Restaurant in London, United Kingdom
Ambassadors Clubhouse
390ptsGymkhana's sibling: serious food, serious room.

About Ambassadors Clubhouse
The Gymkhana team's Punjabi-inspired dining room on Heddon Street earns its £££ price point with technically accomplished Northern Indian and Pakistani cooking, a Michelin Plate, and one of London's more atmospheric rooms at this price tier. Book two to three weeks out for weekends. The two-floor format — restaurant above, late-night DJ venue below — makes it a stronger choice than most London Indian dining rooms for a full evening.
The Verdict
Ambassadors Clubhouse is the restaurant to book when you want serious Northern Indian and Pakistani cooking in a room that earns its price tag. The Gymkhana team has built something distinct on Heddon Street: a lavishly furnished, architecturally considered space that draws on the Punjabi party mansion tradition, with food technical enough to justify the £££ spend and a Michelin Plate to back that claim up. If you are deciding between this and a safer, more familiar Indian dining option, book here instead — the cooking, the room, and the late-night downstairs programme make it a more complete evening than most of its London peers can offer.
About Ambassadors Clubhouse
Heddon Street, just off Regent Street in Mayfair, has become one of central London's more interesting short stretches for serious dining, and Ambassadors Clubhouse is among the reasons why. The restaurant comes from the same team behind Trishna and Amaya-adjacent Gymkhana, which means the pedigree here is not speculative. Chefs Manmeet Shasuna and Pasanjeet Oberoi are working with produce and technique at a level that gets Michelin's attention, and the mooli methi bream cooked on the sigri stove — one of the few specific dishes confirmed in the venue's Michelin write-up , is a clear signal of where the kitchen's priorities sit.
The physical space matters here more than at most Indian restaurants in London. The interiors take direct inspiration from the 'party mansions' of the former undivided Punjab: wood panelling, soft lighting, and colourful decorative details that together create an atmosphere that reads as genuinely considered rather than decorative pastiche. For a diner who cares about where they spend two or three hours as much as what arrives on the plate, the room delivers. The spatial experience is denser and more atmospheric than the cooler, more minimalist approach you find at Benares in Berkeley Square, and more theatrical than the understated dining room at Bombay Bustle.
The menu draws from Northern India and Pakistan, a focus that distinguishes Ambassadors Clubhouse from the broader South Indian or pan-Indian approach taken by several London competitors. That narrower geography allows for more depth: the kitchen can develop a coherent point of view rather than covering the whole subcontinent. The sigri stove, a traditional charcoal grill, anchors the cooking in technique rather than novelty, and the confirmed dishes suggest a menu that prioritises produce quality over menu length.
For context on where Ambassadors Clubhouse sits in the wider category, Opheem in Birmingham and Trèsind Studio in Dubai are pursuing similarly serious Indian fine dining with tasting menu formats, but neither offers this particular combination of Punjabi cultural specificity, central London convenience, and a late-night programme in the same building. The 2025 Opinionated About Dining ranking at number 269 in Europe places Ambassadors Clubhouse in credible company, and a Google rating of 4.5 across 729 reviews confirms the consistency others are finding on repeat visits.
The downstairs venue, Ambassy, is worth factoring into your planning if your evening calls for it. Guest DJs running Punjabi and British dance music from late in the evening turns what could be a direct dinner into something closer to a full night out. That option does not exist at Babur or most of the serious Indian dining rooms in London. If you are planning an occasion that benefits from extending beyond the meal itself, the two-floor structure here is a practical advantage.
On booking, moderate difficulty is an accurate read. This is not a restaurant where walk-ins are your default strategy for a Saturday evening, but it is also not operating at the six-weeks-out pressure of the most oversubscribed Mayfair tables. Aim to book at least two to three weeks ahead for weekend evenings. Mid-week is more forgiving, and if your schedule is flexible, a Tuesday or Wednesday reservation gives you the same room and kitchen with less friction at the booking stage. The address at 25 Heddon Street, W1B 4BH, puts you a short walk from Oxford Circus and Piccadilly Circus tubes, which simplifies arrival logistics for visitors staying anywhere in central London.
For explorers working through London's Indian fine dining tier, the comparison set worth knowing: Amaya focuses on live grill cooking with a more open kitchen format; Trishna runs a coastal Indian menu with a more compact room; Benares offers a longer-standing fine dining take on the category with a basement bar. Ambassadors Clubhouse competes with all of them but does something none of them do: anchor the experience in the specific cultural world of Punjabi hospitality, with the late-night programming to make it feel like a considered choice rather than just another high-end Indian dinner in W1. If that specificity matches what you are looking for, this is the booking to make.
Beyond the Indian fine dining category, our full London restaurants guide covers the broader field, including where to eat across cuisines and price points. If you are planning around a London stay, our London hotels guide covers the accommodation options closest to Mayfair and the West End. For late-night options in the area, our London bars guide has current picks. Those looking to extend their UK trip beyond the capital can look at The Fat Duck in Bray, L'Enclume in Cartmel, Moor Hall in Aughton, Gidleigh Park in Chagford, Hand and Flowers in Marlow, or hide and fox in Saltwood for serious cooking outside London. Our London wineries guide and experiences guide round out the planning picture.
