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    Restaurant in London, United Kingdom

    Lita

    810Pearl Points

    Michelin debut year. Book weeks ahead.

    Lita, Restaurant in London

    About Lita

    Lita earned a Michelin star in its debut year and the seats — particularly weekend lunch — have been in short supply ever since. The kitchen runs prime British produce through a Mediterranean and Iberian fire-cooking lens in a sharing format that rewards unhurried afternoon tables. Book four to six weeks out minimum; this is one of Marylebone's hardest reservations right now.

    Verdict: Book It, But Move Fast

    Lita earned a Michelin star in its debut year — 2024 — and the lunch and dinner slots at this Marylebone address have been filling weeks in advance ever since. If you've already been once, you already know the answer is yes, book again. The question is when and how to secure the seat. Weekend lunch, specifically Saturday, is the hardest table in the building: it combines the format that shows the fire-cooking program at its most relaxed with the time slot most people want. Book at least four to six weeks out for a weekend lunch reservation. Weekday lunch is marginally more available, but not reliably so at this price point and recognition level.

    The Space and Format

    Lita sits at 7-9 Paddington Street in Marylebone, a neighbourhood that has steadily accumulated serious restaurant openings over the past few years without tipping into the oversaturation that parts of Mayfair now face. The room is set up for sharing plates, which shapes how you should think about the seating. This is not a venue where you settle in for a long, structured tasting sequence at a formal table , it is closer in spirit to a counter-led, fire-driven Spanish-influenced format where the table is a communal surface rather than a stage. The layout rewards groups of two to four; a larger party can work, but the sharing format lands better when everyone at the table is eating from the same plates simultaneously rather than passing across a long arrangement.

    For a return visit, the bar or counter seating , if available , is worth requesting. The spatial payoff is closer proximity to the kitchen's fire element, which changes the atmosphere of the meal without changing the menu access. If you are coming back specifically to see what has changed since your first visit, this is the seat that shows the kitchen most directly.

    What the Food Program Is Actually Doing

    Michelin's note on Lita is precise and worth taking seriously: the kitchen uses prime British produce , Scottish langoustines, Norfolk quail, Cornish lamb , and runs it through a Mediterranean and southern European lens with fire as the primary technique. That combination is not accidental. The sourcing signals a kitchen that wants the ingredient quality of a modern British fine-dining room, but applies the cooking register of Iberian and broader Mediterranean traditions. Big sauces, smoke, and bold seasoning are the throughline. Esquire placed it at number 30 on their Leading New Restaurants list in 2023, before the Michelin star arrived.

    The Cornish lamb with smoked aubergine and sheep's milk is cited in Michelin's own write-up as a representative plate, and the sharing format means a table of two will cover substantial ground across three or four dishes. For a return visit, the shareable lamb preparation is the reference point , if you had it before, ask what has rotated around it. The menu has a Mediterranean seasonal logic, so the surrounding dishes will shift while the fire-and-produce identity holds.

    Weekend Lunch Specifically

    The assigned editorial angle here is worth addressing directly: Lita's weekend lunch service is the format that most resembles a proper Spanish-influenced afternoon table. The kitchen runs the same menu as dinner , this is not a truncated brunch card , but the Saturday lunch sitting has a different pace. You are not rushing to a theatre or a meeting. The sharing plates format and the fire cooking make more sense when you have time to work through the meal without watching the clock. At ££££ pricing, the lunch sitting also gives you the full Michelin-starred experience without the evening price pressure on wine spend that a dinner booking typically generates. If you are deciding between lunch and dinner for a return visit, lunch wins on atmosphere and value-per-hour. Sunday lunch closes at 2:30 PM with the kitchen finishing at 10:30 PM rather than 11 PM, so the Sunday sitting is slightly more compressed , Saturday is the stronger choice if you want the full unhurried version.

    Solo Dining

    Solo dining at Lita is possible but not the format's natural fit. The sharing plates structure means a single diner either orders fewer dishes and gets a narrower read of the menu, or orders generously and pays for it at ££££ pricing. The counter or bar seating, if Lita offers it, changes this calculation , it gives a solo diner a natural position in the room and direct sight lines to the kitchen. If you are a regular coming back alone, request counter seating and treat it as a tasting exercise rather than a full sharing meal.

    Practical Reference

    Lita is open Monday through Saturday for lunch (12 PM to 2:30 PM) and dinner (6 PM to 11 PM), and Sunday for lunch (12 PM to 2:30 PM) and dinner (6 PM to 10:30 PM). Google rating sits at 4.4 across 338 reviews. Booking difficulty is high; four to six weeks minimum for weekend lunch, two to four weeks for weekday slots. Price range is ££££. The address is 7-9 Paddington Street, W1U 5QH , Baker Street and Bond Street are both within walking distance.

    For more London dining options across price points and formats, see our full London restaurants guide. If you are building a wider London trip, our London hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide are all available.

    For fire-driven and Michelin-recognised cooking outside London, The Fat Duck in Bray, L'Enclume in Cartmel, Moor Hall in Aughton, Gidleigh Park in Chagford, Hand and Flowers in Marlow, and hide and fox in Saltwood are all worth comparing. For international reference points in fire-forward or technically precise tasting formats, Le Bernardin in New York City and Atomix in New York City sit in a comparable tier of ambition.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What are alternatives to Lita in London?

