Restaurant in Los Angeles, United States
Accessible French fine dining, hotel setting

Lumière at Fairmont Century Plaza is a Michelin Plate-recognised French restaurant at the $$$ price point — accessible by LA fine dining standards and better suited to business dinners or hotel-setting occasions than intimate chef-driven meals. Visit in spring or early summer for the strongest seasonal menu. For a more personal French experience at a similar price, consider Pasjoli in Santa Monica.
At the $$$ price point, Lumière at Fairmont Century Plaza positions itself as one of the more accessible fine French restaurants in Los Angeles — less expensive than the $$$$-tier competition, but carrying a 2025 Michelin Plate recognition that signals the kitchen is doing something more than hotel-restaurant-adequate. If you have been once and left satisfied, the question is whether a return visit is justified, and the honest answer is: yes, but timing matters more than it did on your first trip.
Lumière sits inside the Fairmont Century Plaza at 2025 Avenue of the Stars, a building with enough architectural presence to set expectations before you walk in. The address puts you in Century City, which is not a dining neighbourhood in the way that Silver Lake or Los Feliz is — it is a destination neighbourhood, meaning you are coming here deliberately. That changes the calculus. You are not stumbling in after a drink somewhere nearby; you are making a reservation and making an evening of it. For that kind of commitment, the French cuisine format and the hotel setting need to be what you want, not a compromise.
French cooking at this tier lives and dies by its relationship to seasonal produce. The $$$ price range implies a kitchen that is sourcing with some intention, and at a Michelin Plate-recognised restaurant, the expectation is that the menu rotates meaningfully across the year rather than holding a static list for convenience. If your first visit was in one season, a return in a different quarter should feel like a materially different meal , different proteins, different treatments, different weight to the dishes. Winter menus at French restaurants of this calibre tend toward richer preparations: braises, root vegetables, warming reductions. Spring and early summer shift toward lighter technique, fresh herbs, and the kind of precision that shows off a kitchen's range more clearly.
The practical implication: if you visited Lumière in the autumn or winter and are considering a return, a spring or early summer booking will likely give you the leading read on what the kitchen can do at its most technically demanding. Conversely, if your memory of the first visit was a lighter meal and you want something more substantial, late autumn to winter is the time to go back. This is not a minor point , it is the main reason a second visit to a restaurant at this level can feel like a genuinely different experience rather than a repetition.
For context on what French kitchens at this recognition tier are doing in other markets: Le Bernardin in New York City and The French Laundry in Napa both operate seasonal menus where the gap between a January and a June visit is pronounced. Lumière is working at a different price tier, but the seasonal logic applies across French fine dining regardless of level.
Los Angeles has a small but genuinely interesting French dining scene. Pasjoli in Santa Monica is arguably the city's most technically serious French kitchen right now , if you want a straight comparison for a special-occasion French meal, Pasjoli is the benchmark. Petit Trois operates at a lower price point with a bistro format that is less ceremonial but consistently sharp. Perle and Juliet round out a broader French-influenced set worth knowing.
What Lumière offers that most of those do not is the hotel dining room format: a larger room, a more formal service structure, and the kind of setting that works well for business dinners or occasions where the environment is part of the point. If you are booking for two people who want an intimate, neighbourhood-feel French meal, Pasjoli or Petit Trois will likely feel more personal. If you want a grander room with Century City's particular brand of polished calm, Lumière is the better fit.
For readers who travel and want a reference point: Lumière is operating in the same general tier as the hotel restaurant category rather than the chef-driven destination category. Think of it as occupying a comparable position to the kind of French dining you would find at a serious property in another major city , not at the level of Hotel de Ville Crissier or Les Amis in Singapore, but a cut above generic hotel dining. The Michelin Plate is a meaningful signal here: it indicates the kitchen clears the threshold of genuine quality without yet having earned a star.
Booking difficulty at Lumière is moderate. As a hotel restaurant in Century City rather than a small chef-counter in a residential neighbourhood, it does not face the same demand pressure as a 30-seat tasting menu destination. That said, weekend evenings and business-dinner peak times (Tuesday through Thursday) can fill faster than you expect. Two to three weeks out is a reasonable lead time for most dates; same-week availability is possible on slower nights but not reliable enough to count on if the occasion matters.
Lumière is one stop in a wider Los Angeles dining picture. For more context, see our full Los Angeles restaurants guide, our full Los Angeles hotels guide, our full Los Angeles bars guide, our full Los Angeles wineries guide, and our full Los Angeles experiences guide. For French fine dining context elsewhere in the US, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Smyth in Chicago, and Emeril's in New Orleans are worth knowing as reference points across different price tiers and formats. For contemporary seafood in LA at a comparable recognition level, Providence is the most obvious peer.
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lumière | French | Craving a taste of Paris? Look no further than Fairmont Century Plaza’s flagship restaurant Lumière.; Michelin Plate (2025) | Moderate | — |
| Kato | New Taiwanese, Asian | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Hayato | Japanese | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| Vespertine | Progressive, Contemporary | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| Holbox | Mexican Seafood, Mexican | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Sushi Kaneyoshi | Sushi, Japanese | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
How Lumière stacks up against the competition.
At the $$$ price point with a Michelin Plate recognition in 2025, the tasting menu is worth considering if French seasonal cooking is what you are after — but only if you are committed to a multi-course format. If you want something more technically rigorous in the same city, Hayato in Downtown LA operates at a higher level of precision. Lumière earns its place as an accessible entry point into formal French dining in LA, particularly for guests already staying at the Fairmont Century Plaza.
At $$$, Lumière holds up for the right visitor: business diners, hotel guests, or anyone wanting a polished French meal in Century City without committing to the more challenging booking process of Pasjoli or Vespertine. It is not the most ambitious French table in Los Angeles, but Michelin Plate recognition in 2025 confirms it is cooking at a credible level. If you are prioritising value-per-plate over occasion dining, look elsewhere; if location and reliability matter, it justifies the spend.
Lumière is primarily known for French in Los Angeles.
Lumière is located in Los Angeles, at 2025 Ave of the Stars, Los Angeles, CA 90067.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.