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    Restaurant in Paris, France

    Le Clarence

    2,075Pearl Points

    Book for the wine list, stay for the cooking.

    Le Clarence, Restaurant in Paris

    About Le Clarence

    Le Clarence is a two-Michelin-star restaurant in an 1884 Paris mansion off the Champs-Élysées, with the deepest Bordeaux and Burgundy wine list in its peer group — 1,800 selections, Star Wine List #1 (2025). Chef Christophe Pelé's surprise menu blends Breton coastal produce with global influences. Open Wednesday to Saturday only; book well in advance. Best for a serious special occasion where the wine program is as important as the food.

    Should You Book Le Clarence?

    Getting a table at Le Clarence is genuinely difficult. The restaurant operates just four days a week — Wednesday through Saturday — with a single lunch sitting (12:30–13:30) and a single dinner service (19:30–21:00) each day. That tight window, combined with consistent placement on Paris's most competitive reservation lists, means you should expect to book several weeks in advance at minimum. If you have a fixed travel window, book before you book your flights. The effort is worth it: this is one of the more distinctive rooms in the 8th arrondissement, and the wine program alone justifies serious planning.

    What Le Clarence Is

    Le Clarence occupies an 1884 private mansion just off the Champs-Élysées at 31 Avenue Franklin Delano Roosevelt. The building is owned by Prince Robert of Luxembourg of Château Haut-Brion, which is not incidental to the experience , it shapes everything from the room's atmosphere to one of the two main sections of the wine list, which is devoted entirely to the owner's portfolio of prestigious Bordeaux estates. Chef Christophe Pelé , who trained under Bruno Cirino at Le Royal Monceau, and whose résumé includes Ledoyen, Lasserre, and Pierre Gagnaire , runs a kitchen built around seasonal and vegetable-focused thinking, with a strong pull toward Brittany's coastal produce. The result is surf-and-turf combinations that sound unconventional on paper (red mullet with beef marrow and sea urchin, for instance) but reflect a rigorous, confident hand. Influences from Italy, Corsica, and Japan appear throughout the surprise set menu, which arrives as a sequence of dishes grouped around a single theme. This is not a menu you interrogate ahead of time; you commit to the kitchen's direction and let the satellite dishes unfold.

    The accolades are legitimate. Le Clarence holds two Michelin stars, ranked #67 on the World's 50 Best Restaurants list in 2023 (previously #28 in 2022), sits at #22 in the Opinionated About Dining Classical Europe ranking (2025), scored 96.5 points on La Liste in 2025, and carries a 4.9 on Google across nearly 1,900 reviews. The World of Fine Wine has awarded it 3-Star Accreditation. That is a credible stack of recognition across independent sources, not a single organisation's endorsement.

    The Wine Program

    The wine list is the most distinctive thing about Le Clarence relative to its peer group in Paris. With 1,800 selections and a cellar inventory of 5,000 bottles, it ranks among the city's deepest programs. Star Wine List named it #1 in 2025. The list is structured in two parts: one devoted to Château Haut-Brion and the Domaine Clarence Dillon stable, the other a broader France-focused selection with particular depth in Champagne, Bordeaux, and Burgundy. Wine pricing sits at the $$$ tier, meaning there are significant options above €100 per bottle, though the range accommodates various budgets. Asking to visit the vaulted cellar is reportedly possible and worth doing , it houses the owner's wines and is itself an architectural feature of the building. For anyone serious about Bordeaux or Burgundy, this wine list is not a supporting element; it is a primary reason to book. If the food alone were the draw, you'd have other options at this price point. The combination of Pelé's kitchen and this cellar is what makes Le Clarence specific.

    Who Should Book

    Le Clarence is leading suited to a special occasion dinner for two, or a business meal where the wine list can anchor the conversation. The formal mansion setting, the surprise menu format, and the price point (€€€€, with cuisine pricing above €66 for a typical two-course meal) make it a poor fit for a casual weeknight. Solo diners can book, but the surprise menu format and the room's atmosphere lean toward a shared experience. Groups should note the limited operating days and single daily sittings , coordinating a larger party around this schedule requires advance planning. For those visiting Paris from outside France, this is the kind of restaurant worth building a day around: arrive for the 12:30 lunch sitting, stay for the cellar visit, and use the afternoon to explore the 8th. For an evening occasion, the 19:30 dinner service ends by 21:00, leaving the rest of the night open.

