Restaurant in Dublin, Ireland
Smart Indian dining, worth the Dundrum detour.

Ananda holds two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024, 2025) and a 4.5 Google rating across 1,100-plus reviews, making it Dublin's most credentialled Indian restaurant at the €€ price tier. The 'Railway Journey' tasting menu is the version worth booking. Easier to secure than most Michelin-recognised Dublin tables, it sits in Dundrum and is accessible via the Luas Green Line.
Ananda is the right call for a sit-down Indian meal in Dublin if you want something more considered than a neighbourhood curry house but don't want to spend at the level of a full tasting-menu restaurant. Two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024, 2025) confirm the kitchen is operating above the city's baseline for the cuisine, and a Google rating of 4.5 across more than 1,100 reviews suggests that consistency holds on ordinary nights, not just when critics are watching. At the €€ price tier, it represents direct value for the quality on the plate. If you've been once, the tasting menu is the logical next step.
The address — Cinema Building, Sandyford Road, Dundrum — puts Ananda inside one of Dublin's busiest retail and leisure precincts. That context matters, because the entrance is deliberately understated: a narrow passageway that opens into a substantially larger dining room than the approach suggests. The interior works harder than its shopping-centre surroundings might lead you to expect, with fretwork detailing and a cocktail bar that functions as a proper destination rather than a waiting area. It's the kind of room where the design choices signal that someone cared, without tipping into the self-conscious formality that makes certain Dublin restaurants feel like occasions you need to prepare for emotionally.
The cooking is classified as Indian, but the Michelin notation points toward something more structured: original recipes and accomplished technique rather than a menu of familiar regional staples. If you've visited before and ordered à la carte, you've seen only part of what the kitchen does. The 'Railway Journey' tasting menu is the format Ananda itself encourages, and for a returning visitor it's the version worth committing to. It covers more ground than a standalone order and gives the kitchen the room to demonstrate range. At the €€ price point, a tasting menu in this tier remains genuinely accessible by Dublin standards, where the same format at venues like Bastible or Chapter One by Mickael Viljanen will cost you significantly more.
For the weekend visitor or someone planning a longer Dublin dining run, Ananda sits in a useful position on the map. Dundrum is well connected by Luas, and the venue is easier to reach from the city centre than its suburban address might imply. It's also considerably easier to book than the city's most in-demand tables. If spontaneous plans are your style, this is one of the Dublin restaurants where that remains viable, though a reservation is still the sensible move for Friday and Saturday evenings.
Weekday lunches and early weekday evenings are when Ananda is at its most relaxed. The Dundrum Town Centre generates real footfall on weekends, and the restaurant draws from that crowd, which means Saturday dinner in particular runs busy. If you're returning specifically to try the 'Railway Journey' tasting menu, a Thursday or Friday evening gives you the full experience without the Saturday-night energy that can make a long meal feel rushed at neighbouring tables. Sunday, depending on the service hours, can offer a quieter room , worth checking directly when you book.
For those who want the cocktail bar element of the visit, arriving early enough to sit at the bar before your table is called makes sense. The bar is described as swish rather than perfunctory, and treating it as part of the arrival rather than a waiting room changes the shape of the evening. Indian cooking at this level pairs well with spirit-forward cocktails, and a pre-dinner drink here is a more considered opener than the standard glass of wine at the table.
Against the wider Dublin restaurant field, Ananda occupies a gap that the city's fine-dining circuit doesn't easily fill. Patrick Guilbaud and Bastible sit in a different price category entirely and serve different cuisines. Host, at a comparable price tier, offers a Nordic-influenced modern menu that shares some structural ambition but is a different kind of meal. For a direct Indian comparison within Dublin, Pickle is the most obvious peer , also well regarded, also city-centre accessible, and worth considering if location is your primary filter. Ananda's Michelin recognition gives it a credential that most Dublin Indian restaurants don't carry, and that matters if you're deciding how much to spend and where to put your confidence.
If you're benchmarking Ananda against Indian restaurants in a wider European context, it holds up credibly. Opheem in Birmingham (Michelin-starred) shows what the cuisine can reach at the leading of the UK market, and Trèsind Studio in Dubai represents a globally recognised high-water mark for contemporary Indian. Ananda is neither of those, nor is it priced like them. It's the correct answer to the question: where do I eat serious Indian food in Dublin without paying fine-dining prices?