FAQ
Is Ambassadors Clubhouse worth the price?
- At £££, Ambassadors Clubhouse sits in the mid-to-upper range for London Indian dining and delivers at that level. The Michelin Plate recognition and a top-300 OAD Europe ranking confirm the kitchen is operating at a standard that justifies the spend. If you are comparing it to the £££ tier at venues like Trishna, the added room quality and late-night programme tip the value calculation in its favour for a full evening out.
Can I eat at the bar at Ambassadors Clubhouse?
- Bar seating availability is not confirmed in current venue data. For a definitive answer, contact the restaurant directly before your visit. The two-floor format , restaurant upstairs, Ambassy bar and DJ venue downstairs , suggests the spaces serve different functions, so bar dining in the traditional sense may not be the primary format here.
What should a first-timer know about Ambassadors Clubhouse?
- The menu focuses on Northern India and Pakistan, not a pan-Indian spread, so expect depth in a specific regional tradition rather than breadth across the subcontinent. The room is designed for atmosphere , soft lighting, wood panelling, and decorative detail borrowed from Punjabi party mansion architecture. Book two to three weeks out for weekends. If you want to extend into the late-night Ambassy programme downstairs, factor that into your timing. The address at 25 Heddon Street is walking distance from Oxford Circus and Piccadilly Circus tubes.
Does Ambassadors Clubhouse handle dietary restrictions?
- No specific dietary policy is confirmed in available venue data. The kitchen is working at a technically skilled level, which generally means the team can accommodate requests with advance notice, but confirm directly with the restaurant when booking. Indian cooking at this level often involves complex marinades and preparations, so early communication is worth doing rather than raising restrictions on the night.
Can Ambassadors Clubhouse accommodate groups?
- Group capacity details are not confirmed in the venue data. Given the lavish, multi-room format and the Gymkhana group's operational track record, larger group bookings are likely possible but should be arranged directly and in advance. For a group of six or more, contact the restaurant well ahead , at least three to four weeks minimum , to discuss options. The two-floor layout may give some flexibility for private or semi-private arrangements.
What should I wear to Ambassadors Clubhouse?
- No formal dress code is listed, but the room is designed to feel occasion-worthy: think smart casual at minimum, and closer to smart on a weekend evening. The Mayfair location and the lavish interiors mean you will feel underdressed in jeans and trainers. For the late-night Ambassy programme downstairs, the dress expectations likely shift slightly more relaxed but remain in keeping with a Mayfair venue.
Compare Ambassadors Clubhouse
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Ambassadors Clubhouse | £££ | — |
| CORE by Clare Smyth | ££££ | — |
| Restaurant Gordon Ramsay | ££££ | — |
| Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library | ££££ | — |
| The Ledbury | ££££ | — |
| Dinner by Heston Blumenthal | ££££ | — |
A quick look at how Ambassadors Clubhouse measures up.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Ambassadors Clubhouse worth the price?
At £££, it delivers. The Gymkhana team has a proven track record with serious Indian cooking, and the Michelin Plate recognition alongside an Opinionated About Dining Top 269 ranking in Europe (2025) confirms this is not a style-over-substance operation. The room — lavishly furnished, drawing on the party mansions of undivided Punjab — earns the premium on atmosphere alone. If you want Northern Indian and Pakistani cooking at this level in a room that matches the food, the price holds up.
Can I eat at the bar at Ambassadors Clubhouse?
The venue data does not confirm a walk-in bar dining option upstairs, so do not assume counter availability without checking directly with the restaurant. What is documented is Ambassy downstairs, a late-night space with guest DJs playing Punjabi and British dance music — that is a different format from a dinner reservation and likely a separate entry point.
What should a first-timer know about Ambassadors Clubhouse?
This is from the team behind Gymkhana, which sets the expectation correctly: technically skilled cooking from Northern India and Pakistan, not a broad pan-Indian menu. The mooli methi bream on the sigri stove is the documented standout dish. The room is deliberately theatrical — soft lighting, wood panelling, colourful décor — so arrive ready for atmosphere, not a quiet dinner. The Heddon Street address, just off Regent Street in Mayfair, puts it within easy reach of central London.
Does Ambassadors Clubhouse handle dietary restrictions?
Nothing in the available venue data specifies how dietary restrictions are handled. Given the £££ price point and the Gymkhana team's profile, a kitchen at this level is typically equipped to accommodate requirements when notified in advance — but check the venue's official channels to confirm, particularly for complex needs around the sigri-cooked dishes.
Can Ambassadors Clubhouse accommodate groups?
The venue is described as lavishly furnished with significant investment in the room, which suggests capacity for larger parties, but no specific private dining or group booking details are confirmed in the available data. For groups of six or more, check the venue's official channels before assuming availability — at £££ per head, knowing the format and seating options in advance matters.
What should I wear to Ambassadors Clubhouse?
The room draws on the opulence of Punjabi party mansions — this is a dressed space, not a casual one. The Gymkhana team operates at the formal end of London's Indian dining scene, and the £££ price point reinforces that. Treat it as you would any Mayfair dining room at this level: no need for a tie, but dress intentionally. Turning up in trainers and a t-shirt would feel out of place.
Recognized By
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