Paris Restaurants

A new wave of culinary confidence has been running through one of the world's great food cities and spilling over both banks of the Seine. Whether cooking up grand-mère's roast chicken and riz au lait or placing a whimsical hat of cotton candy atop wild-strawberry-and-rose ice cream, Paris chefs—established and up-and-coming, native and foreign—have been breaking free from the tyranny of tradition and following their passion.

Emblematic of the "bistronomy" movement is the proliferation of "gastrobistros"—often in far-flung or newly chic neighborhoods—helmed by established chefs fleeing the constraints of the star system or passionate young chefs unfettered by overblown expectations. Among the seasoned stars and exciting newcomers to the scene are Yannick Alléno, who left behind two Michelin stars at Le Meurice to open his locavore bistro Terroir Parisien at the Palais Brogniart and earned three stars at the storied Pavillon Ledoyen within his first year at the helm; David Toutain at the exceptional Restaurant David Toutain; Sylvestre Wahid at Brasserie Thoumieux; and Katsuaki Okiyama's Abri.

But self-expression is not the only driving force behind the current trend. A traditional high-end restaurant can be prohibitively expensive to operate. As a result, more casual bistros and cafés, which reflect the growing allure of less formal dining and often have lower operating costs and higher profit margins, have become attractive opportunities for even top chefs.

For tourists, this development can only be good news, because it makes the cooking of geniuses such as Joël Robuchon, Guy Savoy, Eric Frechon, and Pierre Gagnaire a bit more accessible (even if these star chefs rarely cook in their lower-price restaurants) and opens up a vast range of new possibilities for exciting dining.

Like the chefs themselves, Paris diners are breaking away from tradition with renewed enthusiasm. New restaurants, wine bars, and rapidly multiplying épicieries (gourmet grocers) and sandwich shops recognize that not everyone wants a three-course blowout every time they dine out. And because Parisians are more widely traveled than in the past, many ethnic restaurants—notably the best North African, Vietnamese–Laotian, Chinese, Spanish, and Japanese spots—are making fewer concessions to French tastes, resulting in far better food.

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  • 21. Frenchie

    $$$$ | Grands Boulevards

    Set in a brick-and-stone-walled building on a pedestrian street near Rue Montorgueil, Frenchie has quickly become one of the most hard-to-book bistros in town, with tables booked months in advance, despite two seatings each evening. This success is due to the good-value, €140 five-course dinner menu (prix fixe only); boldly flavored dishes such as calamari gazpacho with squash blossoms or melt-in-the-mouth braised lamb with roasted eggplant and spinach are excellent options. Service can be, shall we say, a tad brusque, but for some that's a small price to pay for food this good.

    5 rue du Nil, Paris, Île-de-France, 75002, France
    01–40–39–96–19

    Known For

    • Casual laid-back atmosphere that belies the ultrasophisticated dishes
    • Extensive and original wine list
    • Graciously accommodating to vegetarians

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed weekends, 2 wks in Aug., and 10 days at Christmas. No lunch, Reservations essential
  • 22. Frenchie Bar à Vins

    $$ | Grands Boulevards

    If this weren't one of Paris's most outstanding wine bars, the wait and metal tractor seats might be a deterrent. Yet wine lovers would be hard-pressed to find a better venue for sampling a great list of French wines and inspired selections from Italy and Spain—every one of them sold by the bottle or glass—with superb tapas to match. Feast on yummy small plates like the "coleslaw" of citrusy calamari, black-olive coulis, and a sprinkling of pine nuts; bresaola with apples, spicy mizuna leaves, and dollops of creamy horseradish; and a wedge of Stilton served atop a paste of Speculoos biscuits with poached pears and smoked walnuts. Get here right at 7 pm when the restaurant opens or shortly afterward to avoid waiting for a table.

    6 rue du Nil, Paris, Île-de-France, 75002, France

    Known For

    • Choice selection of natural wines from France and Europe
    • Rare expertise in natural, organic, and biodynamic wines
    • Long waits unless you get there right when it opens (7 pm)

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed weekends. No lunch, Reservations not accepted
  • 23. Gaya

    $$$$ | St-Germain-des-Prés

    If you can't fathom paying hundreds of euros per person to taste the cooking of Pierre Gagnaire, one of France's foremost chefs, at his eponymous restaurant, but would still like to encounter one of his outstanding culinary experiences, book a table at his Left Bank fish restaurant. At Gaya, Gagnaire uses seafood as a palette for his creative impulses. Expect small portions of artfully presented food. Vegan options are offered upon advance request. 

