Skip to main content

    Restaurant in London, United Kingdom

    Le Gavroche

    175pts

    Serious French cooking. Book early, dress up.

    Le Gavroche, Restaurant in London

    About Le Gavroche

    Le Gavroche is London's most historically weighted French dining room — now at The Connaught in Mayfair — with a wine cellar that outguns most of the city and service pitched at formal celebration pace. Book six to eight weeks out minimum. Worth it if institutional prestige and serious Burgundy matter to your occasion; consider CORE or The Ledbury if current culinary momentum is the priority.

    The Verdict

    Le Gavroche is now operating from Mayfair's Connaught Hotel address, and at this price tier — expect to spend well into the four-figure range for two with wine — you are paying for one of London's most historically credentialed French dining rooms. The question is whether that credential still converts to plate-level value in 2024 and beyond. For a special occasion where the weight of the room matters as much as what arrives on it, the answer is yes. For diners who want the freshest expression of French fine dining in London right now, there are sharper options.

    The Experience

    The atmosphere at Le Gavroche sits firmly in the formal register. This is not a loud room , expect low conversation, measured service tempo, and a dining pace that assumes you have cleared your evening. The energy is deliberate rather than electric, which makes it the right call for a serious business dinner or a milestone celebration where you want the room to do some of the work. For a first date or a group looking for a livelier energy, the pitch is less convincing.

    The wine list is where Le Gavroche has historically held a genuine edge over much of the London fine dining field. French-heavy, deep in Burgundy and Bordeaux, and managed with the kind of institutional seriousness you would expect from a restaurant that has been accumulating bottles for decades. If the drinks side of your evening is as important as the food, this is one of the strongest cellars you will sit next to in the city. By comparison, newer openings like CORE by Clare Smyth have built impressive lists, but they lack the sheer depth of back-vintage French stock that Le Gavroche can draw from. For a table where the wine selection is central to the occasion , an anniversary, a deal dinner, a significant birthday , that cellar is a real differentiator.

    Cooking under Michel Roux Jr. follows classical French technique without apology. Sauces, offal, rich preparations, and the kind of structured menu that rewards guests who want to eat rather than graze. If you are managing dietary restrictions, contact the restaurant directly and well in advance , this kitchen is built around a specific culinary language, and deviations require lead time.

    Booking is the main practical obstacle. Le Gavroche operates at near-impossible difficulty , plan for at least six to eight weeks out, and for high-demand dates like Valentine's Day, New Year's Eve, or a Saturday in the run-up to Christmas, three months is not excessive. The move to The Connaught has not made walk-in access any more realistic. There is no casual counter culture here; every seat is a planned reservation. If you are targeting a specific date, treat this the same way you would approach getting a table at The Fat Duck in Bray , set a calendar alert for when the booking window opens and go immediately.

    For London French dining at a comparable price point, Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library offers a more theatrical room if spectacle is part of your brief, while Pétrus by Gordon Ramsay gives you a slightly more accessible booking window without sacrificing the formal French format. If you are willing to leave London entirely, L'Enclume in Cartmel and Moor Hall in Aughton represent a different style of fine dining , ingredient-led and more contemporary , at comparable spend including travel.

    The Google rating of 4.5 across 823 reviews is a solid floor, and the World's 50 Best placements , number 22 in 2008, number 28 in 2007 , reflect the restaurant's standing during its peak period of international recognition. That those rankings are from the late 2000s is worth noting not as a criticism, but as context: Le Gavroche's authority is historical and institutional rather than driven by current awards momentum. For guests who value that lineage, it adds to the occasion. For guests chasing the current critical conversation, venues like The Ledbury are operating with more recent external validation.

    Dress code runs formal to smart formal. This is not a room where you will feel comfortable in business casual, and the staff will notice. If you are bringing a guest who defaults to jeans, have the conversation before you arrive.

