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    Restaurant in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates · Inside Conrad Abu Dhabi Etihad Towers

    Li Beirut

    190Pearl Points

    Two Michelin Plates. Lebanese done seriously.

    Li Beirut, Restaurant in Abu Dhabi

    About Li Beirut

    Li Beirut holds a Michelin Plate for both 2024 and 2025, making it the most formally recognised Lebanese address in Abu Dhabi. At $$$ per head, the price-to-quality ratio is solid for the category. Book a few days ahead for weekdays; a week out for weekend tables during peak season (November to March).

    Verdict: A Michelin-recognised Lebanese table that's worth the moderate effort to book

    Getting into Li Beirut is not a battle, but it does reward some forward planning. The restaurant holds a Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025 — consecutive recognition that signals consistent kitchen standards, not a one-season fluke — and a Google rating of 4.6 across 333 reviews backs that up with real diner consensus. At the $$$ price point, it sits in the mid-upper tier for Abu Dhabi dining, above the casual Lebanese options scattered across the city but well below the $$$$-bracket fine-dining rooms. If Lebanese cuisine is your format, this is the address to book in Abu Dhabi right now.

    The Space

    Li Beirut is located in Podium 2 on King Abdullah Bin Abdulaziz Al Saud Street in Al Bateen, one of Abu Dhabi's more composed, residential-adjacent districts. The Al Bateen setting matters: this is not a mall restaurant or a waterfront terrace built for spectacle. The podium format typically delivers a contained, room-focused dining environment , expect a defined interior rather than an expansive outdoor-first layout. For diners who want a meal that feels like an occasion rather than a feeding station, that spatial restraint works in your favour. The room gives Lebanese hospitality somewhere to breathe, which is a different proposition from the louder, larger formats you find at some of the city's bigger Lebanese addresses.

    The Food and What the Season Tells You

    Lebanese cooking has a strong seasonal logic that often gets flattened in export-market restaurants. The cuisine at its leading follows the produce calendar closely: spring brings fresh herbs, purslane, and early-season greens into the mezze rotation; summer leans into grilled meats and stone-fruit accompaniments; autumn and winter favour heavier stews, lentil dishes, and warming spiced preparations. At a Michelin Plate-level Lebanese restaurant, you should expect the kitchen to honour that rhythm rather than run a static, year-round menu.

    The current season is the relevant frame here. If you are visiting during Abu Dhabi's cooler months (roughly November through March), this is when Lebanese cooking with hearty, slow-cooked elements is at its most rewarding , and when the city's overall dining scene is at peak form, with more international visitors and a livelier atmosphere in mid-range to upscale restaurants. A summer visit to Li Beirut is still a sound choice, but the air-conditioned interior means you lose the outdoor terrace dynamic that some Lebanese restaurants trade on. Plan accordingly.

    For a first visit, focus on the mezze spread before committing to mains. Lebanese restaurants at this level typically show their kitchen's precision in cold and warm mezze before anything else , how the hummus is balanced, whether the fattoush holds its texture, how the kibbeh is seasoned. Those dishes are the calibration test. If the mezze is on, the mains will be too. Signature dishes are not confirmed in the available data, so treat the absence of a "must-order" list as a reason to ask the service team directly what is current , at a Michelin-recognised restaurant, that is exactly the kind of question they should be able to answer well.

    Value Assessment

    At $$$, Li Beirut costs more than Abu Dhabi's everyday Lebanese options but less than the city's top-tier fine-dining rooms. The Michelin Plate distinction is not a star, but it is Michelin's formal signal that the food quality is worth a detour , that's a meaningful credential at this price tier. For comparison, a $$$$-bracket restaurant in Abu Dhabi might deliver more elaborate technique or a more theatrical room, but you would be paying a significant premium over what Li Beirut charges. The value case here is solid: Michelin-recognised Lebanese cooking at a price point that doesn't require a special occasion to justify.

    Solo diners get reasonable value here too. Lebanese mezze is inherently a sharing format, which means a solo visitor ordering a few cold and warm dishes plus one main lands in a comfortable price range without over-ordering. For groups, the format scales well , more people means a wider spread, which is how Lebanese food is designed to be eaten.

    How to Book

    Booking difficulty is rated moderate. That means you should not leave it to the day-of, particularly on weekend evenings or during the November-to-March peak season when Abu Dhabi's dining scene is most active. A reservation made a few days in advance should be sufficient for weekday dinners; book a week out for Friday or Saturday to be safe. Booking method is not confirmed in the available data, so check current reservation availability through the restaurant directly or via a dining platform that covers Abu Dhabi.

    Quick reference: $$$ pricing · Michelin Plate 2024 and 2025 · 4.6 Google rating (333 reviews) · Al Bateen, Abu Dhabi · Moderate booking difficulty · Book ahead for weekends and peak season.