    6 rue de Saint-Simon, Paris, Île-de-France, 75007, France
    01–45–44–73–73

    Known For

    • Intimate, cozy atmosphere
    • Fresh, artfully presented seafood
    • Truly exceptional dining experience

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon.
  • 24. Guy Savoy

    $$$$ | St-Germain-des-Prés

    Within the beautifully restored Monnaie de Paris, you'll find star chef Guy Savoy's hallowed dining room. The market-fresh menu features à la carte classics such as artichoke truffle soup or red mullet fish, but if you want the ultimate gourmet dining experience, splurge on the 13-course, €630 tasting menu. The more modest eight-course lunch menu will only set you back €260, and these prices do not include wine. Whatever you order, every dish is a work of art. 

    11 quai de Conti, Paris, Île-de-France, 75006, France
    01–43–80–40–61

    Known For

    • Gorgeous setting overlooking the Seine
    • Intimate, art-filled dining rooms
    • One of Paris's most highly rated dining experiences

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon., and 1 wk at Christmas. No lunch Sat., Reservations essential, Jacket required
  • 25. Jean Imbert au Plaza Athénée

    $$$$ | Champs-Élysées

    In one of the most anticipated announcements in the Parisian food world, the Plaza Athénée named talented young chef Jean Imbert, a protégé of his predecessor Alain Ducasse, as head of their new temple to gastronomy. A long marble table is the centerpiece of this opulently refurbished dining room (which seems to take Versailles as its model), and the menu is no less splendid, with options like Casparian imperial caviar, Bellevue lobster in a foie gras broth flecked with black truffle, and whole turbot masterfully boned table-side. Each dish goes the extra mile, and that goes for the desserts by pastry chefs Angelo Musa and Elisabeth Hot too. Even among the gilding, marble, Aubusson carpets, and towering chandeliers, a feeling of intimacy prevails, with splashes of candlelight for romance.

    25 av. Montaigne, Paris, Île-de-France, 75008, France
    01–53–67–65–00

    Known For

    • Gorgeous, über-opulent dining room
    • Rising star chef
    • Exemplary service

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch Tues.–Fri., Reservations required
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  • 26. Juvéniles

    $$$ | Louvre

    A favorite with the French and expats alike, this neighborhood bistro blends great dining with an inspired wine list and a handy location a stone's throw from the Louvre. Exquisite French ingredients are given an inspired, often slightly lighter, makeover by Chef Romain Roudeau, although hearty house-made terrines and foie gras as well as slow-cooked meat and game are frequently featured on the eclectic menu.

    47 rue de Richelieu, Paris, Île-de-France, 75001, France
    01–42–97–46–49

    Known For

    • Great cheese selection from Neal's Yard and neighboring Madame Hisada
    • Phenomenal wine selection on-site and takeaway
    • Small space, so best to reserve in advance

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon., Reservations essential
  • 27. Kitchen Ter(re)

    $$ | Latin Quarter

    Michelin-starred chef William Ledeuil flexes his genius for France-meets-Asia flavors at this chic address—his third—a few blocks from Île St-Louis and Notre-Dame. Ledeuil is known and loved for his fearless pairings of bold and subtle flavors, like veal tartare pasta with crunchy peanuts and pungent bonito flakes or Thai beef soup with luscious Iberian ham, mushrooms, and sweet pear. Desserts are equally expressive and not to be missed. The affordable lunch prix-fixe menus are a fabulous deal.

    26 bd. St-Germain, Paris, Île-de-France, 75005, France
    01–42–39–47–48

    Known For

    • Asian-inflected contemporary French cuisine
    • Excellent-value lunch menus
    • Easy walk from many tourist sights

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun., Mon., and 2nd wk of Jan.
  • 28. L'Arcane

    $$$$ | Montmartre

    Once a well-guarded foodie secret, a Michelin star brought this singular restaurant, tucked behind the Sacré-Coeur, richly deserved acclaim. Now the dining room is packed with diners enjoying impeccable contemporary French cuisine that's gorgeously presented and full of flavor. With no à la carte ordering, you are truly in the hands of chef Laurent Magnin, whose menus include the seven-course "temptation" menu (€135) and the eleven-course tasting menu (€180). Expect delights like lacquered suckling pig or roasted mullet in a sublimely creamy mushroom duxelle. It's the perfect end, or midday pause, to a day spent wandering the village-y streets of Montmartre.  There is also a five-course "menu dejeuner" for lunch that costs €65.

    52 rue Lamarck, Paris, Île-de-France, 75018, France
    01–46–06–86–00

    Known For

    • Vividly imagined cuisine on multicourse tasting menus
    • Location near the Sacré-Coeur
    • Very friendly service

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun., Mon., Aug., 1 wk in mid-Apr., and last wk of Dec., Reservations essential
  • 29. L'Astrance

    $$$$ | Eiffel Tower

    Pascal Barbot rose to fame thanks to his restaurant's reasonable prices and casual atmosphere, but after the passage of several years, L'Astrance has become resolutely haute. His dishes often draw on Asian ingredients, as in grilled lamb with miso-lacquered eggplant and a palate-cleansing white sorbet spiked with chili pepper and lemongrass. They offer à la carte, as well as a lunch menu for €125 and the full tasting menu for €285 (this is what most people come for). Each menu also comes at a (significantly) higher price with wines to match each course. Barbot's cooking has such an ethereal quality that it's worth the considerable effort of booking a table—you should start trying at least two months in advance.

