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    Restaurant in Shanghai, China · Inside Capella Shanghai, Jian Ye Li

    Le Comptoir de Pierre Gagnaire

    1,460Pearl Points

    Michelin-backed French dining, book well ahead.

    Le Comptoir de Pierre Gagnaire, Restaurant in Shanghai

    About Le Comptoir de Pierre Gagnaire

    Le Comptoir de Pierre Gagnaire holds a Michelin 1 Star, Black Pearl 1 Diamond, and La Liste recognition — Pierre Gagnaire's first mainland China venture inside Capella Shanghai's restored 1930s villa. The six-course tasting menu is the strongest entry point; book three to four weeks ahead minimum. At ¥¥¥¥, it rewards multiple visits across the dining room, Le Bar, and La Terrace patio.

    Is Le Comptoir de Pierre Gagnaire worth booking in Shanghai?

    Yes — if French fine dining is your format and you have two or three visits in mind. Le Comptoir de Pierre Gagnaire, Pierre Gagnaire's first mainland China venture, holds a Michelin 1 Star (2024), a Black Pearl 1 Diamond (2025), and places at 81 points on La Liste's 2026 ranking. It is set inside the Capella Shanghai, Jian Ye Li — a restored 1930s villa complex in the Xuhui District , and the combination of serious culinary credentials, a layered venue with multiple spaces, and a wine program with real depth gives it strong replay value. For a first visit or a multi-visit strategy, there is enough here to justify the ¥¥¥¥ price tier.

    What Le Comptoir de Pierre Gagnaire is actually like

    The atmosphere is measured and intentionally warm rather than austere. The dining room draws from a 1930s French Concession aesthetic , low light, considered interiors , and the central courtyard view from the main tables keeps the setting from feeling closed in. Noise levels stay at conversation-friendly levels during service, which makes this a reliable choice for business dinners or occasions where you need to be heard. The 20-seat Le Bar reads differently: more intimate, more atmospheric, and better suited to an aperitif before sitting down than to a long evening on its own.

    Executive chef Roberto Torre runs the kitchen, translating Gagnaire's French technique with subtle Shanghainese touches. The menu is not as avant-garde as Gagnaire's Paris flagship, but it is not playing it safe either. Signature dishes include blue lobster fricassée and cocotte of frogs poulette , the latter a recurring presence on the menu that has become a reference point for the restaurant's identity. Desserts are where the kitchen takes its biggest swings: the soufflé and millefeuille arrive with unexpected components like orange blossom marshmallows and pineapple sorbet, and the pinot grigio and genoise cake covered in Italian meringue is a frequently cited standout.

    The six-course tasting menu is the clearest entry point for a first visit. It opens with caviar, moves through blue lobster fricassée, and closes with the kitchen's dessert program. For a second visit, the à la carte format gives you room to explore the beef tartare with bluefin tuna, foie gras, and Comté cheese , a dish that demonstrates how the kitchen handles contrast without losing coherence.

    A multi-visit strategy

    Visit one: the six-course tasting menu in the main dining room with the seasonal wine pairing. Head sommelier Shawn Xiao's list is refreshed regularly, pulling from Chablis, broader France, and Chinese producers, so the pairing is not static. This visit gives you the full arc of the kitchen.

    Visit two: the à la carte menu at lunch. Le Comptoir serves daily breakfast and lunch as well as dinner, which makes lunchtime the lower-stakes entry point for the food without sacrificing any of the room's quality. The beef tartare combination and the cocotte of frogs poulette are the two dishes most worth anchoring a lunch visit around. If you have room at the end, the creative desserts are reason enough to hold back space.

    Visit three: start with an aperitif at Le Bar, where the champagne cocktails incorporate local seasonal ingredients alongside Pierre Gagnaire-designed bar snacks, then move to La Terrace , the vine-enclosed patio lounge , for post-dinner champagne or a digestif. This is the visit for understanding the venue's full spatial identity rather than just the restaurant. La Terrace in particular is worth seeking out; it is a distinct space that most diners skip. For French fine dining elsewhere in Shanghai, Phénix and L'Atelier de Joël Robuchon (Shanghai) are the closest peer comparisons at a similar price tier. Polux offers a lighter, less formal French option at ¥¥ if one visit is your ceiling.

    Booking and timing

    Reservations are hard to secure. With Michelin, Black Pearl, and La Liste recognition all active simultaneously, dinner slots fill well in advance , book three to four weeks out as a baseline, and further ahead for weekend evenings or special occasions. The lunch service is easier to access than dinner, which supports the multi-visit strategy above: use lunch as a lower-friction entry point and hold dinner slots for the tasting menu visit.

    La Boulangerie within the property offers traditional French pastries made with butter and flour imported from France, which gives you a low-commitment reason to visit the venue before committing to a full reservation. This is worth noting if you are travelling and want to gauge the space before booking a formal meal. For broader context on Shanghai's restaurant scene, see our full Shanghai restaurants guide. If you are arriving in Shanghai and planning accommodation alongside dining, our full Shanghai hotels guide covers the relevant options. For bars worth adding to an evening around this area, our full Shanghai bars guide is the reference.

