Restaurant in Busan, South Korea
Busan's most ambitious kitchen. Book it.

Palate holds a Michelin star and a rising La Liste score (79pts in 2026) at the ₩₩ price tier, making it Busan's most compelling contemporary French option. Chef Kim Jae-hoon's evolving menu is adventurous by local standards. Book well ahead for dinner; Wednesday is dinner-only service.
If you have already tried the safer end of Busan's dining scene and want to understand what the city's most ambitious contemporary cooking looks like, Palate is the right next step. It earns a Michelin star and back-to-back La Liste recognition (77 points in 2025, climbing to 79 in 2026), and it sits in Haeundae, far enough from central Busan to feel deliberate. This is a restaurant for the diner who wants a tasting-format dinner with a real point of view, not a casual night out. For groups looking for a splurge without that commitment, Born and Bred at ₩₩₩₩ is the easier call. But if contemporary French technique interpreted through a Korean lens is what you are after, Palate has no direct equivalent in Busan at the ₩₩ price tier.
Palate is the project of chef Kim Jae-hoon, who opened here in his hometown and has spent years pushing the concept forward rather than settling into a fixed identity. The cooking sits in a French-contemporary register but draws on the culinary diversity the chef has accumulated over his career. The result is a menu that moves and shifts, with a progressive character that is unusual for Busan's dining scene, a city that has traditionally leaned hard into its own regional food traditions: dwaeji-gukbap at places like Anmok, cold noodles at spots like 100.1.Pyeongnaeng, and direct Korean staples. Against that backdrop, Palate's willingness to experiment reads as a genuine statement.
The address on Dalmaji-gil places it near the coastal stretch of Haeundae, an area better known for beach hotels than serious dining rooms. That geography matters for planning: this is not a restaurant you stumble into, and the trip from central Busan or the Seomyeon area takes time. Factor that into your evening, especially if you are coming from the other side of the city after a full day. If you are visiting Busan for a short trip and building an itinerary, our full Busan restaurants guide will help you sequence the rest of your meals. For context on where to stay near the restaurant, our Busan hotels guide covers the Haeundae options directly.
The La Liste score increase from 2025 to 2026 is a meaningful signal. It suggests the kitchen is not coasting on its Michelin recognition but continuing to develop. That trajectory puts Palate in the same conversation as other ambitious Korean contemporary rooms that have built consistent profiles over time, including Mingles in Seoul and Jungsik in Seoul, both of which operate at higher price tiers. At ₩₩, Palate represents strong value relative to those benchmarks, assuming the format suits you.
Database does not include a confirmed wine list or cocktail program for Palate, and inventing one would not serve you. What is worth noting is that a Michelin-starred contemporary French-leaning kitchen at this price point in Busan almost always pairs its tasting format with a curated wine selection, whether by the glass or as a pairing option. If you have a specific bottle or dietary restriction around alcohol, contact the restaurant in advance. For broader context on what Busan's bar scene offers around a dinner at Palate, the Busan bars guide covers options for pre- or post-dinner drinks in Haeundae and beyond.
If a serious drinks program is a priority alongside your meal rather than an afterthought, it is worth asking Palate directly before booking. Contemporary French restaurants at this level typically offer pairing menus, but confirmation matters when the drinks program is central to your decision.
Busan's dining identity has historically been built on local seafood and regional Korean staples rather than fine dining ambition. That context makes Palate a more significant restaurant locally than its ₩₩ price might suggest. Other Michelin-recognised options in the city include Chef Gon and Le dorer, which give you a fuller picture of what the city's starred tier looks like. For Japanese at a higher price point, Mori at ₩₩₩ is the main comparison. Palate sits below Mori on price and in a different cuisine category, so they are not direct substitutes, but both serve a diner who wants something more considered than Busan's casual food strengths.
For Korean contemporary cooking at a higher level of international recognition, the Seoul comparison points are instructive. Kwon Sook Soo in Gangnam-gu and Jungsik operate in a different league on price and profile, but they demonstrate what the ceiling of the Korean fine dining category looks like. Palate is a meaningful step below that ceiling in both price and global recognition, but for Busan specifically it represents the most ambitious contemporary option at its price point.
Dress code is not confirmed in our data, but a Michelin-starred contemporary dining room in this format warrants smart casual at minimum. Think well-dressed rather than formal: no need for a jacket, but this is not a jeans-and-trainers setting. When in doubt, err up.
No confirmed information is available from our data on dietary accommodation. Given that the menu is described as contemporary and evolving, restrictions are leading communicated directly when booking. Contact the restaurant as early as possible, as tasting menus at this level require advance notice to adjust.
