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    Restaurant in Paris, France

    L’As du Fallafel

    125pts

    No booking needed. Bring cash, join queue.

    L’As du Fallafel, Restaurant in Paris

    About L’As du Fallafel

    L'As du Fallafel on Rue des Rosiers is Paris's most-cited cheap eats address for Middle Eastern food, ranked in Opinionated About Dining's Europe list in both 2023 and 2024. No booking required, no meaningful spend, and a 4.3 Google rating across nearly 14,000 reviews. Check hours before you go — it's closed Saturday and closes at 5 pm on Fridays.

    Verdict

    L'As du Fallafel is the right call if you want one of Paris's most consistent Middle Eastern sandwiches without any booking friction or meaningful spend. Ranked #28 in Opinionated About Dining's Cheap Eats in Europe in 2023 and #45 in 2024, it holds a verifiable position in the European cheap eats conversation that most street-food spots in the Marais never reach. Walk in, queue, eat. The barrier to entry is a few euros and whatever time you have on a weekday or Sunday.

    What Makes It Worth the Queue

    The case for L'As du Fallafel rests on execution, not novelty. Falafel as a category is not hard to find in Paris, but consistent falafel at this level of recognition — twice listed by Opinionated About Dining across consecutive years — is rarer. The Rue des Rosiers address puts it at the centre of the 4th arrondissement's Jewish quarter, a neighbourhood with a long history of Middle Eastern food that gives the kitchen a clear tradition to work within. The quality benchmark here is set against that local competition, and the OAD rankings suggest it clears it comfortably.

    The physical setup is what you'd expect from a high-volume street counter: tight, fast, and built for throughput rather than lingering. If you're looking for a sit-down meal with space between tables, this is not the format. The experience is counter-service, often with a queue extending onto the street, and seating is limited. Come with that expectation and it's entirely fine; come expecting a leisurely lunch and you'll be frustrated. For solo diners or pairs who are happy eating standing or finding a nearby spot, this works well. Groups of four or more will find the format less comfortable.

    Friday hours cut off at 5 pm and Saturday is closed entirely, which matters more than it might seem. If your Paris weekend runs Friday evening through Sunday, you have exactly one viable window: Sunday, when the venue runs its full 11 am to 11 pm schedule. Miss that and you're looking at the Monday-to-Thursday window. Plan around this before you show up on a Saturday and find the shutters down.

    For comparison in the Middle Eastern category beyond Paris, Baron in Doha and Bait Maryam in Dubai represent what the format looks like when it moves upmarket. L'As du Fallafel is not trying to be either of those, and that's the point , the value proposition is precision at low cost, not an refined experience.

    Within Paris's broader dining scene, the contrast with the city's fine-dining tier is significant. Venues like Le Cinq at the Four Seasons George V, Arpège, and L'Ambroisie require weeks of advance planning and multi-course commitments. L'As du Fallafel asks for none of that. It fits a different slot in your Paris itinerary , the lunch you don't have to think about, the meal between museums, the thing you eat before a longer evening reservation. France's broader restaurant tradition includes destinations like Mirazur in Menton, Bras in Laguiole, and Flocons de Sel in Megève , none of which compete with L'As du Fallafel on price or format, but all of which benefit from the same trip-planning logic: know the format, book accordingly, and match the venue to the moment.

    Google reviews sit at 4.3 across 13,677 ratings, which at that volume is a meaningful signal rather than a small-sample outlier. That kind of consistency across a large review base suggests the kitchen is not having off days at the frequency that would pull the average down.

    For the full picture of what Paris offers across all formats and price points, see our full Paris restaurants guide, our full Paris hotels guide, our full Paris bars guide, and our full Paris experiences guide.

    Quick reference: No booking required. Open Mon–Thu and Sun 11 am–11 pm; Fri until 5 pm; closed Saturday. Queue expected at peak hours. Counter-service format, limited seating.

