Restaurant in Nice, France
Flaveur
1,220Pearl PointsNice's strongest case for two-star spending.

About Flaveur
Flaveur holds two Michelin stars and is the most credible fine dining choice in Nice. The Tourteaux brothers cook with genuine conviction, pairing local Niçois ingredients with spices from beyond the region in a way that earns independent recognition from Michelin, OAD, and La Liste. Book at least four to six weeks ahead; demand consistently outpaces the small room.
The Verdict
Flaveur is the strongest case for a two-Michelin-star meal in Nice. If you are weighing where to spend serious money on a special occasion dinner on the Côte d'Azur, book here before considering the alternatives. The Tourteaux brothers have held two stars since 2018 and earned a La Liste score of 88.5 points in 2025, placing Flaveur in the same conversation as France's most technically serious restaurants. The cooking is bold without being theatrical, and the format rewards diners who want a meal with a clear point of view rather than safe crowd-pleasing luxury.
About Flaveur
If you have been to Flaveur before, the most likely reason to return is the cooking itself: the Tourteaux approach has a consistency that does not flatten into repetition. Brothers Mickaël and Gaël Tourteaux trained together at the hotel school in Nice and worked side by side at the Negresco under Alain Llorca before opening Flaveur, where they received their first Michelin star in 2011 and their second in 2018. Their culinary signature is a willingness to put local Niçois ingredients in direct conversation with spices and aromatics from well beyond the Mediterranean — scorpion fish from the waters near Nice paired with a broth built around vadouvan, for instance. It is a considered risk-taking that the Michelin inspectors, OAD reviewers, and La Liste selectors have all recognised independently, which matters when you are spending at this price tier.
The room at 25 Rue Gubernatis is intimate rather than grand. Visually, it reads as a serious restaurant that has no interest in performing luxury for its own sake — the focus is directed toward the plate, which is where the Tourteaux brothers clearly want it. For a special occasion dinner, that visual restraint works in your favour: the meal becomes the event, not the décor. The counter or bar seating, where available, puts you closer to the kitchen rhythm and gives you a better read on the pacing of the menu, making it a sharper choice for solo diners or pairs who want more engagement with the experience rather than a table that isolates you from it.
Timing matters here. Flaveur is closed Monday and Sunday, and Saturday service runs dinner only (19:30 to 21:15, last orders). Tuesday through Friday offers both lunch (12:00 to 13:30) and dinner (19:30 to 21:15). Lunch is the stronger practical choice for first-timers: the windows are the same length, the kitchen is the same kitchen, but you walk out into an afternoon on the Côte d'Azur rather than into a dark street, and in most cases you will pay less for a similar level of cooking. If the meal is the occasion itself , an anniversary, a milestone birthday, a celebration dinner , then Saturday evening has a different weight to it and is worth the extra planning effort, even though it means booking further out for the only dinner slot of the week.
Booking at this level in Nice is not casual. Flaveur's combination of a two-star rating, an OAD Classical Europe ranking of #306 for 2025, and a physically small dining room means demand consistently outpaces availability. Plan for a minimum of four to six weeks ahead for a weekday lunch, and considerably longer for a Saturday evening or peak summer dates. Nice draws significant visitor traffic from June through September, and competition for tables at this tier intensifies across that window. If you are planning a trip around a meal here, lock the reservation before you book flights. There is no booking method or phone number publicly listed in our data, so check the restaurant's own channels directly for the current reservation system.
For context on where Flaveur sits in the broader French fine dining picture: the Côte d'Azur has Mirazur in Menton at the very leading of the international ranking system, and further afield in France you have institutions like Troisgros - Le Bois sans Feuilles in Ouches, Flocons de Sel in Megève, and Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern. Flaveur does not compete for the same headline as those longer-established names, but within Nice itself it has no close rival at the two-star level, and that gap is meaningful when you are deciding where to eat in the city. For creative cooking with a strong regional anchor and a kitchen that takes real positions rather than defaulting to safe classicism, Flaveur is the answer in Nice.
On the question of dietary restrictions: the menu is creative and ingredient-led, which typically means the kitchen has flexibility when approached in advance. There is no specific dietary accommodation policy in our data, so contact the restaurant directly when booking to raise any requirements rather than assuming the format is adaptable on the night.
For broader planning around your visit, see our full Nice restaurants guide, our full Nice hotels guide, and our full Nice bars guide. If you are exploring more of the region's wine culture, our full Nice wineries guide and our full Nice experiences guide are worth checking before you go.
Other two-star and high-ambition kitchens worth knowing if Flaveur's style or availability does not align with your trip: La Villa Madie in Cassis sits at a comparable tier on the coast, and La Grenouillère in Paris offers a similarly personal, non-institutional approach to modern French cooking. Within Nice, Le Chantecler, ONICE, and Apopino are all worth knowing as you build your shortlist.
Practical Details
Flaveur is at 25 Rue Gubernatis, 06000 Nice. The restaurant is open Tuesday through Friday for lunch (12:00–13:30) and dinner (19:30–21:15), and Saturday for dinner only (19:30–21:15). It is closed Sunday and Monday. Price range is €€€€. Book as far ahead as possible , at minimum four to six weeks for a weekday lunch, and significantly longer for Saturday evenings or summer dates. Contact the restaurant directly for reservations; no online booking link or phone is listed in our current data.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is lunch or dinner better at Flaveur?