Ananda is located in the Cinema Building, Sandyford Road, Dundrum, Dublin 16. It's accessible via the Luas Green Line (Balally or Dundrum stops). Booking is easy relative to most Michelin-recognised Dublin restaurants , a few days' notice is generally sufficient, though weekend evenings merit more lead time. The 'Railway Journey' tasting menu is the format to request when booking if that's your intention. The venue is priced at the €€ tier. No dress code information is available, but the smart interior and attentive service suggest smart casual is appropriate. For more Dublin dining options, see our full Dublin restaurants guide. If you're building a wider Dublin trip, our Dublin hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide cover the rest.
Quick reference: Ananda, Dundrum, Dublin | Indian | €€ | Michelin Plate 2024 & 2025 | Google 4.5 (1,164 reviews) | Booking: easy, advance recommended for weekends.
If you're building a broader Ireland itinerary beyond Dublin, Liath in Blackrock and dede in Baltimore are two of the country's more interesting restaurants outside the capital. Further afield, Terre in Castlemartyr, Bastion in Kinsale, and Homestead Cottage in Doolin all merit attention for longer trips. For Maynooth, The Morrison Room is a solid option within reach of Dublin. See our full Dublin restaurants guide for a broader view of the city's dining options, and our Dublin wineries guide if wine is part of the plan.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ananda | Indian | €€ | Its name means ‘bliss’ and this smart Indian restaurant certainly feels like a haven from the bustling shopping centre in which it sits. Accessed via a narrow entrance, it's a sizeable place inside with a swish cocktail bar – and is stylishly decorated with attractive fretwork and vibrant art. The combination of accomplished, original cooking and assured, attentive service makes for a great all-round package. The ‘Railway Journey’ tasting menu is encouraged and is certainly the way to go if you want to sample as much of the cooking as possible.; Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024) | Easy | — |
| Patrick Guilbaud | Irish - French, Modern French | €€€€ | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| Bastible | Modern Irish, Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Host | Nordic , Modern Cuisine | €€ | Unknown | — | |
| mae | Southern, Modern Cuisine | €€€ | Unknown | — | |
| Matsukawa | Kaiseki, Japanese | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Yes, the cocktail bar makes solo dining viable here — you can eat and drink without the awkwardness of a table for one. The service is described as attentive rather than hovering, which helps. At €€ pricing, a solo visit with the tasting menu is a reasonable spend rather than a commitment.
For Indian specifically, Ananda sits in its own category in Dublin — there's little direct competition at this level of cooking. If you're weighing it against other smart casual dining options, Bastible in the Liberties offers similarly considered cooking at a comparable price point. For a step up in formality and cost, Patrick Guilbaud is the fine-dining benchmark, but it's a different occasion entirely.
At €€, yes — Michelin Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025 signals that the cooking is consistently above the neighbourhood curry house tier without asking you to pay fine-dining prices. The tasting menu format gives you the most return on that spend. If you're after a quick à la carte, the value equation is less clear-cut.
It works well for a low-key celebration — the décor is stylish, service is attentive, and the 'Railway Journey' tasting menu gives the meal a structured, event-like feel. It won't carry the formal weight of a Michelin-starred room, but that's often the point. For a birthday or anniversary where you want quality without stiffness, it delivers.
The venue is described as sizeable inside, so groups are likely manageable. The tasting menu format works better for tables where everyone is aligned on pace and appetite — mixed-preference groups may find à la carte easier. For larger parties, book well ahead given weekend demand from the Dundrum Town Centre footfall.
Book at least a week out for weekday visits; two weeks or more for Friday and Saturday evenings. Dundrum Town Centre drives consistent weekend footfall, and Ananda's Michelin Plate profile means it draws diners from across the city, not just the local catchment. Don't assume availability.
Yes — the venue itself encourages the 'Railway Journey' tasting menu, and at €€ pricing it's the format that shows the kitchen's range most clearly. If you're visiting once, the tasting menu is the stronger choice over à la carte. Go à la carte only if your group has conflicting dietary needs or a hard time constraint.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.