Skip to main content

    Restaurant in Rouen, France

    L'epicurius

    210pts

    Michelin-recognised bistro at mid-range prices.

    L'epicurius, Restaurant in Rouen

    About L'epicurius

    A Michelin Plate bistro on one of Rouen's most atmospheric pedestrian streets, L'epicurius delivers technique-led modern cooking at a €€ price point that is hard to argue with. Google-rated 4.7 from 490 reviews, it is the strongest value option for a considered meal in central Rouen. Reservations are easy to secure; request the upstairs room for a special occasion.

    Should You Book L'epicurius?

    Rue Damiette is the kind of street that makes first-time visitors to Rouen stop walking. The cobblestones, the half-timbered facades, the antique dealers spilling their inventory onto the pavement — it is one of the most photographed stretches in Normandy. L'epicurius has planted itself at number 31, and if the address alone sets expectations high, the Michelin Plate it earned in 2025 confirms it can meet them. At the €€ price point, this is one of the more compelling bookings in the city for a considered meal that does not require a special-occasion budget.

    Book it. Particularly for a date, a small celebration, or a slow weekday lunch when you want cooking that shows genuine thought without the formality of a three-course tasting ceremony.

    The Portrait

    There are streets in historic Rouen where the architecture does most of the work, and restaurants on those streets can sometimes coast on the postcode. L'epicurius does not coast. The Michelin Plate recognition, awarded for 2025, signals a kitchen applying real technique to well-chosen ingredients — not a bistro riding ambient charm. With a Google rating of 4.7 from 490 reviews, the consistency tracks across a meaningful sample size, which matters more than a handful of glowing scores from opening month.

    The cuisine is classified as Modern Cuisine, but the Michelin description gives a clearer picture of what that means in practice here: precise, ingredient-led cooking where the sourcing is deliberate and the recipes are built around letting those ingredients speak. The examples cited , catch of the day with savory-flavoured vegetables and a hollandaise scented with trout roe; a tartlet of raw cocoa with frothy praline and caramelised peanut ice cream , point to a kitchen that is comfortable moving between savoury precision and pastry technique without losing coherence. That range, at this price tier, is worth noting.

    The setting divides between a contemporary ground-floor interior and a room upstairs that opened more recently. For a special occasion, the upstairs room is worth requesting: a newer space tends to feel more considered for a private meal, and the separation from the main floor gives the table a quieter dynamic. Service is described by Michelin as gracious and cheerful, which at a €€ bistro is exactly the register you want , attentive without theatre.

    L'epicurius sits on a pedestrian street in the antique district, one of the densest concentrations of dealers in northern France. That context matters beyond aesthetics. This is a neighbourhood that draws a specific kind of visitor , someone interested in craft, provenance, and things made carefully , and the restaurant's cooking reflects those values back at them. It is not a tourist trap capitalising on foot traffic; it is a neighbourhood anchor that has earned its place on one of the city's most distinctive streets. For visitors using Rouen as a base while exploring Normandy, or for those arriving specifically to see the city's medieval core, L'epicurius is within easy walking distance of the Gros-Horloge and the cathedral, making it a logical choice for a meal before or after the main sightseeing circuit.

    Rouen's dining scene has strengthened considerably in recent years, and L'epicurius competes in a category , modern bistro cooking with genuine technique, accessible pricing , that is genuinely contested. Paul-Arthur operates at the same €€ tier with modern cuisine credentials worth considering. L'Odas steps up to €€€ with a more creative register. OKTO and Tempo round out a city centre scene that gives diners real options. What L'epicurius has that several of those alternatives do not is the combination of a Michelin signal, a high-volume Google rating, and a location that earns its keep even before you sit down.

    For context on where L'epicurius sits within the broader French fine-dining spectrum: the Michelin Plate is an entry-level recognition, below the one-star threshold held by restaurants such as Arpège in Paris or Mirazur in Menton. That framing is not a criticism , it is a calibration. You are not getting the full architectural precision of a Maison Lameloise in Chagny or the institutional weight of Paul Bocuse in Collonges-au-Mont-d'Or. What you are getting is a kitchen that Michelin inspectors looked at and decided deserved a flag , at prices that make a second visit entirely reasonable.

    Reservations are recommended. Booking difficulty is rated easy, which means you do not need to plan weeks in advance, but do not assume walk-ins will work reliably on a Friday or Saturday evening. A same-week reservation for midweek dining should be achievable without difficulty.

    Quick reference: Michelin Plate (2025), 4.7/5 (490 Google reviews), €€ pricing, 31 Rue Damiette, reservations recommended, easy to book.

