Restaurant in Paris, France
Helen
475ptsTwo Michelin stars. Book for serious seafood.

About Helen
Helen holds two consecutive Michelin stars (2024–2025) and a 4.6 Google rating, making it one of the stronger special-occasion bets in Paris's €€€€ tier. Chef Uroš Štefelin's seafood and Southern grill combination is genuinely unusual in the starred Paris circuit. Book four to six weeks out minimum — this is a hard reservation at any time of year.
Should You Book Helen?
If you can secure a table, yes. Helen holds two consecutive Michelin stars (2024 and 2025) and a 4.6 Google rating across 272 reviews, which is a strong signal for a €€€€ restaurant in the 8th arrondissement. The combination of seafood and Southern grill at this price point is unusual in Paris, and that distinctiveness is either the reason to book or the reason to look elsewhere, depending on what you want from a serious dinner. For a special occasion where you want something technically accomplished but tonally different from classic French haute cuisine, Helen is the right call.
Helen, Paris: The Full Picture
Timing Your Visit
The leading tactical move at Helen is to book a weeknight table rather than Friday or Saturday. Paris €€€€ restaurants at this level fill their weekend slots weeks in advance, and the room will be more composed on a Tuesday or Wednesday evening — service teams at Michelin-starred restaurants in France tend to be more attentive when covers are lower. If you are planning a celebration dinner, midweek also gives you a better chance of the kitchen team being fully present rather than stretched. Aim to book at least four to six weeks out; this is a hard booking by any measure, and leaving it to two weeks will likely mean a wait or a compromise on timing.
What Helen Actually Is
Helen sits at 3 Rue Berryer in the 8th arrondissement, within a short distance of the Champs-Élysées corridor but operating with a culinary identity that has nothing to do with its neighbourhood's tourist-facing reputation. Chef Uroš Štefelin runs a kitchen that crosses seafood with Southern grill techniques — a combination that reads as genuinely unusual within Paris's starred restaurant circuit, where the dominant register is either classic French or Japanese-inflected modern cuisine. Recognised as one of Esquire's Leading New Restaurants (ranked third in 2021), Helen built early credibility before the Michelin recognition followed in 2024 and was retained in 2025. That trajectory , editorial recognition first, then sustained award performance , tends to indicate a kitchen that arrived with a clear point of view rather than one retrofitted for awards.
Service Philosophy and Whether It Earns the Price
At €€€€ in Paris, you are operating in a tier where the service experience has to work hard to justify the spend. The honest read on Helen is that the editorial and award record suggest a kitchen-led proposition: the food is the reason to go. Whether the service matches the technical level of the cooking is harder to assess from public data alone, but a 4.6 Google rating across 272 reviews at this price point , where critical guests tend to leave detailed negative feedback when service disappoints , implies consistency rather than a notable gap. For comparison, Paris institutions with looser service execution at this price tend to cluster below 4.4 on Google over a similar volume of reviews. Helen's score suggests it is not leaving guests frustrated.
That said, Helen's service model appears to sit closer to the focused, kitchen-forward style you find at newer starred restaurants than to the ceremonial formality of long-established houses like L'Ambroisie or Le Cinq at the Four Seasons George V. If your priority for a special occasion is classic white-glove service with tableside theatre, those venues will deliver more of it. If the food itself is the centrepiece and you want service that supports rather than performs, Helen is better positioned.
Who Should Book Helen
Helen is the right choice for a special occasion dinner when the person you are taking has a genuine interest in seafood and is open to a restaurant with a clear American Southern grill influence rather than a strictly French register. It works well for couples and small groups celebrating a birthday, anniversary, or significant professional moment where the conversation matters as much as the food. It is less well-suited to guests who want the full ceremonial Parisian dining experience , the rolling trolleys, the extensive cheese cart, the decades of institutional memory , that you get at a place like Arpège or the classic houses. Helen is a restaurant with a strong individual identity, which is its advantage and its constraint simultaneously.
For diners flying into Paris specifically for a starred seafood experience, it is worth comparing Helen against the broader French seafood benchmark. Le Bernardin in New York remains the reference point for French chef-led seafood globally, and if you have eaten there, Helen's Southern grill crossover will read as a genuinely different register rather than an overlap. That distinctiveness is worth paying for if it matches your preference.