    FAQ

    • What should I order at L'As du Fallafel? The falafel sandwich is the reason people come , that's the core item and the one the OAD ranking is built around. No specific menu items are confirmed in available data beyond the venue's Middle Eastern format, so arrive knowing the falafel is the anchor order and let the counter staff guide you on current options.
    • What are alternatives to L'As du Fallafel in Paris? For Middle Eastern food in Paris, the Marais and surrounding arrondissements have several competitors. L'As du Fallafel's OAD ranking places it above most of them for 2023, so it's the benchmark in the category locally. If you want a sit-down Middle Eastern meal with more space and service, you'll need to look outside the Rue des Rosiers counter format. For a complete contrast, Kei or Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen cover the fine-dining end of the city's spectrum.
    • What should a first-timer know about L'As du Fallafel? Check the hours before you go , Friday cuts off at 5 pm and Saturday is a full closure. Come ready to queue, especially at lunch. The format is counter-service, not table service, so this is a casual eat rather than a sit-down meal. The Google rating of 4.3 across nearly 14,000 reviews and two consecutive OAD Cheap Eats rankings give you confidence you're not walking into a tourist trap.
    • Is L'As du Fallafel good for solo dining? Yes, this is one of the better solo-dining formats in Paris's casual category. No reservation, no minimum spend, no odd-number awkwardness. You queue, you order, you eat. The limited seating means you might stand or take your food nearby, but for a solo traveller fitting in a quick lunch between other plans, the format works cleanly.
    • Is lunch or dinner better at L'As du Fallafel? Lunch tends to draw the heavier queue given foot traffic in the Marais, so if you want a shorter wait, a weekday dinner (Monday through Thursday, or Sunday) is the practical call. Friday dinner is not an option given the 5 pm close. The food does not change by time of day, so this is purely a queue-management decision.
    • Is L'As du Fallafel good for a special occasion? Not in the traditional sense. There is no atmosphere built around celebration, no tableside service, and no private space. If a special occasion means a proper sit-down meal with service and a wine list, look at Le Cinq or L'Ambroisie instead. That said, if a special occasion means eating something genuinely good at near-zero cost in one of Paris's most characterful streets, L'As du Fallafel delivers that specific thing well.
    • Does L'As du Fallafel handle dietary restrictions? The falafel format is naturally plant-based, which makes it a strong option for vegetarians and vegans in a city where those diets can be harder to feed cheaply. Beyond that, no specific dietary accommodation data is available. If you have allergy concerns, no phone or website data is available to confirm directly , your leading option is to ask at the counter on arrival.

    Compare L’As du Fallafel

    Award Winners Like L’As du Fallafel
    VenueAwardsPriceValue
    L’As du FallafelOpinionated About Dining Cheap Eats in Europe Ranked #45 (2024); Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats in Europe Ranked #28 (2023)
    PlénitudeMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best€€€€
    Pierre GagnaireMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best€€€€
    Alléno Paris au Pavillon LedoyenMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best€€€€
    KeiMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best€€€€
    Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George VMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best€€€€

    What to weigh when choosing between L’As du Fallafel and alternatives.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Does L’As du Fallafel handle dietary restrictions?

    Dietary accommodations can vary. Flag restrictions in advance via the venue's official channels.

    What should I order at L'As du Fallafel?

    The falafel sandwich is the reason to come — it's what earned L'As du Fallafel a #45 ranking on Opinionated About Dining's Cheap Eats in Europe list for 2024. Shawarma is also on the menu, but first-timers should start with the falafel. Keep it simple; the format here is counter service, not a sit-down menu.

    What are alternatives to L'As du Fallafel in Paris?

    Mi-Va-Mi, a few doors down on Rue des Rosiers, is the most direct competitor and draws loyal regulars who prefer it for slightly shorter queues. For a sit-down Middle Eastern meal rather than a sandwich on the go, the broader Marais neighbourhood has more options. L'As du Fallafel's OAD ranking distinguishes it for consistent execution at the counter-service level specifically.

    What should a first-timer know about L'As du Fallafel?

    No reservations, no table service — this is a queue-and-order operation at 34 Rue des Rosiers in the 4th arrondissement. It's closed on Saturdays and closes at 5 pm on Fridays, so plan around those hours. Lunchtime queues can stretch down the street on weekdays; arriving before noon or after 2 pm cuts wait time meaningfully.

    Hours

    Monday
    11 am–11 pm
    Tuesday
    11 am–11 pm
    Wednesday
    11 am–11 pm
    Thursday
    11 am–11 pm
    Friday
    11 am–5 pm
    Saturday
    Closed
    Sunday
    11 am–11 pm

    Recognized By

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