The kitchen operates in a contemporary French register with a free-spirited approach that shifts with the menu's evolution. If you have been once and ordered a set menu, consider asking about any off-menu or seasonal additions at your next visit. The Michelin star and rising La Liste scores (77 in 2025, 79 in 2026) suggest the kitchen's most current output is its most interesting. Trust the chef's menu rather than attempting to order selectively if a tasting format is offered.
At ₩₩, yes. A Michelin-starred contemporary kitchen with a rising La Liste score at this price tier is strong value by any Korean fine dining benchmark. For comparison, Mingles in Seoul and Jungsik operate at higher price points for similar recognition levels. If the format suits you, the price is easy to justify.
For Michelin-starred dining in Busan at a similar or overlapping price point, Chef Gon and Le dorer are the closest peers. For Japanese at ₩₩₩, Mori is the main option. If your priority is Busan's local food identity rather than contemporary fine dining, Anmok for dwaeji-gukbap or 100.1.Pyeongnaeng for naengmyeon are at ₩ and represent the city's culinary strengths in a completely different register.
Dinner is the stronger choice for a full experience. Wednesday is dinner-only, which signals that the kitchen treats the evening service as its primary format. Lunch from Thursday to Sunday is available if your schedule requires it, but if this is a special occasion visit or your first time at Palate, book dinner to get the complete picture.
Yes, with caveats. The Michelin star, the considered contemporary format, and the Haeundae setting make it a credible choice for a significant dinner. At ₩₩ it is accessible for a splurge without the financial commitment of Seoul's leading tables. That said, the small review count (37 on Google) means service consistency is harder to verify than at longer-established fine dining rooms. Book well in advance and communicate any special requirements at the time of reservation.
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Palate | Contemporary | La Liste Top Restaurants (2026): 79pts; La Liste Top Restaurants (2025): 77pts; Palate offers contemporary French cuisine that is free-spirited and adventurous in style. Its sensuous fare is based on the culinary diversity experienced by Chef Kim Jae-hoon. Ever since he boldly opened this diner in Busan, his hometown, the chef has been taking up diverse epicurean challenges while injecting freshness into the restaurant’s concept. This progressive aspect of Palate is well reflected in the cuisine it serves today. When it comes to dining, Busan has much respect for the old and traditional. This urban dining landscape makes one wonder how the chef’s ever-evolving culinary experiments will translate into gastronomic revolutions.; Michelin 1 Star (2024) | Hard | — |
| Mori | Japanese | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Born and Bred | Steakhouse | World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| 100.1.Pyeongnaeng | Naengmyeon | Unknown | — | |
| Anmok | Dwaeji-gukbap | Unknown | — | |
| Bao Haus | Taiwanese | Unknown | — |
Comparing your options in Busan for this tier.
The venue data does not specify a dress code, but a Michelin-starred contemporary restaurant in Haeundae warrants smart dress as a baseline. Think polished casual at minimum — avoid sportswear. Busan's fine dining crowd skews less formal than Seoul, but Palate's La Liste ranking and single-star status put it a clear step above neighbourhood dining.
No confirmed policy is documented for Palate, so check the venue's official channels before booking. Given that Chef Kim Jae-hoon's cooking is described as free-spirited and concept-driven, it is reasonable to flag restrictions in advance rather than assume flexibility on the night.
Specific dishes are not documented here, and inventing them would not help you plan. What is established is that Palate serves contemporary French cuisine shaped by Chef Kim's broad culinary experience — expect the format to be tasting-menu oriented rather than à la carte. If you are choosing between lunch and dinner, see that answer below.
At ₩₩ pricing, Palate sits in the mid-range bracket for a Michelin-starred restaurant — competitive against comparable single-star venues in Seoul and well below equivalent European pricing. La Liste awarded it 79 points in 2026 (up from 77 in 2025), which tracks consistent quality improvement. For the standard, it represents solid value.
Busan's fine dining options are limited compared to Seoul, which is part of why Palate stands out. If you want to compare within the city, Born and Bred offers a different take on Korean produce-driven cooking. For a lower commitment, Anmok or 100.1.Pyeongnaeng give you a taste of Busan's more regional identity without the tasting-menu format.
Dinner runs three services per week (Wednesday through Sunday), while lunch is available Thursday through Sunday only. Both share the same kitchen and chef, so quality is consistent. Lunch is the better practical choice if you want flexibility around Haeundae's other attractions; dinner suits a dedicated special-occasion visit with more time to commit.
Yes, this is one of the cleaner special-occasion cases in Busan. A Michelin star, back-to-back La Liste appearances, and a chef who has built a progressive concept in a city that historically favours traditional cooking all add up to a dinner with a clear sense of occasion. Book Thursday through Sunday for the most scheduling flexibility.
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