    4 rue Beethoven, Paris, Île-de-France, 75016, France
    01–40–50–84–40

    Known For

    • Set menus that change daily
    • Space that seats only 25 lucky diners a night
    • Extraordinary wine list

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed weekends and Aug., Reservations essential
  • 30. La Boissonnerie

    $$$ | St-Germain-des-Prés

    A perennial favorite, this lively, unpretentious bistro is prized by expats and locals for its friendly atmosphere, consistently good food, solid wine list, and English-speaking staff. Dishes like pork belly with crushed potatoes or swordfish with fresh vegetables always hit the spot, especially when followed by decadent chocolate ganache infused with candied bergamot or poached peaches with white wine and sorbet.

    69 rue de Seine, Paris, Île-de-France, 75006, France
    01–43–54–34–69

    Known For

    • Convivial atmosphere
    • Excellent selection of natural wines
    • Good-value menu that changes daily

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Reservations essential, Closed Sun.
  • 31. La Caféothèque

    $ | Marais Quarter

    This was Paris's first coffee bar, founded by former Guatemalan ambassador to France turned coffee ambassador, Gloria Montenegro. With three spacious rooms, all coffee preparations under the sun, and a daily special brew chosen from among dozens of varieties of meticulously sourced beans from plantations around the globe, this is a Paris institution.

    52 rue de l'Hotel de Ville, Paris, Île-de-France, 74004, France
    01–53–01–83–84

    Known For

    • Rigorously sourced, hard-to-find beans
    • Excellent coffee of the day
    • All roasting done in-house

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No dinner
  • 32. La Coupole

    $$$ | Montparnasse

    This world-renowned, cavernous spot with Art Deco murals practically defines the term brasserie. It's been popular since Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir were regulars, and today it attracts a mix of bourgeois families, tourists, and lone diners treating themselves to a dozen oysters. Recent additions to the classic brasserie menu are a tart of caramelized apple and pan-fried foie gras, beef fillet flambéed with cognac, and profiteroles made with Valrhona chocolate.

    102 bd. du Montparnasse, Paris, Île-de-France, 75014, France
    01–43–20–14–20

    Known For

    • Classic brasserie menu
    • Lively atmosphere
    • Historic setting
  • 33. La Régalade Saint-Honoré

    $$$ | Louvre

    After taking over the original La Régalade, chef Bruno Doucet kept some of what made the old restaurant so popular (country terrines, reasonably priced wines, convivial atmosphere), but he also had a few tricks under his toque, notably creating a successful haute-cuisine-meets-comfort-food destination. With a good quality-to-price ratio, this chic bistro has evolved into a staple of the neighborhood.

    123 rue St-Honoré, Paris, Île-de-France, 75001, France
    01–42–21–92–40

    Known For

    • Contemporary iterations of French bistro classics like escargots or beef bourguignon
    • Comfort-food desserts like rice pudding or soufflé
    • Good-value prix-fixe menu for lunch and dinner

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon., Reservations essential
  • 34. La Scène

    $$$$ | Champs-Élysées

    Shortly after earning a second Michelin star from the chic open kitchen at the Hôtel Prince des Galles, Stéphanie le Quellec left to strike out on her own. Now she's regained her two stars at this gleaming dining room on the elegant Avenue Matignon, the perfect setting for the refined, scintillating cuisine that earned the former Top Chef winner a loyal following among Paris gastronomes. Whether you're having lunch in the ground-floor brasserie, with its burnished bronze bar, or downstairs in the elegant 30-seat dining room with an open kitchen, Le Quellec doesn't skimp on luxury ingredients in signature dishes like Pompadour potato soufflé with Ossetra caviar, poached langoustine, and the famous foie gras tart, all masterfully paired with handpicked small-producer wines. Pastry chef Pierre Chirac's irresistible desserts round out a perfect meal.

    32 av. Matignon, Paris, Île-de-France, 75008, France
    01–42–65–05–61

    Known For

    • Beautiful atmosphere
    • Famous foie gras tart
    • Handpicked small-producer wines

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed weekends
  • 35. La Tour d'Argent

    $$$$ | Latin Quarter

    You can't deny the splendor of this legendary Michelin-starred restaurant's setting overlooking the Seine; if you don't want to break the bank on dinner, treat yourself to the three-course lunch menu for €120. This entitles you to succulent slices of one of the restaurant's numbered ducks (the great duck slaughter began in 1919 and is now well past the millionth mallard, as your certificate will attest). Don't be too daunted by the vast wine list—with the aid of the sommelier you can splurge a little and perhaps taste a rare vintage Burgundy from the extraordinary cellars, which survived World War II.