    The Ledbury is the natural comparison if you want equally serious produce-led cooking at a similar price point but prefer a more composed, plated format over sharing plates. CORE by Clare Smyth sits in the same ££££ bracket and leans harder into British ingredient sourcing. For something closer to Lita's fire-and-sharing format but with a broader Spanish backbone, look at Barrafina or Brat — both are easier to book and cheaper per head.

    Does Lita handle dietary restrictions?

    The menu is built around prime British produce — meat, fish, and dairy feature prominently across the sharing format, including Cornish lamb and Scottish langoustines. Strict vegetarians or vegans should check the venue's official channels before booking, as the menu's identity is anchored in those ingredients. At ££££, they should be able to accommodate with notice, but do not assume flexibility without confirming.

    How far ahead should I book Lita?

    Book at least three to four weeks out for weekend lunch and dinner; the Michelin star awarded in 2024 compressed lead times significantly. Weekday lunch slots at 12 PM are your best shot at shorter notice. Sunday dinner closes at 10:30 PM rather than 11 PM, so factor that in when choosing a session.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Lita?

    Lita's format is sharing plates rather than a set tasting menu, so the question is really whether the à la carte sharing format justifies ££££ pricing — and based on the Michelin recognition in its debut year, the answer is yes for the right group. The sharing structure rewards tables of three or four who can cover more dishes; pairs should plan their order carefully to get full range across the menu.

    Is Lita good for solo dining?

    Solo dining works logistically — Lita is open for both lunch and dinner across the week — but the sharing plates format is genuinely designed for groups. A solo diner ordering two or three dishes gets a narrower read on what the kitchen can do. If you're dining alone, a weekday lunch at 12 PM is the most comfortable session, but manage expectations: this format rewards company.

    Is Lita worth the price?

    At ££££ with a Michelin star earned in its debut year (2024), Lita sits in a price tier that demands delivery — and the kitchen's use of Scottish langoustines, Norfolk quail, and Cornish lamb through a fire-led technique suggests it earns the spend. It is priced comparably to The Ledbury and CORE by Clare Smyth, but offers a looser, sharing-plate experience rather than a formal tasting progression. Worth it if that format suits your group.

    What should I order at Lita?

    The Michelin citation specifically flags Cornish lamb with smoked aubergine and sheep's milk as representative of what the kitchen does — bold flavours, fire technique, sharing format. Scottish langoustines and Norfolk quail also appear in the recognition notes as strong indicators of the produce tier. Order widely across the menu; the dishes are designed to share and the kitchen's strength comes through across multiple plates rather than a single showpiece.

    Location

    7-9 Paddington St, London W1U 5QH, United Kingdom

    London, United Kingdom

    Compare Lita

    The Complete Picture: Lita and Peers
    VenueCuisineAwardsBooking Difficulty
    LitaMediterranean Cuisine, Spanish (Iberian)Hard
    CORE by Clare SmythModern BritishMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Restaurant Gordon RamsayContemporary European, FrenchMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Sketch, The Lecture Room and LibraryModern FrenchMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    The LedburyModern European, Modern CuisineMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Dinner by Heston BlumenthalModern British, Traditional BritishMichelin 2 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown

    Comparing your options in London for this tier.

    Also Consider

    How It Compares

    Among London's ££££ Michelin-starred rooms, Lita occupies a distinct position: it is the one most committed to a casual sharing format with fire as the primary technique. CORE by Clare Smyth is the more polished choice if service depth matters to you, it runs a structured tasting menu with a level of front-of-house precision that Lita does not aim for. The Ledbury sits in a similar tier of technical ambition but operates in a more formal European mode. If you want a tasting menu with clear progression and ceremony, those two are better fits. Lita is the right call if you want Michelin-credentialled cooking that still feels like a proper dinner rather than a performance.

    Dinner by Heston Blumenthal shares Lita's interest in British sourcing but the experience is more theatrical and the format more set-piece. Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library is worth considering if the room itself is part of the occasion, the visual spectacle is a significant part of what you are paying for. Restaurant Gordon Ramsay remains the reference point for classical European structure at this price tier in London, which is a different proposition entirely from what Lita is doing.

    On booking difficulty, Lita and CORE are the hardest tables in this comparison group right now, both require four to six weeks minimum for prime slots. Dinner by Heston Blumenthal and Sketch tend to have more availability at shorter notice, partly because of their higher seat counts. If you have a tight timeline, those two are more realistic options. If you have flexibility, Lita's combination of Michelin recognition, fire-cooking technique, and produce quality makes it the most interesting first booking in this group for someone who has not yet been.

    Hours

    Monday
    12 PM-2:30 PM 6 PM-11 PM
    Tuesday
    12 PM-2:30 PM 6 PM-11 PM
    Wednesday
    12 PM-2:30 PM 6 PM-11 PM
    Thursday
    12 PM-2:30 PM 6 PM-11 PM
    Friday
    12 PM-2:30 PM 6 PM-11 PM
    Saturday
    12 PM-2:30 PM 6 PM-11 PM
    Sunday
    12 PM-2:30 PM 6 PM-10:30 PM

    Recognized By

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