    Across London's broader restaurant scene, Le Gavroche occupies a category of its own: a dining room where the history of the place is part of what you are paying for. If that is the brief , a room with weight, a cellar with depth, service that runs at a formal tempo , book it. If you want to spend similarly and prioritise cutting-edge cooking over institutional prestige, look elsewhere first.

    Also Worth Considering

    If your occasion calls for serious French cooking but slightly more booking flexibility, Galvin La Chapelle and Chez Bruce both deliver technically grounded cooking at a lower price ceiling. For a more relaxed French format, 64 Goodge Street is worth a look. Outside the UK, the tradition that shaped Le Gavroche is visible at Hotel de Ville Crissier in Crissier and, in a different direction, at L'Effervescence in Tokyo.

    Compare Le Gavroche

    How Le Gavroche Compares
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    Le GavrocheFrenchWorld's 50 Best Restaurants #22 (2008); World's 50 Best Restaurants #28 (2007); World's 50 Best Restaurants #27 (2006); World's 50 Best Restaurants #47 (2005); World's 50 Best Restaurants #19 (2004)Near Impossible
    CORE by Clare SmythModern British££££Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Restaurant Gordon RamsayContemporary European, French££££Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Sketch, The Lecture Room and LibraryModern French££££Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    The LedburyModern European, Modern Cuisine££££Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Dinner by Heston BlumenthalModern British, Traditional British££££Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown

    What to weigh when choosing between Le Gavroche and alternatives.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I wear to Le Gavroche?

    Formal dress is expected. Le Gavroche at The Connaught operates firmly in the white-tablecloth register, and the room's tone — measured service, low conversation — sets clear expectations. Men should wear a jacket at minimum. Arriving underdressed will feel conspicuous at this price tier.

    Is Le Gavroche good for solo dining?

    It can work, but Le Gavroche is not optimised for solo diners the way a counter-format omakase would be. The formal dining room is built around table service for two or more. Solo diners will be seated and served attentively, but the social architecture of the room is pair- and group-facing. If solo fine dining is your priority, a counter-seat format will feel more natural.

    Does Le Gavroche handle dietary restrictions?

    At this price point and with the operational sophistication of a kitchen that has placed in the World's 50 Best, dietary accommodations should be communicated at the time of booking rather than on arrival. Contact the restaurant in advance — kitchens at this tier can typically adjust, but classic French technique relies heavily on butter, cream, and animal proteins, so vegan and strict dairy-free requests require advance notice.

    What are alternatives to Le Gavroche in London?

    For serious French cooking with slightly easier booking, Galvin La Chapelle and Chez Bruce are the practical alternatives. If you want comparable formal ambition at a similar price, Restaurant Gordon Ramsay in Chelsea is the direct peer. Sketch's Lecture Room and Library offers a more theatrical version of grand French dining if occasion atmosphere is the priority over culinary austerity.

    Is Le Gavroche good for a special occasion?

    Yes, this is the core use case. A meal for two will run well into four figures, the service is formal and attentive, and the room at The Connaught carries the weight of an occasion. Le Gavroche's World's 50 Best appearances (No. 22 in 2008) give it the credibility that makes it a defensible choice when the occasion demands a name. Book well ahead and communicate the occasion when reserving.

    Can Le Gavroche accommodate groups?

    Groups are possible, but this is a formal dining room rather than a flexible event space. Larger parties should check the venue's official channels to discuss private or semi-private arrangements. At Le Gavroche's price tier, groups of six or more should plan well in advance and confirm whether the format and room configuration suits the occasion before booking.

    What should I order at Le Gavroche?

    The menu specifics change and are not documented here, so ordering advice based on current dishes would be speculative. What is consistent: this is classical French cooking under Michel Roux Jr., meaning the kitchen's strengths lie in technique-led French repertoire rather than trend-chasing. Trust the set menu format over à la carte if it's available — it will show the kitchen's range more honestly at this price point.

    Recognized By

    More restaurants in London

    Keep this place

    Save or rate Le Gavroche on Pearl

    Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.