Skip to main content

    Restaurant in London, United Kingdom

    Hoppers

    475Pearl Points

    Great value Sri Lankan; book ahead.

    Hoppers, Restaurant in London

    About Hoppers

    Hoppers at 49 Frith Street holds back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition (2024 and 2025) and delivers Sri Lankan and South Indian cooking at ££ per head in Soho. Compared to the broader Sethi portfolio — Gymkhana for formal occasions, Trishna for seafood — this is the address for fast, flavour-forward Sri Lankan cooking that punches well above its price tier.

    Should You Book Hoppers?

    If you've been once, you already know the answer is yes. The question on a return visit is whether the kitchen and service still hold up against the original impression, or whether the three-branch expansion has diluted what made the Frith Street original worth queuing for. The short answer: the Soho location still earns its Michelin Bib Gourmand — collected in both 2024 and 2025 — and the value at ££ per head remains hard to argue with in central London. Come back and order differently this time.

    What Hoppers Actually Is

    Hoppers is a Sri Lankan and South Indian restaurant from the Sethi family, who also run Trishna and Gymkhana. The name comes from the signature dish: bowl-shaped pancakes made from fermented rice and coconut milk, leading eaten with a creamy kari spooned into the well. The format sits somewhere between a casual street-food canteen and a considered neighbourhood restaurant. The room, modelled loosely on the toddy shops of Sri Lanka's coconut plantations, has a terracotta-tiled floor, rattan ceiling, and Sri Lankan poster art. It feels deliberate without feeling themed , a difficult balance that most restaurants in this category get wrong.

    The menu is concise. A glossary at the bottom helps first-timers decode the terminology, but if this is your second visit, skip straight to the 'short eats' and build around one of the rice and coconut hoppers. The kitchen's style runs spicy, fragrant, and layered , dry-fried proteins with curry leaves and chillies, wet karis with depth from roasted spice bases, and kothu dishes built around chopped roti stir-fried with whatever protein is on the day's menu. Goraka, a sun-dried and smoked fruit native to Sri Lanka, shows up in the black pork kari and gives it a sour, smoky finish that separates it from anything you'd get at a generic South Asian restaurant. That dish, served with dhal, sambols, raita, and a hopper, is the one to order if you didn't manage it last time.

    Service: Does It Earn the Price?

    This is where Hoppers earns genuine credit. The service model is informal but attentive , staff know the menu cold, will steer first-timers toward a set menu without making it feel like an upsell, and handle a packed, buzzy room without losing pace. For a restaurant at this price tier in Soho, that's not a given. You won't get the tableside theatre of a Michelin two-star, but you also won't feel rushed or ignored. The ratio of knowledge to warmth is well-calibrated. If you're arriving as a returning guest with questions about specific dishes or what's changed on the menu seasonally, the floor team tends to be genuinely helpful rather than scripted.

    The drinks list is short: eight wines, a focused cocktail menu leaning on Ceylon Arrack (a Sri Lankan coconut-based spirit), and own-brand beers. An affordable carafe of Rhône rosé handles the food well if you want wine without overthinking it. The cocktails are the more interesting choice if you haven't tried them.

    What's Changed Since the Original Opening

    Hoppers launched in 2015 and has since expanded to three London sites. The Frith Street original remains the reference point. The kitchen's approach to Sri Lankan flavours has stayed consistent in its fundamentals , the hopper itself, the spice architecture, the reliance on sambols and dhal as accompaniments , while seasonal variations (pheasant chilli fry replacing the signature beef rib fry, for instance) show the kitchen still evolving rather than running on autopilot. That seasonal flexibility is worth factoring into your decision to return: the menu you ate in a previous visit won't be identical to the one you find now.

    Who Should Book

    Hoppers works for solo diners who want to eat well at the counter without committing to a long format, for pairs who want a fast, flavour-forward lunch in Soho, and for small groups wanting to share across the full menu. It is not the right call for a formal celebration dinner or anyone who wants a quiet room , the space is compact and the atmosphere is consistently lively. For a special occasion at the Sethi family level, Gymkhana is the better address. For Sri Lankan cooking at this price in London, Hoppers is the clear first choice.

    Practical Details

    Reservations: Bookings available; walk-ins possible but the room is small, so booking ahead is advisable especially for dinner. Hours: Monday dinner only (5:30–10pm); Tuesday to Thursday lunch and dinner (12–3pm, 5:30–10pm); Friday lunch and dinner (12–3pm, 5–10:45pm); Saturday all-day (12–10:45pm); Sunday all-day (12–9pm). Price: ££ per head , genuinely good value for Soho at Bib Gourmand standard. Address: 49 Frith St, London W1D 4SG. Dress: Casual; no dress code enforced. Good for: Solo dining, pairs, small groups, quick lunches, Sri Lankan and South Indian cuisine.