    For context on how Pierre Gagnaire-level French fine dining compares internationally, Hotel de Ville Crissier in Crissier and L'Effervescence in Tokyo are the most useful Asia-Europe reference points for understanding where this kitchen sits in the broader French fine dining tier. Elsewhere in mainland China and the region, Xin Rong Ji in Beijing, Chef Tam's Seasons in Macau, and Imperial Treasure Fine Chinese Cuisine in Guangzhou represent the Chinese fine dining tier at a comparable price and award level for cross-category comparison.

    Practical details

    DetailLe Comptoir de Pierre GagnairePeers
    Price tier¥¥¥¥Polux ¥¥ / Coquille ¥¥¥
    Booking difficultyHard (3–4 weeks out minimum)Jean Georges similarly hard
    Service styleFormal fine dining, experienced teamMore casual at Polux
    AwardsMichelin 1 Star, Black Pearl 1 Diamond, La Liste Top 100Varies by venue
    Venue spacesMain dining room, Le Bar (20 seats), La Terrace patio, La BoulangerieSingle-room format at most peers
    Wine programSommelier-led, seasonal pairing + premium pairing optionStrong at Jean Georges

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Le Comptoir de Pierre Gagnaire worth the price?

    At ¥¥¥¥, it earns its price point — but only if French fine dining is the format you want. The six-course tasting menu, Michelin 1 Star recognition (2024), Black Pearl 1 Diamond (2025), and La Liste placement at 82 points (2025) collectively back up the spend. If you want French cooking at a lower price threshold, Polux is the more accessible alternative.

    What should I wear to Le Comptoir de Pierre Gagnaire?

    The setting — a remodelled Shanghai villa inside the Capella Hotel with a 1930s French Concession aesthetic — signals formal to semi-formal dress. A jacket for men and evening wear for women is the safe call for dinner. Lunch and afternoon tea allow slightly more flexibility, but this is not a casual venue.

    Is Le Comptoir de Pierre Gagnaire good for solo dining?

    The 20-seat Le Bar is the practical solo option: champagne cocktails, Pierre Gagnaire-designed bar snacks, and a lower commitment than a full tasting menu. The main dining room works for solo diners, but the six-course format is better shared across a two-hour dinner than rushed alone.

    How far ahead should I book Le Comptoir de Pierre Gagnaire?

    Book at least three to four weeks ahead for dinner. The restaurant holds simultaneous Michelin, Black Pearl, and La Liste recognition, which keeps demand high. Lunch slots are typically easier to secure and give you access to the same kitchen at a lower-pressure booking window.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Le Comptoir de Pierre Gagnaire?

    Yes, for a first visit. The six-course menu runs from caviar through blue lobster fricassée to veal tenderloin, and the seasonal wine pairing managed by head sommelier Shawn Xiao adds genuine value. If you return, the à la carte route lets you target signatures like the cocotte of frogs poulette without repeating the full sequence.

    Location

    484 Jianguo Rd (W), Xuhui District, Shanghai, China, 200031

    Compare Le Comptoir de Pierre Gagnaire

    Le Comptoir de Pierre Gagnaire Side-by-Side
    VenueCuisineAwardsBooking Difficulty
    Le Comptoir de Pierre GagnaireFrenchHard
    Fu He HuiVegetarianMichelin 2 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Ming CourtCantoneseMichelin 1 StarUnknown
    PoluxFrenchUnknown
    Royal China ClubChinese, CantoneseUnknown
    ScarpettaItalianUnknown

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    Also Consider

    Le Comptoir de Pierre Gagnaire is the clearest choice for French fine dining in Shanghai at the ¥¥¥¥ tier, but its credentials come with a booking commitment and a price floor to match. If you want French cooking with fewer logistical hurdles, Polux at ¥¥ is the practical alternative, lower spend, more casual, and easier to book at short notice. The gap in formality and award depth is real, but for a weeknight dinner or a first French meal in Shanghai, Polux removes friction without a significant quality trade-off.

    Against the city's other ¥¥¥¥ option in the comparison set, Fu He Hui is the one to consider if vegetarian fine dining is on the table, it holds its own at the top price tier with strong tasting menu credentials. For Cantonese fine dining at ¥¥¥, Ming Court and Royal China Club both deliver serious cooking at a lower price point than Le Comptoir, with booking difficulty a level below. Scarpetta at ¥¥¥ covers Italian at a mid-tier spend, a different category but a useful comparison for groups who are deciding between cuisines.

    The decision point is straightforward: if French fine dining with tasting menu format and multi-space venue depth is the goal, Le Comptoir is the pick in Shanghai at this tier. If the priority is value, shorter booking windows, or a different cuisine, the ¥¥¥ options above each serve a distinct need without requiring the same commitment.

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