    15–17 quai de la Tournelle, Paris, Île-de-France, 75005, France
    01–43–54–23–31

    Known For

    • Duck in all its many forms
    • One of the city's best wine lists
    • Fabulous Seine-side setting with glorious views

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun., Mon., and Aug., Reservations essential, Jacket and tie
  • 36. Ladurée

    $$$ | Champs-Élysées

    With 100-plus locations worldwide, the largest branch of the Ladurée tea salon empire is worth the splurge, thanks to the sumptuous pastries, which steal the show. In addition to more than a dozen flavors of macarons, it has assorted cakes, ice cream, pastries, and beautifully boxed treats ideal for gift-giving. Reserve a table in the elegant wood-paneled rooms upstairs or the glassed-in storefront, or grab a bite in the secluded Art Nouveau bar in the back. Though pricey, the menu promises generous salads and flavorful plats du jour.

    75 av. des Champs-Élysées, Paris, Île-de-France, 75008, France
    01–40–75–08–75

    Known For

    • Pricey lunch menu
    • Beautiful and elegant decor
    • World-famous macarons
  • 37. Le BAL Café Otto

    $ | Montmartre

    Set in a bright, modern space on a tiny street in the lower reaches of Montmartre, the popular Le BAL Café Otto caters to a diverse clientele who come for the great coffee, delicious homey food, lively crowd, and the art gallery/bookstore. Italian- and French-inspired cuisine (like spelt risotto with mushrooms, hazelnuts, and creamed spinach) during the week rests alongside a traditional weekend brunch menu featuring items like tender pancakes, fried eggs with ham and roasted tomatoes, and buttery scones with jam. On Sunday in spring and summer, brunch is truly an event, with artists, hipsters, expats, and young families enthusiastically enjoying all of the above. Note that the café closes at 10 pm on Wednesday and Thursday and 7 pm on Friday and Sunday, so perhaps look elsewhere for dinner.

    6 impasse de la Défense, Paris, Île-de-France, 75018, France
    01–44–70–75–51

    Known For

    • Great brunches and reliably good coffee
    • Art gallery on the premises
    • Outdoor terrace on a quiet passageway

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues., No reservations taken for weekend brunch
  • 38. Le Bistrot Paul Bert

    $$$ | Charonne

    The Paul Bert delivers everything you could want from a traditional Paris bistro (faded 1930s decor, thick steak with real frites, and good value), so it's no wonder its two dining rooms fill every night with a cosmopolitan crowd. The impressively stocked wine cellar helps, as does the heaping cheese cart, the laid-back yet efficient staff, and hearty dishes such as monkfish with white beans and duck with pears. The prix-fixe lunch menu is only €22, or you can order à la carte.

    18 rue Paul Bert, Paris, Île-de-France, 75011, France
    01–43–72–24–01

    Known For

    • Excellent, and abundant, cheese trolley
    • Delicious dessert soufflés
    • Sidewalk seating in summer

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon., Reservations essential
  • 39. Le Buisson Ardent

    $$ | Latin Quarter

    This charming Quartier Latin bistro with woodwork and murals dating from 1925 is always packed and boisterous. A glance at the affordable menu makes it easy to understand why: dishes such as chestnut soup with spice bread, sea bass marinated in lime and coconut, and apple and quince tatin (upside-down tart) with gingerbread ice cream put a fresh twist on French classics. Service is reliably courteous. If you don't finish your bottle of wine, you can take it with you to savor the last drops.

    25 rue Jussieu, Paris, Île-de-France, 75005, France
    01–43–54–93–02

    Known For

    • Authentic Parisian bistro atmosphere
    • Excellent value daily prix-fixe lunch menu
    • You can take home your wine if you don't finish it

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun., Reservations essential
  • 40. Le Café Jacquemart-André

    $ | Grands Boulevards

    Tucked away in the courtyard of the Musée Jacquemart-André, this is one of Paris's best-kept secrets. For decades, Parisians have been nibbling tarte aux framboises and composed salads beneath charming colorful frescoes and elegant woodwork or out on the garden courtyard terrace. Open seven days during museum hours (with late hours on Monday and brunch on Sunday), it's a convenient place for a light lunch, a sweet from the famous pastry cart laden with all the French classics, or a coupe de champagne, whether you're visiting the museum or not.

    158 blvd. Haussmann, Paris, Île-de-France, 75008, France
    01–45–62–11–59

    Known For

    • Gorgeous setting, featuring the mansion's original woodwork and frescoes
    • Copious salads and gigantic pastries from the car
    • Decent prices

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