Restaurant in Laval, France
Michelin-recognized value in Laval's dining scene.

L'Antiquaire holds Michelin Plate recognition for both 2024 and 2025 and scores 4.6 from 429 Google reviews — making it the most credible modern cuisine option in Laval at the €€ price point. Easy to book and seasonally driven, it rewards return visitors who time their visit to catch a different menu. A practical choice for anyone in the Mayenne area who wants serious cooking without destination-restaurant pricing.
If you've eaten at L'Antiquaire once and are weighing a return, the answer is almost certainly yes — provided you time it right. This Michelin Plate-recognised modern cuisine address in Laval has held its recognition through both 2024 and 2025, which signals consistency rather than a one-season spike. At the €€ price point, it sits in accessible territory for the region, making it one of the more credible arguments for dining in Laval rather than driving toward larger cities for comparable quality. The case for coming back is stronger if your first visit didn't align with the seasonal kitchen's current focus — what's on the plate now may be materially different from what you tried before.
L'Antiquaire occupies a specific niche in Laval's dining scene: it is the kind of restaurant that rewards repeat visitors who pay attention to the calendar. Modern cuisine at the €€ level in a mid-sized French city usually means reliable brasserie execution , but Michelin Plate recognition two years running suggests the kitchen here is working with more intention than that benchmark implies. The Plate designation, which Michelin awards to restaurants offering good cooking worth a stop, is not a star, but it is a meaningful signal that inspectors found the food technically sound and worth recommending to travellers passing through or visiting the Mayenne department.
The address is 64 Rue de Vaufleury, which places it within the city of Laval proper. For context on where to stay while visiting, see our full Laval hotels guide, and for a broader picture of eating and drinking in the area, our full Laval restaurants guide covers the wider field.
For a returning visitor, the most relevant question is not whether L'Antiquaire is good , the ratings suggest it is , but what has changed since your last meal. Modern cuisine at this level in France typically rotates with the seasons, meaning spring visits lean toward lighter, vegetable-forward preparations while autumn and winter menus tend to draw on richer, produce-driven depth: mushrooms, root vegetables, game, and preserved elements from the warmer months. If your first visit was in summer, a return in late autumn will give you a genuinely different experience. That seasonal rotation is the main practical reason to come back sooner rather than waiting until conditions replicate themselves.
Google reviewers rate L'Antiquaire at 4.6 across 429 reviews, which is a meaningful sample size for a restaurant in a city of this scale. A 4.6 average with that volume of responses suggests the kitchen delivers consistently across different service periods , not just on good nights. For comparison, restaurants in larger French cities often see higher review counts but similar or lower average scores, which puts L'Antiquaire's rating in a favourable light relative to its tier. Venues like Maison Lameloise in Chagny and Flocons de Sel in Megève operate at higher price points and star levels, but they are useful reference points for what recognised modern French cooking looks like when the kitchen is operating with full ambition.
The €€ price positioning matters more here than it might at a destination restaurant. In Laval, this is not budget dining, but it is approachable enough that the commitment is relatively low for a first visit and very low for a return. You are not making a significant financial decision the way you would at a €€€€ tasting menu address. That accessibility is part of what makes L'Antiquaire worth planning around rather than simply walking past.
For those building a broader itinerary around food in the Mayenne region, two nearby addresses worth noting are L'effet Papilles and Racines, both in Laval. They offer different angles on the local dining scene and are worth considering if you are spending more than one evening in the city. For drinks and bars in the area, our full Laval bars guide has current recommendations, and our full Laval wineries guide covers the wine side if you are exploring the region beyond the city.
On the broader French modern cuisine circuit, L'Antiquaire is not competing with three-star destinations like Arpège in Paris, Mirazur in Menton, or Troisgros in Ouches. The comparison set is restaurants at the Plate and Bib Gourmand level that deliver genuine cooking without the financial and logistical weight of destination dining. Within that frame, two consecutive years of Michelin recognition in a city the size of Laval is worth taking seriously. It is not a restaurant you would make a cross-country journey for, but if you are in the Mayenne area, it is the most credible fine-ish dining option the city currently offers.
Booking is rated easy, which at the €€ level in Laval is expected , you are unlikely to need more than a few days' notice outside of peak local periods. That said, if you are visiting in a specific seasonal window to catch a particular menu direction, booking a week or two out is sensible to avoid the room being full on your preferred date.
For experiences and activities in the area beyond dining, our full Laval experiences guide is a useful companion.
Quick reference: Michelin Plate 2024 and 2025; €€ price range; 4.6/5 from 429 Google reviews; easy to book; 64 Rue de Vaufleury, Laval, France.
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| L'Antiquaire | Modern Cuisine | Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024) | Easy | — |
| Plénitude | Contemporary French | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Pierre Gagnaire | French, Creative | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen | Creative | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Kei | Contemporary French, Modern Cuisine | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George V | French, Modern Cuisine | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
How L'Antiquaire stacks up against the competition.
L'Antiquaire is a Michelin Plate restaurant at the €€ price point, which typically means a compact dining room with limited flexibility for large parties. Groups of 4–6 are likely manageable, but larger parties should check the venue's official channels at 64 Rue de Vaufleury before assuming availability. For groups that want a dedicated private-dining setup, a Paris option like Le Cinq will have more infrastructure.
At €€ with Michelin Plate recognition two years running, L'Antiquaire is a reasonable solo choice if you want a credentialed meal without the financial commitment of a tasting-menu-only room. The modern cuisine format tends to suit individual pacing. That said, without counter or bar seating confirmed in the venue data, it's worth calling ahead to confirm solo arrangements.
L'Antiquaire's €€ price range and Michelin Plate status suggest a relaxed but presentable standard — think neat casual rather than formal. A jacket is unlikely to be required, but showing up in sportswear would read as underdressed for a Michelin-recognized room. When in doubt, err toward smart casual.
Yes, particularly if the occasion calls for something meaningful without the pressure of a €€€+ price tag. Two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) signal consistent kitchen quality, which matters when a meal needs to deliver. For a milestone anniversary where only a grand Parisian address will do, Pierre Gagnaire or Alléno Paris sets a different tone — but for a birthday or low-key celebration in the Laval area, L'Antiquaire is a practical and credentialed choice.
At €€, L'Antiquaire delivers Michelin Plate-level modern cuisine at a price point that rarely demands justification. Two consecutive Plate recognitions in 2024 and 2025 confirm the kitchen is performing consistently, not coasting. Compared to Paris peers like Kei or Le Cinq, you're spending less for cooking that has earned independent critical recognition — that's a strong value case for a regional French restaurant.
The venue data does not confirm whether L'Antiquaire runs a dedicated tasting menu, so committing to that format sight unseen carries risk. What is confirmed is Michelin Plate recognition at an €€ price — meaning even a full multi-course meal is unlikely to feel financially overextended. If you're deciding between a tasting-menu commitment here versus a carte-blanche omakase-style experience in Paris, the Paris options will have more format clarity upfront.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.