    Ratings at a Glance

    • Food quality: Michelin Plate (2025) , technique-led modern bistro cooking
    • Value: Strong at €€ for Michelin-recognised cooking in central Rouen
    • Service: Gracious and cheerful (Michelin-noted)
    • Atmosphere: Contemporary interior, pedestrian street setting, upstairs room available
    • Google rating: 4.7 from 490 reviews

    Booking & Practical Details

    Reservations are recommended and easy to secure. For a special occasion, request the upstairs room when booking. The restaurant is on a pedestrian street, so arrive on foot or drop off nearby , Rue Damiette is not accessible by car. No dress code data is available, but the setting and price point suggest smart-casual is appropriate. Hours are not listed in our current data; confirm directly before your visit. For more dining options across the city, see our full Rouen restaurants guide. Planning a longer stay? Our Rouen hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide cover the rest of the city.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    • What should I wear to L'epicurius? No formal dress code is on record, but the combination of a Michelin Plate, a contemporary interior, and a €€ price point puts this squarely in smart-casual territory. Jeans are fine; trainers are probably fine too, but lean toward the cleaner end. You will not feel out of place in a blazer, and you will not feel overdressed either.
    • What should I order at L'epicurius? The Michelin guide highlights catch-of-the-day preparations and the dessert course, specifically the raw cocoa tartlet with praline and caramelised peanut ice cream. That range , fish cookery with technical saucing on the savoury side, composed pastry work on the sweet side , suggests the kitchen is most confident in those areas. Order accordingly.
    • What are alternatives to L'epicurius in Rouen? At the same €€ price tier, Paul-Arthur is the closest direct comparison for modern cuisine. If you want to spend more for a more ambitious creative menu, L'Odas at €€€ is the step up. For something more casual, Au Flaméron and Le P'tit Zinc offer different registers. OKTO and Tempo are also worth checking if your dates are flexible.
    • Does L'epicurius handle dietary restrictions? No specific dietary policy is listed in our data. Given the ingredient-led, market-driven style of cooking, the kitchen likely accommodates some restrictions with advance notice , but confirm when booking rather than assuming. The menu changes with the catch and the season, so flexibility depends on what is available that day.
    • Is L'epicurius worth the price? Yes, at the €€ tier. Michelin Plate recognition at this price point is good value by any measure in France. You are paying for genuine technique, carefully sourced ingredients, and a location that costs nothing extra. If the €€€ ceiling matters to you, L'Odas is the comparison to benchmark against , but for most diners, L'epicurius delivers more than its price suggests.
    • Is L'epicurius good for a special occasion? Yes, with the right expectations. This is a bistro, not a gastronomic destination in the mould of Troisgros or Bras. But for a birthday dinner, anniversary, or a meal that marks something without requiring a €200-per-head outlay, it fits well. Request the upstairs room, book a weekday if possible for a quieter room, and the combination of setting, food quality, and service should hold up for the occasion.

    Compare L'epicurius

    Is L'epicurius Worth It?
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    L'epicurius€€Easy
    L'Odas€€€Unknown
    Paul-Arthur€€Unknown
    GillUnknown
    Le P’tit ZincUnknown
    Au FlaméronUnknown

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I wear to L'epicurius?

    Dress neatly but not formally. L'epicurius is a contemporary bistro on a pedestrian street in historic Rouen, priced at €€, so casual-smart fits the room. Think clean jeans and a shirt rather than a suit. There is no indication of a dress code in the Michelin Plate citation.

    What should I order at L'epicurius?

    The Michelin Plate citation specifically highlights the catch of the day with hollandaise perfumed with trout roe, and a tartlet of raw cocoa with frothy praline and caramelised peanut ice cream — both worth anchoring your order around. The kitchen focuses on ingredient-led modern French cooking, so fish and seasonal vegetable dishes are a reliable call. If those appear on the menu during your visit, order them.

    What are alternatives to L'epicurius in Rouen?

    For a higher-stakes occasion with more formal service, Gill is Rouen's long-standing fine dining reference and operates at a significantly higher price point. Paul-Arthur is a comparable modern bistro option worth considering at a similar tier. Le P'tit Zinc suits a more casual, traditional Norman meal, while L'Odas offers contemporary tasting-menu format for those who want a structured progression of courses.

    Does L'epicurius handle dietary restrictions?

    The venue database does not include specific dietary policy, so check the venue's official channels before booking. The Michelin citation notes a strong focus on vegetables alongside fish, which suggests some flexibility, but the menu's ingredient-led format means the kitchen is working with painstakingly selected produce that may not adapt easily to every restriction.

    Is L'epicurius worth the price?

    Yes, at €€ with a Michelin Plate for 2025, it is one of the better-value Michelin-recognised meals you can book in Normandy. The citation describes cooking precise enough that ingredients carry the dish rather than technique masking them, which is a good sign at this price tier. For comparison, Gill delivers more ceremony but at considerably higher cost.

    Is L'epicurius good for a special occasion?

    Yes, particularly if you request the upstairs room when booking, which was recently opened and provides a more distinct setting than the main floor. The Michelin Plate recognition and gracious, cheerful service noted in the citation make it suitable for a birthday or anniversary dinner without the formality or price of Rouen's top-end options like Gill. Reservations are recommended, so book ahead.

    Recognized By

    Keep this place

    Save or rate L'epicurius on Pearl

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