Restaurant in Phnom Penh, Cambodia
Le Royal at The Raffles
320ptsFormal, awarded, and priced accordingly.

About Le Royal at The Raffles
Le Royal at The Raffles is Phnom Penh's most formal French-Cambodian dining room, recognised by La Liste at 75 points in both 2025 and 2026, with a Google rating of 4.7 across more than 2,000 reviews. It is the clearest special-occasion choice in the capital — a colonial hotel setting with consistent service and enough culinary ambition to justify the premium over mid-range Cambodian alternatives. Booking is easy, with no significant lead time required.
The Verdict
Le Royal at The Raffles is Phnom Penh's most formal French-Cambodian dining room, and the price reflects it. If you want white-tablecloth service, colonial-era surroundings, and a kitchen that earns consistent La Liste recognition (75 points in both 2025 and 2026), this is the right booking. For a special occasion dinner in the capital, it is the clearest choice. If you want a more casual or locally-focused Cambodian meal, Cuisine Wat Damnak or Malis will serve you better at a lower spend.
What to Expect
Le Royal sits inside the Raffles Hotel Le Royal at 92 Rukhak Vithei, one of Phnom Penh's landmark colonial-era properties. The dining room carries that weight: high ceilings, measured proportions, and a spatial formality that signals this is a celebration venue rather than a neighbourhood spot. The room is built around full table service, though the bar seating — where available — is worth requesting if you are dining solo or as a pair. Counter or bar dining at a restaurant of this register lets the service team work closer to you, which translates to better pacing and more direct engagement with the menu's French-Cambodian combinations. It is a practical upgrade over a table in the middle of a large formal room.
The cuisine sits at the intersection of classical French technique and Cambodian ingredients , a format that, done well, is genuinely interesting rather than merely decorative. La Liste has rated Le Royal at 75–75.5 points across two consecutive years, placing it in the recognised tier of Southeast Asian fine dining without overstating its global standing. For context, venues at this score level sit comfortably alongside recognised regional fine dining but below the top 100 global list , honest positioning for a hotel restaurant in a city still developing its fine-dining infrastructure.
Google reviews average 4.7 across more than 2,000 ratings, which is a meaningful signal at that volume. High-volume, high-score combinations are harder to sustain than niche venues with fewer reviews, and Le Royal holds both. That consistency points to a kitchen and front-of-house operation that delivers reliably across a wide range of diner types.
Timing matters here. Weekday evenings tend to be quieter and offer more attentive service than weekends, when hotel dining rooms across Southeast Asia fill with both guests and walk-in bookings. If a special occasion dinner is your reason for coming, a Tuesday or Wednesday booking gives you the room at its leading. The colonial building also reads differently at night , the lighting and atmosphere reward an evening reservation over lunch.
Booking is easy. Le Royal does not have the scarcity pressure of a counter-only tasting menu restaurant. You are unlikely to need more than a week's lead time for most dates, which makes last-minute occasion planning more feasible here than at tighter-capacity venues. For comparison, getting a table at Lazy Bear in San Francisco or Atomix in New York requires planning weeks or months ahead , Le Royal operates on a different access model entirely.
Dress code is not formally published in available data, but a colonial-era hotel dining room of this calibre warrants smart casual at minimum. Arriving underdressed will read as a mismatch with the room.
If you are already in Phnom Penh and want to build a fuller picture of where Le Royal sits within the city's dining and drinking options, see our full Phnom Penh restaurants guide, our Phnom Penh bars guide, and our Phnom Penh hotels guide.
Quick reference: French-Cambodian, Raffles Hotel Le Royal, Phnom Penh. La Liste 75pts (2025, 2026). Google 4.7/5 (2,068 reviews). Booking: easy, short lead time.
How It Compares
Le Royal is the right choice if the occasion calls for formal surroundings, consistent service, and French-Cambodian technique in a colonial hotel setting. It is not the right choice if you want the most authentic Cambodian cooking in the city , that argument goes to Cuisine Wat Damnak (also La Liste-listed) or Malis, both of which offer a more direct expression of Cambodian cuisine at a lower price point.
