Restaurant in Geneva, Switzerland
Franco-Swiss Square Dining

Brasserie du Molard is a centrally located Geneva address at Place du Molard, best suited to business dinners and dates where a relaxed atmosphere and easy booking matter more than Michelin-level precision. It is not the right choice if you need award credentials or a tasting-menu format — for that, L'Atelier Robuchon is the stronger pick. Booking is easy, and the evening sitting outperforms lunch for occasion dining.
If you are weighing Brasserie du Molard against the more formal dining rooms in Geneva, the calculus is direct: this is a brasserie address in one of the city's most recognisable squares, Place du Molard, which puts it in a different bracket from the high-concept tasting-menu venues nearby. Think of it less as a competitor to L'Atelier Robuchon and more as the kind of place you choose when you want a proper sit-down meal without the theatre of a full tasting menu. For a special occasion dinner that still allows real conversation, that positioning can be exactly right — or it can be the wrong fit if your guest expects Michelin-level precision.
The lunch-versus-dinner question matters here more than at most Geneva addresses. Brasserie du Molard sits at Place du Molard, the historic square in the heart of the old town, which means foot traffic and atmosphere shift dramatically between midday and evening. At lunch, you are sharing the square with shoppers and professionals, and the energy is faster, more casual. At dinner, the square quietens and the brasserie format earns its keep: a longer meal, a slower pace, and the kind of setting that works well for a business dinner or a date where you need the room to feel considered without being oppressive. If you are planning a celebration or a client meal, the evening slot is the stronger choice. A weekday lunch works well for a lower-commitment meeting or a solo meal before an afternoon in the old town.
Geneva's dining options for a comparable occasion include Arakel and L'Aparté, both of which offer modern French cooking at a similar pitch of formality. If you want something lighter or more Mediterranean in character, La Micheline is worth considering. For a full account of what is available across the city, see our full Geneva restaurants guide.
Booking difficulty at Brasserie du Molard is rated easy, which means you are unlikely to need more than a few days' notice for most slots. The square location helps — this is a venue that benefits from walk-in proximity if your plans are flexible, but securing a table in advance for a Friday or Saturday evening is still sensible. Geneva as a city tends to fill its better brasserie-tier tables quickly around international conference periods, so if your trip coincides with a major event at Palexpo or the UN calendar, book further ahead than you normally would.
Dress code information is not confirmed in our data, but as a brasserie in a central Geneva location, smart casual is a reasonable baseline. Geneva dining rooms at this tier generally expect you to be presentable without requiring formal attire , a jacket is rarely mandatory, but trainers and sportswear would feel out of place at dinner.
For broader trip planning, you may also find our Geneva hotels guide, Geneva bars guide, Geneva wineries guide, and Geneva experiences guide useful.
| Detail | Brasserie du Molard | Il Lago | Tsé Fung |
|---|---|---|---|
| Price tier | Not confirmed | €€€€ | €€€ |
| Booking difficulty | Easy | Moderate | Moderate |
| Leading for | Business dinner, date | Occasion dining | Special occasion |
| Location | Place du Molard, Old Town | Hotel setting | Hotel setting |
If Brasserie du Molard is part of a wider Switzerland trip and you want to benchmark it against the country's higher-end options, it is worth knowing what is available at the leading of the market. Hotel de Ville Crissier in Crissier and Schloss Schauenstein in Fürstenau represent the country's most decorated addresses. Memories in Bad Ragaz, Cheval Blanc by Peter Knogl in Basel, Maison Wenger in Le Noirmont, and Einstein Gourmet in Sankt Gallen round out the national picture for serious diners. Internationally, if you are calibrating expectations against similarly positioned addresses, Le Bernardin in New York City and Lazy Bear in San Francisco offer useful reference points for what modern occasion dining can look like at its most deliberate. Brasserie du Molard is not competing at that altitude , but for a well-located, accessible Geneva dinner, it does not need to.
Book Brasserie du Molard if you want a reliable, centrally located Geneva dinner with low booking friction and a setting that works for a date or business meal. It is not the choice if you need award-backed credentials or a tasting-menu format. For that, look at L'Atelier Robuchon or Il Lago instead. For a more relaxed meal in a genuinely useful Geneva location, this earns its place on the shortlist.
The closest alternatives depend on what you are prioritising. For French contemporary cooking with more ambition, L'Atelier Robuchon is the obvious step up. Arakel and L'Aparté are worth considering if you want modern cooking at a similar price tier. For something Mediterranean and lighter, try La Micheline. See our full Geneva restaurants guide for a complete comparison.
It works for a business dinner or a date where the priority is a good location and a relaxed atmosphere rather than formal ceremony. The Place du Molard setting gives the evening meal a sense of occasion without requiring the full tasting-menu commitment. If the occasion demands Michelin-tier precision or a wow-factor room, Il Lago or L'Atelier Robuchon are stronger choices.
Booking difficulty is rated easy, so two to three days' notice is usually sufficient outside of peak periods. During major Geneva conference weeks or international event periods, book five to seven days ahead to be safe. Weekend evenings fill faster than weekday lunches , if your date is flexible, a Tuesday or Wednesday dinner gives you the most room to manoeuvre.
No confirmed dress code is on record, but smart casual is a safe assumption for a central Geneva brasserie at dinner. A jacket is unlikely to be required, but the Geneva dining culture generally skews more formal than most European cities , err on the side of being slightly overdressed rather than under. Trainers and casual sportswear would feel out of place at an evening sitting.
No specific dietary restriction policy is confirmed in our data. The practical advice for any Geneva brasserie: contact the venue directly before booking if you have serious allergies or strict dietary requirements. Phone and website details are not currently listed, so reaching out via a reservation platform or in person is the most reliable route to getting a direct answer before you commit.
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brasserie du Molard | Easy | — | |
| Il Lago | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Tsé Fung | €€€ | Unknown | — |
| Fiskebar | €€€ | Unknown | — |
| Le Jardinier | €€€ | Unknown | — |
| L'Atelier Robuchon | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
How Brasserie du Molard stacks up against the competition.
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