock), Rabbit introduces a note of rusticity to one of London's glitziest areas. The emphasis is on locality, sustainability, and nose-to-tail eating, and the menu changes daily depending on what's in season and available. Plates are tapas-style and designed for sharing, but dishes like celeriac confit with caramelized red onion and red kale or wild fallow deer in a tarragon crust with hen of the wood mushrooms and walnut ketchup are hearty enough to be quite filling. The eight-course tasting menu (£48) or weekday set lunch (£25 for three courses) is a bargain.

Rita's

$$$ | Soho Fodor's choice

Co-owner Missy Flynn and chef Gabe Pryce bring a playful spirit to Modern American dining at this indie spot on Soho's gastro-central Lexington Street. Sit at cute raised tables or red-leather booths and enjoy densely flavored Americana like hearty baby shrimp boil, fried chicken with buttermilk waffles, or corn-crusted turbot with macha pico salsa. The wines are all organic, low intervention, or biodynamic, and you can't go wrong by kicking off dinner with a signature gilda martini. 

49 Lexington St., London, W1F 9AP, England
750-229--2453
Known For
  • Renowned cocktails and natural wine list
  • Eclectic Modern American dishes like grilled lobster with drawn butter
  • Malted milk pudding with poached blueberries for dessert
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. No lunch Mon.–Wed.
Reservations essential

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Rules

$$$ | Covent Garden Fodor's choice

Opened by Thomas Rule in 1798, London's oldest restaurant is still perhaps its most beautiful. The epitome of High Victorian design, overflowing with antique portraits, prints, cartoons, busts, and taxidermy, here you can indulge in traditional British fare like jugged hare, steak and kidney pie, or roast beef and Yorkshire pudding. For a taste of the 18th century, choose game from the restaurant's High Pennines estate, including roast grouse, mallard, or pheasant. Snag a table in one of the skylit rooms or the spot where the  Victorian-era Prince of Wales had trysts with the famed beauty and actress Lillie Langtry. 

35 Maiden La., London, WC2E 7LB, England
020-7836–5314
Known For
  • The oldest restaurant in London
  • Traditional British game-based fare
  • Famous diners from Charles Dickens to Evelyn Waugh
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.
Reservations essential

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Six Portland Road

$$$ | Notting Hill Fodor's choice

The ultimate neighborhood restaurant in west London's wealthy Holland Park section draws diners with its brilliant-but-understated French and Mediterranean classics, relaxed service, and interesting, mainly French wines. Treat yourself to grilled dover sole with beurre noisette and capers, or King oyster mushrooms with sorrel risotto. With only 36 seats and a teeny bar, this is an intimate affair, which is highlighted by the white paper tablecloths and bentwood chairs. Service is friendly but not overly familiar, while wines are grower, boutique, or biodynamic. Traditional roasts served on Sunday.

St. John

$$$ | Clerkenwell Fodor's choice

Global foodie fanatics join Clerkenwell locals for the pioneering nose-to-tail cuisine at this high-ceilinged, converted smokehouse near Smithfield Market. Here the chef uses all scraps of a carcass—from tongue and cheeks to tail and trotters—so brace for radically stark signatures like bone-marrow-and-parsley salad. One stand-out main is grilled ox's heart with chard and mustard while elsewhere on the menu you'll find crispy pig skin, lamb's liver, deviled tripe, and a pig's head and potato pie. Plunder the outstanding wine list (mainly French and Italian) and finish with traditional Eccles cakes with Lancashire cheese or half a dozen golden madeleines.

The Wolseley

$$$ | St. James's Fodor's choice

A glitzy procession of famous faces, media moguls, and hedge-funders comes for the spectacle, swish service, and soaring elegance at this bustling Viennese-style grand café on Piccadilly. Located in a former Wolseley Motors luxury-car showroom, this brasserie begins its long decadent days with breakfast at 7 am (8 am on weekends) and serves Dual Monarchy delights until 11 pm (10 pm on Sunday). Don't be shy about popping by (they welcome walk-ins) for dishes like kedgeree, steak tartare, chicken soup with dumplings, or Wiener schnitzel. For dessert, go for an éclair, and don't forget to return to savor the classy afternoon tea.

The Anchor & Hope

$$$ | Southwark

Exceptional Brit-focused fish and meat dishes at wallet-friendly prices fly out of the open kitchen at this permanently packed, no-reservations (apart from Sunday lunchtime) gastropub in Southwark. Dishes like steamed Icelandic cod with spinach and lobster beurre blanc, pheasant two ways with choucroute and potato, a suet-crusted chicken with bacon and leek pie, and a buttermilk pudding with Bramley apple and salted caramel punch above their weight in terms of taste and tenderness. Mains are well priced at £20–£27, but keep in mind it's noisy, usually packed, and you may have to wait for (and then share) a table. That said, there are great dishes to share—like the seven-hour lamb shoulder with root vegetables or a cassoulet.

36 The Cut, London, SE1 8LP, England
020-7928–9898
Known For
  • Innovative gastropub cuisine
  • Buzzy and informal atmosphere
  • Large crowds, so prepare to wait and maybe share a table
Restaurant Details
No lunch Mon.--Thurs. No dinner Sun.
Reservations not accepted

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Brawn

$$$ | Shoreditch

This unpretentious neighborhood restaurant serves inventive modern European cuisine—think rabbit, pork, and pistachio terrine or brill, mussels, and fennel in a bouillabaisse sauce. Enjoy your meal with some of the best natural wines you'll find in London.