Chanrey Tree and Damnak Meas are worth considering if you want a mid-range Cambodian dinner without the hotel dining room premium. Neither carries Le Royal's formal setting or La Liste credentials, but both are easier on budget for a multi-night trip where you are eating out daily.
Bayon Pastry School in Siem Reap serves a different purpose entirely , it is a social enterprise training programme rather than a fine-dining destination , but if your Cambodia itinerary includes Siem Reap, it is worth a visit for context on the country's culinary development. For the special-occasion, celebration-dinner brief in Phnom Penh specifically, Le Royal at The Raffles is the clearest answer in the current market.
More from Pearl
- Our full Phnom Penh restaurants guide
- Our full Phnom Penh hotels guide
- Our full Phnom Penh bars guide
- Our full Phnom Penh experiences guide
- Our full Phnom Penh wineries guide
- Cuisine Wat Damnak in Siem Reap
- Bayon Pastry School in Siem Reap
- Alain Ducasse at Louis XV, Monte Carlo , for context on French fine dining at the leading of the La Liste table
- Arpège in Paris
- Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen
Compare Le Royal at The Raffles
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Le Royal at The Raffles | Easy | — | |
| Cuisine Wat Damnak | Unknown | — | |
| Malis | Unknown | — | |
| Bayon Pastry School | Unknown | — | |
| Chanrey Tree | Unknown | — | |
| Damnak Meas | Unknown | — |
A quick look at how Le Royal at The Raffles measures up.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I order at Le Royal at The Raffles?
The kitchen works across French and Cambodian culinary traditions, so dishes that bridge both cuisines are the reason to be here rather than at a straight French brasserie. The La Liste recognition (75pts in both 2025 and 2026) points to consistency rather than a single breakout dish. Ask your server what is running as a signature that week — in a room at this price point, that question will get a real answer.
Is Le Royal at The Raffles good for solo dining?
A formal colonial dining room inside the Raffles is not the natural habitat for solo diners looking for an easy, low-key meal. It works if you are comfortable with white-tablecloth service on your own and want a considered dinner rather than a social one. For solo diners after something less ceremonial, Cuisine Wat Damnak or Chanrey Tree offer a similarly serious approach to Cambodian food in a less formal setting.
Is Le Royal at The Raffles good for a special occasion?
Yes — this is the clearest use case. Le Royal is Phnom Penh's most formal French-Cambodian dining room, set inside one of the city's landmark colonial-era hotel properties, and La Liste has placed it among the top restaurants globally for two consecutive years. For an anniversary, a business dinner, or a celebration where the setting needs to do work, it delivers. Book well in advance.
What should a first-timer know about Le Royal at The Raffles?
The address is 92 Rukhak Vithei, inside the Raffles Hotel Le Royal — allow time to find parking or arrange a tuk-tuk drop-off, as the property is set back from the main road. The cuisine spans French and Cambodian, so expect a menu that may read differently from a standard hotel restaurant. Dress to match the room: this is a formal dining environment, and the La Liste standing signals that the kitchen takes the food seriously.
What are alternatives to Le Royal at The Raffles in Phnom Penh?
Cuisine Wat Damnak is the strongest alternative for serious Cambodian cooking with a tasting-menu format and lower formality. Malis covers Cambodian cuisine at a broader, more accessible price point across multiple courses. Chanrey Tree is worth considering for modern Cambodian in a more relaxed setting. Damnak Meas offers a different register entirely. None of them match Le Royal's colonial hotel backdrop, but Cuisine Wat Damnak is the closest peer on culinary ambition.
Can I eat at the bar at Le Royal at The Raffles?
The Raffles Hotel Le Royal has a separate bar area — the Elephant Bar is a known feature of the property — but whether the full Le Royal dining menu is available there is not confirmed in current venue data. If a bar seat matters to you, call ahead or ask at the hotel front desk when you arrive. For walk-in drinks without a dinner commitment, the Elephant Bar is the practical option.
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