    Pearl Rating Context

    Hoppers holds a Google rating of 4.5 from 2,878 reviews , a strong signal of consistent execution rather than occasional brilliance. Combined with back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition (2024 and 2025), it sits in a reliable tier: not chasing formal fine dining credentials, but delivering quality and value at a level that most restaurants at this price point in central London don't match.

    For more London dining options across all price tiers, see our full London restaurants guide. If you're planning a broader trip, our London hotels guide, London bars guide, and London experiences guide cover the rest. For comparison with other UK destinations, see venues like The Fat Duck in Bray, L'Enclume in Cartmel, and Moor Hall in Aughton for a sense of where UK dining goes at the leading end.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How far ahead should I book Hoppers?

    Book at least a week ahead for dinner, two weeks for Friday or Saturday. The room is small and fills quickly, particularly at the Frith Street original. Walk-ins are possible at lunch on quieter weekdays, but don't rely on it for a group or a weekend evening.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Hoppers?

    Lunch is the better value play at ££ per head — shorter waits, the same kitchen, and a slightly more relaxed pace. Dinner runs later and louder, which suits the format if you want the full Sri Lankan spread with cocktails. Both services share the same menu, so the choice is really about atmosphere and convenience.

    Can Hoppers accommodate groups?

    The Frith Street room is intimate, so larger groups can be a squeeze — parties of four or five are manageable, but eight-plus will struggle without a specific arrangement. If you're planning a group dinner, check the venue's official channels to discuss options; the other London branches may offer more flexibility on space.

    Can I eat at the bar at Hoppers?

    Counter seating is available at Hoppers and works well for solo diners or pairs who haven't booked. It's a practical option for a quick lunch or a spontaneous weeknight dinner, though space is limited and turnover at the counter can be brisk.

    What are alternatives to Hoppers in London?

    For Sri Lankan specifically, Hoppers remains the reference point in London. If you want broader South Asian cooking at a similar price, Roti King in Euston covers Malaysian-Indian flatbreads at a lower price point. For a step up in formality within the Sethi family's own portfolio, Trishna in Marylebone offers refined coastal Indian at a higher price.

    Is Hoppers good for a special occasion?

    It depends on what kind of occasion. The room is lively and informal rather than quietly intimate, so it suits celebratory dinners where energy matters more than hushed formality. At ££, it won't feel like a splurge occasion to everyone — if you need a grander setting, Gymkhana (also Sethi family) is the better call.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Hoppers?

    The set menu is the most efficient way to cover the range on a first visit — it takes in most of the kitchen's core dishes without requiring familiarity with Sri Lankan cuisine. At ££ pricing, it represents strong value relative to comparable set formats in London. Regular visitors who know the menu may prefer to order à la carte and concentrate on the dishes they're returning for.

    Location

    49 Frith St, London W1D 4SG, United Kingdom

    London, United Kingdom

    Compare Hoppers

    Value at a Glance: Hoppers

    How Hoppers stacks up against the competition.

    Also Consider

    Hoppers and the ££££ London restaurants listed below are not really competing for the same booking. CORE by Clare Smyth, Restaurant Gordon Ramsay, Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library, The Ledbury, and Dinner by Heston Blumenthal all operate at two to three times the price point, with longer tasting menu formats and formal service structures. If your decision is purely about where to spend a serious dining budget in London, those venues offer a different register of experience. Hoppers doesn't try to compete on that axis and is better for it.

    Where the comparison does matter is value for quality. Hoppers' back-to-back Bib Gourmand (2024 and 2025) places it among the London restaurants that deliver the most flavour per pound spent, a category where it has almost no direct competition in Sri Lankan and South Indian cuisine. CORE and The Ledbury are worth the spend if you want Modern European cooking at the top of its range; Dinner by Heston is the call for a set-piece occasion with theatrical presentation. None of them are the right answer if you want spiced short eats, a hopper with black pork kari, and a Ceylon Arrack cocktail for under £40 a head in Soho.

    Book Hoppers if: you want high-quality, genuinely distinctive cooking at an accessible price tier, you're comfortable with a lively, compact room, and you don't need the formality of a multi-course tasting menu structure. Book one of the ££££ alternatives if: a formal occasion demands a room and service level that matches the moment, or if Modern British or European cuisine is your priority. For a broader view of where Hoppers sits in the London dining picture, see our full London restaurants guide.

    Hours

    Monday
    5:30–10 pm
    Tuesday
    12–3 pm, 5:30–10 pm
    Wednesday
    12–3 pm, 5:30–10 pm
    Thursday
    12–3 pm, 5:30–10 pm
    Friday
    12–3 pm, 5–10:45 pm
    Saturday
    12–10:45 pm
    Sunday
    12–9 pm

    Recognized By

    Keep this place

    Save or rate Hoppers on Pearl

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