Restaurant in Washington DC, United States
Le Diplomate
800Pearl PointsD.C.'s go-to French brasserie. Book ahead.

About Le Diplomate
Le Diplomate is Washington D.C.'s most credible French brasserie at the $$ price tier, with Pearl Recommended status (2025) and a serious wine list of 350 selections overseen by a dedicated sommelier. Book 1–3 weeks ahead depending on the night. The room is the point — skip delivery and dine in.
Le Diplomate, Washington D.C.: The Verdict
The most common misconception about Le Diplomate is that it's a tourist trap dressed up in French brasserie clothing. It isn't. This is a Stephen Starr-operated room that has earned consecutive Opinionated About Dining recognition — Recommended in 2023, ranked #562 in 2024, and #681 in 2025 across North America's casual category — plus a Pearl Recommended designation for 2025. At $$ pricing (expect $40–$65 for a typical two-course meal before drinks), it delivers a credible French brasserie experience in a city that doesn't have an obvious equivalent at this price tier.
If you've been once and want to know what to focus on next time: the wine program is the underrated reason to return. Wine Director Mikayla Cohen and Sommelier Benjamin Greenberg oversee a list with 350 selections and a 4,400-bottle inventory weighted toward France, earning Le Diplomate a White Star from Star Wine List (published July 2022). The $$ wine pricing means you'll find a range of bottles without being pushed into triple-digit territory. Corkage is $45 if you'd rather bring your own. For a brasserie setting, this is a more serious list than the room suggests.
Chef Gregory Lloyd runs the kitchen under General Manager Charlie Smedile, and the format is direct French brasserie: lunch and dinner daily, with weekend service extending to brunch (Saturday and Sunday from 9:30 am). Friday and Saturday nights run to midnight, which makes this a viable late option in a city where kitchens close early.
On Takeout and Delivery
French brasserie food does not travel particularly well as a category. Steak frites lose their crispness, moules cool fast, and anything with a proper sauce tends to arrive compromised. Le Diplomate's appeal is substantially tied to the room , the noise, the Parisian aesthetic, the wine-by-glass options that complement the food in context. If you're considering off-premise, the food will be edible but you'll be missing the larger part of what you're paying for. This is a dine-in venue. Book a table.
Booking and Practical Details
Booking difficulty at Le Diplomate is rated Easy, but that can shift on weekends and during peak D.C. political season. Book 1–2 weeks ahead for weeknight dinner; aim for 2–3 weeks out if you need a Friday or Saturday evening. Weekend brunch (Saturday from 9:30 am, Sunday from 9:30 am) is popular , book at least a week ahead or plan for an early seating. Walk-ins are possible at the bar, but don't count on a full table without a reservation on busy nights.
Reservations: Recommended; book 1–3 weeks ahead depending on day. Budget: $$ ($40–$65 per person for two courses, pre-drinks). Wine: 350 selections, France-weighted, $$ pricing; corkage $45. Hours: Mon–Thu 11:30 am–3 pm and 5–11 pm; Fri 11:30 am–3 pm and 5 pm–12 am; Sat 9:30 am–12 am; Sun 9:30 am–11 pm. Address: 1601 14th St NW, Washington, DC 20009.
How It Compares
Le Diplomate sits in a different tier from most of D.C.'s acclaimed dining. Bresca and Gravitas are both $$$$ venues operating at a more ambitious, tasting-menu-adjacent register , the right choice if you want contemporary technique and a curated progression, but not if you want a relaxed brasserie meal with a glass of Burgundy and steak frites. Le Diplomate is the better call for groups who want flexibility in ordering and a longer, unhurried evening.
Albi and Causa are both $$$$ and operate in entirely different cuisines , Middle Eastern and Peruvian respectively , so the comparison is about budget and occasion rather than food style. If price is a constraint, Le Diplomate's $$ positioning makes it the most accessible of D.C.'s well-credentialed options. Oyster Oyster at $$$ is worth knowing if sustainability and vegetable-forward cooking matter to you, but it's a different kind of room entirely. For French brasserie specifically, Le Diplomate doesn't have a direct competitor in Washington at this price point.
If you're cross-referencing against French brasserie options in other cities, Boucherie NYC and Scoundrel in Greenville are comparable in format. For the broader D.C. dining picture, see our full Washington, D.C. restaurants guide, and if you're planning a full trip, our D.C. hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide are worth checking before you book.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are alternatives to Le Diplomate in Washington, D.C.?