Practical Details
Helen is located at 3 Rue Berryer, 75008 Paris. The price range is €€€€, placing it at the top tier of Paris restaurant spending. Booking is hard , treat it as a four-to-six week minimum lead time for weeknight tables, longer for weekend. No dress code data is available from verified sources, but at a Michelin-starred €€€€ restaurant in the 8th arrondissement, smart dress is a safe default. Phone and website data are not confirmed in our current records; book through a dedicated reservation platform or contact the restaurant directly through search. For more options in this tier, see our full Paris restaurants guide.
| Venue | Price | Michelin | Booking Difficulty | Style |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Helen | €€€€ | 1 Star (2024, 2025) | Hard | Seafood / Southern Grill |
| Kei | €€€€ | 3 Stars | Very Hard | Contemporary French / Japanese |
| L'Ambroisie | €€€€ | 3 Stars | Very Hard | Classic French |
| Le Cinq | €€€€ | 3 Stars | Hard | Modern French |
| Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen | €€€€ | 3 Stars | Very Hard | Creative French |
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More French Dining Worth Considering
Compare Helen
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Helen | Michelin 1 Star (2025); Michelin 1 Star (2024); Esquire Best New Restaurants #3 (2021) | €€€€ | — |
| Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | €€€€ | — |
| Kei | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | €€€€ | — |
| L'Ambroisie | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | €€€€ | — |
| Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George V | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | €€€€ | — |
| Pierre Gagnaire | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | €€€€ | — |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Helen good for a special occasion?
Yes, and it earns that use case better than most €€€€ options in the 8th arrondissement. Back-to-back Michelin stars in 2024 and 2025 give it the credential to anchor a meaningful dinner. It works best when your guest has a genuine appetite for seafood rather than a preference for classic French cuisine. If you need a more traditional grand occasion format, Le Cinq at the Four Seasons George V covers that ground instead.
Does Helen handle dietary restrictions?
Specific dietary accommodation details are not confirmed in the venue record. At Michelin one-star level, kitchens at this price point (€€€€) generally respond to advance notice of restrictions, but check the venue's official channels before booking to confirm. Do not assume flexibility on allergies without prior confirmation.
What should I order at Helen?
Specific menu items are not available in the venue data, so no dishes can be named here. What is documented is that Helen's identity centres on seafood with a Southern grill influence, which sets it apart from the classic French fine dining format common in the 8th. Use that as your guide: if raw or grilled seafood is not your format, this may not be the right match regardless of the Michelin credential.
What are alternatives to Helen in Paris?
For classic French technique at a similar price tier, Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen and L'Ambroisie are the natural comparisons, though both carry higher star counts and steeper formality. Kei offers a French-Japanese crossover that suits guests wanting precision without full classical ceremony. Pierre Gagnaire is the choice if you want avant-garde over product-driven cooking. Helen holds a specific position: it is the strongest option in Paris if contemporary seafood with a grill register is what you are after at the €€€€ level.
Is Helen worth the price?
At €€€€ with consecutive Michelin stars in 2024 and 2025 and a 4.6 Google rating across 272 reviews, the price is justified if seafood is your category of choice. The Esquire Best New Restaurants #3 ranking in 2021 signals early critical recognition that the Michelin committee has since confirmed. Where it may not deliver full value is for guests who want a broad French menu: Helen's focus is narrow, and a narrower menu at top-tier prices requires buy-in on the format.
Recognized By
More restaurants in Paris
- ArpègeArpège is the strongest case in Paris for a milestone dinner built around vegetables. Alain Passard's three-Michelin-star kitchen sources daily from three biodynamic farms, and the menu shifts with the seasons — meaning no two visits are identical. At €€€€, it is worth booking if this specific philosophy excites you; if you need protein at the centre of the plate, look elsewhere.
- La GrenouillèreLa Grenouillère is a destination, not a Paris dinner option — two hours north in the Pas-de-Calais, Alexandre Gauthier runs a 2-Michelin-Star, Green Star kitchen ranked #77 on the World's 50 Best in 2024. Book well in advance, plan to stay overnight, and go if creative, place-rooted French cooking is your priority. If you need €€€€ ambition in the city, look elsewhere.
- Pierre GagnairePierre Gagnaire holds three Michelin stars and a La Liste score of 98 points (2026), making it one of Paris's most decorated creative French restaurants. At €€€€ and near-impossible to book, it is best reserved for milestone occasions or high-stakes business meals. Plan four to six weeks ahead minimum and contact the restaurant directly.
- Le TailleventLe Taillevent holds two Michelin stars, a La Liste score of 94 points, and one of Europe's deepest wine cellars — 3,800 selections across 40,000 bottles. Book 4–6 weeks out minimum; the restaurant closes weekends and availability is tight. The wine list is the deciding factor: engage with it fully and the $$$$-per-head spend is justified. Skip it and you're paying grande table prices for food alone.
- Guy SavoyGuy Savoy scores 99 points on La Liste 2026 and holds two Michelin stars, making it one of Paris's most decorated classical French kitchens. Dinner-only, Wednesday through Sunday, with a 34,000-bottle wine cellar and a Seine-side address on the Quai de Conti. Book six to eight weeks out at minimum — ideally three months for weekend dates.
- PlénitudePlénitude at Cheval Blanc Paris holds three Michelin stars, 99 points from La Liste, and the #1 ranking in Opinionated About Dining's Classical Europe list for 2025. Chef Arnaud Donckele's sauce-centred tasting menu, paired with Maxime Frédéric's award-winning pastry work and a dining room overlooking the Seine, makes it one of the strongest cases for a splurge meal in Paris — if you can secure the near-impossible reservation.
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