    If Bordeaux and Burgundy are genuinely important to you, there is no comparable wine program at this food level in Paris. For broader context on the city's fine dining options, see our full Paris restaurants guide. Elsewhere in France, kitchens with a comparable commitment to seasonal produce and regional identity include Flocons de Sel in Megève, Mirazur in Menton, and Bras in Laguiole. For Paris specifically, contemporary French restaurants with strong creative programs include L'Astrance, La Dame de Pic, and Restaurant H. If Japanese-French crossover interests you, Toyo and Kei cover that ground at a lower price point. For the broader Paris picture, explore our Paris hotels guide, our Paris bars guide, and our Paris experiences guide.

    Practical Details

    DetailLe ClarencePierre GagnaireLe Cinq
    Price tier€€€€€€€€€€€€
    Days openWed–Sat onlyMon–SatMon–Sat
    Lunch sitting12:30–13:30YesYes
    Dinner sitting19:30–21:00YesYes
    Wine program depth1,800 selections / 5,000 bottlesExtensiveExtensive
    Wine list rankingStar Wine List #1 (2025), ,
    Michelin stars233
    Booking difficultyNear impossibleVery hardVery hard
    Address31 Av. FDR, 750086 Rue Balzac, 7500831 Av. George V, 75008

    FAQ

    Is Le Clarence good for a special occasion?

    • Yes, this is one of the stronger special-occasion options in the 8th arrondissement. The 1884 mansion setting, the surprise menu format, and a wine list ranked #1 in Paris by Star Wine List (2025) combine to make the meal feel considered rather than routine. The Michelin 2-star rating and La Liste score of 96.5 (2025) confirm the kitchen is performing at the level the room promises. For a milestone dinner or a serious date, it delivers. For a more relaxed celebration, the format , a surprise menu, a formal room, a 60-minute lunch window , may feel constraining.

    Can Le Clarence accommodate groups?

    • Potentially, but the logistics are tight. The restaurant operates only four days a week (Wednesday through Saturday) with single lunch and dinner sittings each day. Coordinating a group requires booking well in advance and accepting the surprise menu format, which removes individual ordering flexibility. No capacity data is available in the public record, so contact the restaurant directly to confirm group availability and any private dining options. Address: 31 Av. Franklin Delano Roosevelt, 75008 Paris.

    Is Le Clarence good for solo dining?

    • Possible, but not the natural fit. The surprise set menu and the formal mansion atmosphere are designed for a shared experience. Solo diners can book, and the wine list gives a solo guest with serious Bordeaux or Burgundy interest plenty to engage with. If you're dining alone and want a more counter-friendly format in Paris, L'Astrance or Toyo may suit better. If the wine cellar and Pelé's kitchen are the draw, a solo booking at Le Clarence is entirely reasonable , just know the format leans toward pairs.

    Is Le Clarence worth the price?

    • At €€€€ with cuisine pricing above €66 for a two-course baseline (full tasting menus will run considerably higher), Le Clarence is expensive. The question is whether the combination of kitchen quality and wine program depth justifies the cost versus peers. With a World's 50 Best ranking (#67 in 2023), two Michelin stars, and the deepest Bordeaux and Burgundy list in its peer group (1,800 selections, 5,000-bottle cellar), the price is defensible , particularly for guests who will engage with the wine side. If wine is not a priority and you want three Michelin stars for the same spend, Le Cinq or Pierre Gagnaire are the relevant comparisons.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Le Clarence?

    • Lunch is the practical choice if availability is your concern , the 12:30 sitting on a Wednesday or Thursday tends to be slightly more accessible than prime Friday or Saturday dinner slots. The menu format is the same at both services, so you are not sacrificing kitchen ambition by going at lunch. Dinner has the edge on atmosphere in the formal room. If you can get a Saturday dinner reservation, take it. If you need flexibility, Wednesday or Thursday lunch is the more bookable option and still delivers the full experience. Note that the lunch window is tight (12:30–13:30), so arrive on time.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Le Clarence good for a special occasion?

    Yes, and it's one of the stronger cases for it in Paris. The 1884 private mansion setting, a Michelin 2-star kitchen under Christophe Pelé, and a wine list anchored by Château Haut-Brion make the occasion feel proportionate to the price. It works best for dinner for two; the formal atmosphere and surprise tasting menu format reward guests who want the full evening, not just a meal.