Lunch is the sharper value move. The kitchen runs the same Tourteaux-level cooking during the Tuesday–Friday lunch service (12:00–13:30), and two-star lunches in France routinely cost less than their dinner equivalents. Saturday dinner (19:30–21:15) is the only evening option if you can't make a weekday — just note there's no Saturday lunch service and the restaurant closes Sunday and Monday.
Does Flaveur handle dietary restrictions?
Dietary accommodation is not detailed in publicly available information for Flaveur, but two-Michelin-star kitchens in France are generally equipped to handle restrictions when notified at the time of booking. check the venue's official channels when reserving and be specific — the Tourteaux approach involves bold spice combinations (including Indian-influenced blends) that could affect certain dietary needs.
How far ahead should I book Flaveur?
Book at least three to four weeks out for a weekday lunch, longer for Saturday dinner — the only evening service available mid-week fills alongside a limited lunchtime window. Flaveur has held two Michelin stars since 2018, which keeps demand consistent year-round. If you have a fixed travel date, book the day you confirm your trip.
What are alternatives to Flaveur in Nice?
JAN (Nice) is the closest alternative for creative, ingredient-driven cooking at a high level, though at a different price point. L'Aromate is worth considering if you want a similar prestige tier with a different stylistic approach. La Merenda is the right call if you want honest Niçois cooking without the tasting menu format or the €€€€ price tag.
Is Flaveur worth the price?
At €€€€ with two Michelin stars and a consistent La Liste ranking (88.5 points in 2025, 85 in 2026), Flaveur earns its price if you value cooking with clear creative conviction. The Tourteaux signature — pairing local Mediterranean produce with spices from further afield — gives you something more distinctive than standard French fine dining. If you're benchmarking against other two-star meals, the level holds.
What should a first-timer know about Flaveur?
Flaveur is a small, chef-driven restaurant at 25 Rue Gubernatis where the Tourteaux brothers have cooked together since day one. Arrive on time: the lunch window (12:00–13:30) and dinner window (19:30–21:15) are tight by design. The cooking leans bold rather than classical — expect spice combinations and ingredient pairings that take deliberate risks, which is what earned the second Michelin star in 2018.
Is Flaveur good for a special occasion?
Yes, with the caveat that the format suits couples and small groups rather than large parties. Two Michelin stars and a La Liste ranking give it the credential weight a special occasion demands, and the Tourteaux brothers' approach produces cooking that gives you something to talk about. For a milestone dinner in Nice, this is the clearest choice at the top end of the market.
Location
25 Rue Gubernatis, 06000 Nice, France
Compare Flaveur
| Venue | Awards | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Flaveur | €€€€ | |
| L'Aromate | Michelin 1 Star | €€€€ |
| JAN | €€€€ | |
| La Merenda | €€ | |
| Pure & V | €€€€ | |
| Les Agitateurs | Michelin 1 Star | €€€€ |
What to weigh when choosing between Flaveur and alternatives.
Also Consider
- L'Aromate, Modern Cuisine, €€€€
- JAN, Modern French, Modern European, Creative, €€€€
- La Merenda, Niçoise, Provençal, €€
- Pure & V, Neobistro - Nordic, Modern Cuisine, €€€€
- Les Agitateurs, Creative, €€€€
How Flaveur Compares in Nice
At the €€€€ tier, Flaveur sits above its Nice peers on formal recognition: two Michelin stars and an OAD Classical Europe ranking of #306 give it a credential that L'Aromate and Les Agitateurs do not currently match. If your decision is purely about where the cooking has been most consistently validated over time, Flaveur wins that argument. JAN offers a more South African-inflected modern European approach and may be marginally easier to book, making it a reasonable alternative if Flaveur is full or if you want a different flavour register for the same price level.
Pure & V at €€€€ brings a neobistro-Nordic sensibility that sits at a different end of the creative spectrum from Flaveur's Mediterranean-global approach, if you want something less rooted in the south of France, it is the better fit. Les Agitateurs is the other creative €€€€ option worth shortlisting, particularly if booking Flaveur on your preferred date proves difficult. For the most value-conscious choice in Nice that still delivers quality, La Merenda at €€ is not a like-for-like substitute, the format, ambition, and experience are entirely different, but it makes a strong case as a second meal on the same trip.
The clearest decision framework: if the occasion justifies €€€€ and you want the strongest formal credentials in Nice, book Flaveur first. If Flaveur is unavailable, go to JAN or Les Agitateurs before dropping to a lower tier. If you are building a multi-restaurant trip through Nice, pair a Flaveur dinner with a La Merenda lunch for a sharper read on what the city's cooking actually looks like across price points. See our full Nice restaurants guide for the complete picture.
Hours
- Monday
- Closed
- Tuesday
- 12:00-13:30 19:30-21:15
- Wednesday
- 12:00-13:30 19:30-21:15
- Thursday
- 12:00-13:30 19:30-21:15
- Friday
- 12:00-13:30 19:30-21:15
- Saturday
- 19:30-21:15
- Sunday
- Closed
Recognized By
Explore Nice
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