For French brasserie at a similar $$ price point, Le Diplomate has few direct rivals in D.C. If you want more ambitious tasting-menu cooking, Bresca and Gravitas operate at a higher price tier and a more formal register. Albi is the better call for a completely different direction — modern Middle Eastern with serious wine credentials. Oyster Oyster suits sustainability-focused diners who want creative vegetable-driven plates. Causa is the pick for Peruvian-Japanese, not French comfort food.
Can Le Diplomate accommodate groups?
Le Diplomate is a full-scale Stephen Starr brasserie at 1601 14th St NW, so it has the floor space to handle groups better than most D.C. restaurants at this price point. For parties of six or more, call ahead rather than booking online — the reservation system works best for smaller tables. Weekend evenings fill fast, so lock in the date at least two weeks out for larger groups.
How far ahead should I book Le Diplomate?
Book 1–2 weeks ahead for weeknight lunch or dinner. Weekend evenings and Saturday brunch (which opens at 9:30 am) fill faster, especially during D.C.'s political and event calendar peaks — aim for 2–3 weeks out in those windows. The booking difficulty is rated Easy by Pearl, but that rating assumes you're planning ahead, not calling the day before a Friday night.
Is Le Diplomate good for solo dining?
Yes, for a French brasserie format it works well solo. The bar and counter seating absorb single diners without the awkwardness of being seated at a table for four. Lunch service runs 11:30 am–3 pm Monday through Friday and is a lower-pressure option than weekend evenings. The $$ cuisine pricing means a solo lunch won't hurt.
Is Le Diplomate good for a special occasion?
It works for a relaxed celebration rather than a milestone dinner. The OAD Casual ranking and Pearl Recommended status confirm it delivers consistently, but this is a brasserie — the atmosphere is convivial and lively, not intimate or hushed. For a formal anniversary or proposal setting, Bresca or Gravitas at the $$$$ tier give you more of that. Le Diplomate is the right call when the occasion calls for good food and wine (350 selections, 4,400 inventory) without the formality.
Location
1601 14th St NW, Washington, DC 20009
Washington DC, United States
Compare Le Diplomate
| Venue | Awards | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Le Diplomate | ||
| Albi | Michelin 1 Star | $$$$ |
| Causa | Michelin 1 Star | $$$$ |
| Oyster Oyster | Michelin 1 Star | $$$ |
| Bresca | Michelin 1 Star | $$$$ |
| Gravitas | Michelin 1 Star | $$$$ |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Also Consider
- Albi, United States, Middle Eastern, $$$$
- Causa, Peruvian, $$$$
- Oyster Oyster, New American, Vegetarian, Vegetarian (Sustainable), $$$
- Bresca, Modern French, Contemporary, $$$$
- Gravitas, New American, Contemporary, $$$$
Le Diplomate is the most accessible of D.C.'s well-credentialed dining options at $$ per head, which puts it in a different conversation from most of the city's recognized venues. Bresca and Gravitas are both $$$$ and operate with a more chef-driven, contemporary format, better if you want a structured progression of courses and a quieter room, but not the right fit if you want a brasserie evening with flexibility to order as you go. Le Diplomate wins on value and atmosphere for groups and for diners who want a long, unhurried meal.
Albi at $$$$ and Causa at $$$$ are strong options in their own cuisines, Middle Eastern and Peruvian respectively, and worth booking if you're open to something beyond French. Oyster Oyster at $$$ is the pick for sustainability-focused, vegetable-forward dining and sits between Le Diplomate and the $$$$ tier on price. For French brasserie specifically, Le Diplomate has no direct peer in Washington at this price point, the comparison is more about whether brasserie is the format you want than whether a better version exists nearby.
If you're deciding between Le Diplomate and a higher-end French experience in D.C., Jônt is the city's most ambitious French-leaning tasting menu but requires significantly more planning and budget. Le Diplomate is the practical choice for most occasions: easier to book, lower spend, and a wine list that punches above its price tier thanks to Wine Director Mikayla Cohen and Sommelier Benjamin Greenberg's France-focused curation.
Hours
- Monday
- 11:30 am–3 pm, 5–11 pm
- Tuesday
- 11:30 am–3 pm, 5–11 pm
- Wednesday
- 11:30 am–3 pm, 5–11 pm
- Thursday
- 11:30 am–3 pm, 5–11 pm
- Friday
- 11:30 am–3 pm, 5 pm–12 am
- Saturday
- 9:30 am–12 am
- Sunday
- 9:30 am–11 pm
Recognized By
Explore Washington DC
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