    Lebanese Dining in Abu Dhabi: How Li Beirut Fits the Wider Picture

    Abu Dhabi has a meaningful Lebanese dining scene. Almayass is a well-established name with Armenian-Lebanese crossover; Beirut Sur Mer and Byblos Sur Mer both bring waterfront settings to the category; Em Sherif Sea Café carries strong brand recognition from its Beirut origins; and Grand Beirut rounds out the mid-to-upper tier. Li Beirut's Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and 2025 gives it a credential that most of these addresses cannot match on paper. That doesn't automatically make it the right choice for every diner , waterfront restaurants serve a different mood , but on pure kitchen-quality signals, Li Beirut has the strongest formal backing in this set.

    If you want to benchmark Lebanese cooking across other markets, Amal in Toronto, Beity in Chicago, and L'Arabesque in Geneva all represent the cuisine in different international contexts. For something more seasonal-forward in an unusual setting, Base Kamp by Aïnata in Courchevel is worth noting. In Abu Dhabi itself, our full Abu Dhabi restaurants guide covers the broader options. If you are planning a full trip, the Abu Dhabi hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide are useful complements. For high-end comparative reference on what a Michelin-level modern restaurant can do in the region, Trèsind Studio in Dubai is the benchmark to know.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should a first-timer know about Li Beirut?

    Go in knowing this is a Michelin Plate-recognised Lebanese restaurant at the $$$ price point, which puts it above Abu Dhabi's casual Lebanese spots but below the city's full fine-dining tier. It sits in Al Bateen, a quieter residential-adjacent district, so the setting is composed rather than high-traffic. Book ahead for weekend evenings — the November-to-March peak season in Abu Dhabi fills tables faster than most visitors expect.

    Can I eat at the bar at Li Beirut?

    Bar seating details are not confirmed in available venue data, so it's worth contacting the restaurant directly before assuming walk-in bar access. Given the $$$ price point and Michelin Plate recognition, the operation is likely more structured than a casual drop-in format. If flexibility matters to you, call ahead rather than risk a wasted journey.

    Is Li Beirut good for solo dining?

    Al Bateen's quieter neighbourhood profile and Li Beirut's recognition as a serious Lebanese table make it a reasonable solo choice if you want a composed, unhurried meal rather than a buzzy social setting. At $$$, the spend is moderate rather than punishing for one. Without confirmed counter or bar seating details, check with the restaurant on single-cover arrangements before booking.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Li Beirut?

    Specific menu formats are not confirmed in the venue data, so it would be misleading to assess a tasting menu directly. What the two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) do confirm is that the kitchen is operating at a consistent standard. If a tasting format is available, the Michelin recognition at the $$$ price range suggests reasonable value relative to Abu Dhabi's fine-dining alternatives.

    Is Li Beirut good for a special occasion?

    It works well for a low-key celebratory dinner rather than a full-scale occasion venue. The Michelin Plate recognition for both 2024 and 2025 signals consistent kitchen quality, and the Al Bateen location gives it a quieter, more personal feel than Abu Dhabi's hotel-based dining rooms. For a group celebration requiring a private room or event infrastructure, verify directly with the restaurant, as those details are not publicly documented.

    Location

    Podium 2 - King Abdullah Bin Abdulaziz Al Saud St - Al Bateen - W32 - Abu Dhabi - United Arab Emirates

    Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates

    Compare Li Beirut

    How Li Beirut Compares
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking Difficulty
    Li BeirutLebanese$$$Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024)Moderate
    Talea by Antonio Guida$$$$ · Italian$$$$Michelin 1 StarUnknown
    Al MrzabEmirati Cuisine$Unknown
    Bord Eau by Nicolas IsnardFrench$$$$Unknown
    OtoroJapanese Contemporary$$Unknown
    MikaMediterranean Cuisine$$Unknown

    Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.

    Also Consider

    Li Beirut sits at the $$$-bracket alongside other mid-upper dining options in Abu Dhabi, but its Michelin Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025 sets it apart from most of the city's Lebanese competition. If you are weighing it against Talea by Antonio Guida or Bord Eau by Nicolas Isnard, both at $$$$, you are comparing Lebanese hospitality at a moderate price against Italian and French fine-dining at a premium. Those rooms deliver more elaborate service production and more theatrically composed dishes, but you will pay noticeably more per head. Li Beirut is the stronger value play if Lebanese cuisine is the format you want.

    For budget-conscious diners, Al Mrzab at the $ tier covers Emirati cuisine at a fraction of the cost, and Otoro and Mika both offer $$-level alternatives in Japanese contemporary and Mediterranean respectively. Neither of those carries Michelin recognition, which matters if formal kitchen credentials are part of your decision. Li Beirut costs more than Otoro or Mika but delivers a more documented quality signal in return.

    The clearest booking decision breaks down like this: choose Li Beirut if Lebanese cuisine and Michelin-level consistency at a mid-tier price are your priorities; move up to Talea or Bord Eau if budget is secondary and you want a full fine-dining production; go to Otoro or Mika if you want a lighter spend and are flexible on cuisine. Li Beirut is the most directly useful choice for anyone whose trip to Abu Dhabi includes a dedicated Lebanese dinner.

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