49 Columbia Rd., London, E2 7RG, England
020-7729–5692
Known For
  • Welcoming vibe
  • Industrial look
  • Orange wines by the glass
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. No lunch Mon.

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Cafe Murano

$$$ | Covent Garden

Chef Angela Hartnett's low-key Italian café is an excellent value eatery perfect for pre-and-post theater meals. Set off Covent Garden piazza, you'll find classics like chicken Milanese or veal osso buco as well as fine cicchetti, crudo, risottos, gnocchis, and handmade pastas. Bargain three-course set lunch and theater meals are £30, and the portions, flavors, and general atmosphere are all on the warm and generous side.  

Chez Bruce

$$$ | Battersea

Top-notch French and Mediterranean cuisine, faultless service, and a winning wine list make this one of London's all-star favorite restaurants. At this cozy haunt overlooking Wandsworth Common, prepare for unfussy grown-up gastro wonders ranging from homemade charcuterie to lighter, simply grilled fish dishes. Expect plates like chateaubriand, venison loin, and roasted cod with truffle mash all to be effortlessly conceived. Desserts like prune and Armagnac tart are packed with flavor, and the sommelier's a hoot.

2 Bellevue Rd., London, SW17 7EG, England
020-8672–0114
Known For
  • Elegant neighborhood salon
  • Luxe classics like lobster and scallop ravioli
  • Impressive sommelier
Restaurant Details
Reservations essential

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Coal Office

$$$ | King's Cross

Styled as a collaboration between star designer Tom Dixon and chef/entrepreneur Assaf Granit, this delightful restaurant is full of infectious joie de vivre and, most important, to-die-for food. With a mix of shared plates and main courses, the menu is a playful, refined celebration of Israeli cuisine, with dishes that range from the most delicious sea bass carpaccio to grilled octopus on Yemeni pancakes with a truffle harissa sauce. Leave room for the tahini ice cream.

2 Bagley Walk, London, N1C 4PQ, England
020-3848–6086
Known For
  • Grilled lamb, chicken, and beef
  • Ancient Levantine bread with za'atar and olive oil
  • Bar seating where the chefs often give tasting samples
Restaurant Details
No lunch Mon.–Wed.

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Colbert

$$$ | Chelsea

The kind of smooth-running, welcoming all-day brasserie that is difficult to find in Paris these days, Colbert offers well-prepared bistro favorites like croque monsieur, escargot, and steak haché, along with bigger plates like pan-roasted sea trout with samphire and seaweed or confit duck. The service is professional but friendly and the atmosphere is stylish but comfortable. Although a neighborhood favorite, it's a swanky neighborhood, which is reflected in the prices, but a prix-fixe menu (two courses for £24.75 and three courses for £29.95) offers good value.

Dean Street Townhouse

$$$ | Soho

Everyone feels a zillion times more glamorous just stepping inside this candlelit restaurant attached to the swank Georgian-era hotel of the same name. Straightforward but endlessly fun retro British favorites include classic English pea and ham soup, primary school-style mince and potatoes, smoked haddock soufflé, and sticky toffee pudding. You'll also find quaint English scones and crumpets for afternoon tea and nostalgic 1970s-style fish finger sandwiches for traditional early evening high tea.

Fischer's

$$$ | Marylebone

It almost feels like Sigmund Freud or Gustav Klimt might doff their Homburg hats and shuffle into a dark leather banquette at this evocative, early-20th-century–style Viennese neighborhood café on Marylebone High Street. Savor the antique light fittings and distressed wallpaper before diving into a rye brötchen (bread roll) sandwich with chopped chicken livers and dill. Expect top service from staff in natty Trachten-style Tyrolean green waistcoats and dark green ties. The all-day restaurant opens early on weekdays (7:30 am) and semi-early on weekends (9 am) so you can head here for a unique Austrian-theme breakfast. 

Jamavar

$$$

There is no finer fish dish in town than the Malai stone bass tikka at this upmarket Indian restaurant. The food and spices here are so authentic that it regularly buzzes with Bollywood stars, wealthy Mayfair moguls, and the entire well-heeled Indian diaspora. Inspired by the Viceroy's House in New Delhi and oozing with Lutyens-style furniture, this spot is perfect for luxuriating in mini dosas, coconut spiced lobster, or Old Delhi butter chicken.

8 Mount St., W1K 3NF, England
020-7499–1800
Known For
  • Stunning interior of dark wood, marble, and Indian artwork
  • Unmissable Malai stone bass tikka
  • Glossy, luxurious Indian crowd

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Joia

$$$ | Bankside

The first London restaurant from two Michelin-starred chef Henrique Sá Pessoa offers views over the landmark Battersea Power Station from its 15th floor perch and explores the flavors of his native Portugal with excursions farther afield into Catalonia. Unsurprisingly, tapas like patatas bravas, Iberico croquetas, or a hand-dived scallop with chorizo, fennel, and celeriac puree feature prominently, while big plates like suckling pig and arroz de marisco come from the Josper oven. You pay for the glamorous art deco atmosphere and the views, but a three-course set menu on weekends (£45) offers better value. 

1 Electric Blvd., London, SW11 8BJ, England
020-3833–8333
Known For
  • Excellent tapas
  • Lovely rooftop bar
  • Good value set lunches
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No dinner Sun. No lunch Tues.–Thurs.

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