Restaurant in Dublin, Ireland
Sunday Times-listed; easy to book, worth it.

Nightmarket in Ranelagh earned a place on The Sunday Times Ireland's 100 Best Restaurants for 2025, making it one of Dublin 6's most externally validated dining options. It suits date nights and celebration dinners where the cooking matters more than ceremony. Booking is easy and the location is accessible from the city centre.
Nightmarket sits on Ranelagh's main strip at 120 Ranelagh, Dublin 6, and it carries a concrete credential: a place on The Sunday Times Ireland's 100 Best Restaurants for 2025. That award matters here because Ranelagh is a competitive dining corridor, and making that list signals the kitchen is operating at a level above the neighbourhood average. If you're planning a date night or a celebratory dinner in Dublin's southside and want somewhere that has been externally validated, Nightmarket is a reasonable first call. Booking is direct, and the location is accessible from the city centre.
The venue name points toward Asian-influenced cooking, a format that has found a strong footing in Dublin over the past decade. Ranelagh itself has long attracted the kind of resident who eats out regularly and spends thoughtfully, which means restaurants here tend to sharpen their offer to stay relevant. Nightmarket benefits from that pressure. The Sunday Times recognition suggests the food is consistent enough to hold up against scrutiny, not just popular enough to fill seats.
For a special occasion, the combination of a credentialed kitchen and a residential, lower-key setting can work in your favour. You get seriousness of cooking without the formality of a city-centre institution. Think of it as the kind of dinner where the food leads the conversation rather than the room. If you need a grander backdrop for a celebration, Patrick Guilbaud or Glovers Alley will give you more ceremony. But if the meal itself is the point, Nightmarket earns its reputation.
The venue's name and likely Asian-influenced direction raise a practical question any wine-focused diner should ask: how well does the drinks list match the food? Asian-accented cooking, particularly anything leaning toward heat, spice, or fermented complexity, rewards a list that looks beyond conventional French and Italian anchors. The leading versions of this pairing lean on aromatic whites, lower-tannin reds, and natural or skin-contact wines that can hold their own against bold flavours without fighting them. Whether Nightmarket's wine program is built with that logic in mind is worth confirming when you book. If wine matters to your occasion, call ahead and ask what they're pouring by the glass. A kitchen at this level typically attracts front-of-house staff who know the list, so the answer you get will tell you something useful about how seriously the drinks are taken. For comparison, Dublin venues like Bastible and Chapter One by Mickael Viljanen have invested heavily in their wine programs alongside their food reputations. Nightmarket's Sunday Times placement puts it in a tier where that expectation is reasonable.
Booking difficulty is rated easy, which means you are unlikely to face a multi-week wait. For a weekend dinner, booking a week ahead is sensible. For a weeknight, a few days' notice should be sufficient. There is no indication of a strict dress code given the Ranelagh setting, but the award recognition suggests smart-casual is the appropriate register — overdressing is harder to get wrong than underdressing for a dinner of this calibre.
The current season is worth factoring in. Autumn and early winter in Dublin bring shorter days and a shift toward richer, warmer cooking in most serious kitchens. If the menu rotates seasonally, this is typically a strong period for depth of flavour. It is worth checking what the kitchen is running now before you book, particularly if you are planning around a specific occasion.
Nightmarket sits within a wider national picture of strong regional cooking. Liath in Blackrock and dede in Baltimore are both frequently cited alongside Dublin's better restaurants in national conversations. Outside the capital, Bastion in Kinsale, Terre in Castlemartyr, and Homestead Cottage in Doolin represent the kind of cooking that makes a case for leaving Dublin entirely. The Morrison Room in Maynooth is another name worth knowing if you're tracking serious cooking near the capital.
For broader context on the Dublin dining scene, see our full Dublin restaurants guide. If you're planning a longer stay, our Dublin hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide cover the rest of the picture.
120 Ranelagh, Dublin 6. Sunday Times Ireland Top 100 Restaurants 2025. Booking: easy. Dress: smart-casual. Leading for: date nights, celebrations, serious weeknight dinners in a residential setting.
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nightmarket | The Sunday Times Ireland’s 100 Best Restaurants (2025) | — | |
| Patrick Guilbaud | Michelin 2 Star | €€€€ | — |
| Bastible | Michelin 1 Star | €€€€ | — |
| Host | €€ | — | |
| mae | €€€ | — | |
| Matsukawa | €€€€ | — |
How Nightmarket stacks up against the competition.
Booking difficulty is rated easy, which suggests the restaurant is not operating at capacity pressure — a reasonable sign that group bookings are manageable. check the venue's official channels to confirm capacity and table configuration for parties of six or more. For larger groups, mid-week is usually the safer bet than a Saturday.
Bastible on Leonard's Corner is the closest comparison for considered, neighbourhood-rooted cooking in Dublin. For a more formal occasion, Patrick Guilbaud remains the benchmark for fine dining in the city. If you want something more casual with serious intent, Host on South Great George's Street or mae in Donnybrook are worth considering alongside Nightmarket.
It sits at 120 Ranelagh on the main strip — easy to find, easy to book, and carrying a Sunday Times Ireland Top 100 (2025) credential that signals it is taken seriously as a dining address. The venue name points toward Asian-influenced cooking, so if that format doesn't appeal, it's worth confirming the menu direction before you book. Booking a week ahead for weekends is sensible even with easy availability.
Ranelagh skews relaxed but considered — the kind of neighbourhood where people dress with intent rather than formality. Nothing in the venue data signals a dress code, so treat it as you would a serious neighbourhood restaurant: presentable but not black-tie. If you're heading there for a celebration, slightly more dressed up than your average weeknight dinner is a reasonable call.
Yes, with caveats. The Sunday Times Ireland Top 100 (2025) listing gives it enough credibility to hold up as an occasion venue, and easy booking means you won't fight for a table. That said, if the occasion demands a very high-end experience, Patrick Guilbaud or Liath in Blackrock set a higher bar. Nightmarket is the right call for a meaningful dinner that doesn't require a formal setting.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.