    Can Le Clarence accommodate groups?

    Le Clarence is not well-suited to large groups. The mansion format and tasting menu structure favour smaller parties, and with only four service days per week (Wednesday to Saturday, lunch and dinner), availability for groups is limited. Parties of two to four will have the easiest experience; larger groups should check the venue's official channels to discuss private room options.

    Is Le Clarence good for solo dining?

    It's possible but not the ideal format here. Le Clarence's surprise set menu and formal mansion setting are designed around a shared experience, and the €€€€ price point is harder to justify solo when the wine list — one of the restaurant's strongest assets with 1,800 selections — is best explored with a companion. Solo diners after a counter-style experience would be better served elsewhere in Paris.

    Is Le Clarence worth the price?

    At €€€€, Le Clarence earns its price if you engage with both the food and the wine. Christophe Pelé's surprise menu has placed the restaurant at #67 on the World's 50 Best and 96.5 points on La Liste, and the Haut-Brion-anchored wine list — rated #1 by Star Wine List in 2025 — is a genuine differentiator. If you're coming for food alone and not using the wine list, Kei or Alléno Ledoyen offer comparable cooking at lower commitment.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Le Clarence?

    Lunch is the better value entry point: the same kitchen, the same setting, and a tighter time window (12:30–13:30) that suits a business meal or a day where you want the afternoon free. Dinner (19:30–21:00) gives more room to work through the wine list and suits a special occasion where pace matters. Both services run Wednesday through Saturday only, so plan accordingly.

    Location

    31 Av. Franklin Delano Roosevelt, 75008 Paris, France

    Compare Le Clarence

    The Complete Picture: Le Clarence and Peers
    VenueCuisineAwardsBooking Difficulty
    Le ClarenceContemporary French, CreativeNear Impossible
    Alléno Paris au Pavillon LedoyenCreativeMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    KeiContemporary French, Modern CuisineMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    L'AmbroisieFrench, Classic CuisineMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George VFrench, Modern CuisineMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Pierre GagnaireFrench, CreativeMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown

    A quick look at how Le Clarence measures up.

    Also Consider

    Among Paris's top-tier contemporary French restaurants, Le Clarence occupies a specific position: it is the one to book when the wine list matters as much as the kitchen. Compared to Pierre Gagnaire, which holds three Michelin stars versus Le Clarence's two, Pelé's room wins on wine program depth, Pierre Gagnaire's list, while strong, does not carry 1,800 selections or a dedicated Château Haut-Brion section. For pure kitchen prestige, Gagnaire edges ahead. If you want the most creatively ambitious menu in the 8th arrondissement and wine is secondary, Gagnaire is the call. If you want two stars plus the city's most serious Bordeaux cellar, Le Clarence is the better fit.

    Le Cinq at the Four Seasons George V is the easier comparison for special occasion diners who want a grand room and three Michelin stars. Le Cinq is more bookable than Le Clarence on short notice, operates more days per week, and has hotel infrastructure behind it (concierge support, valet, in-house accommodation). Le Clarence offers a more intimate, privately-owned atmosphere and the Haut-Brion cellar as a differentiator. For a business meal where the surroundings need to impress a first-time Paris visitor, Le Cinq is safer. For someone who knows Paris well and wants something more specific, Le Clarence is more interesting. Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen (three stars) pushes further into technical creativity and is the right choice if you want the most ambitious, technique-forward menu in the city, but it is a different kind of meal, more laboratory, less mansion dinner.

    L'Ambroisie is the alternative for guests who want classic French cooking at the highest level without a surprise menu format. L'Ambroisie allows à la carte ordering, which Le Clarence does not, making it the better option for guests who need control over what they eat. Kei offers French-Japanese cooking at the same price tier with slightly easier reservation availability, and suits diners who want contemporary crossover cuisine rather than a Bordeaux-anchored French program. For context on other Paris options at this level, see our full Paris restaurants guide.

    Hours

    Monday
    Closed
    Tuesday
    Closed
    Wednesday
    12:30-13:30 19:30-21:00
    Thursday
    12:30-13:30 19:30-21:00
    Friday
    12:30-13:30 19:30-21:00
    Saturday
    12:30-13:30 19:30-21:00
    Sunday
    Closed

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