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    Restaurant in Paris, France

    L'Ouzeri

    210Pearl Points

    Michelin-recognised Greek at accessible prices.

    L'Ouzeri, Restaurant in Paris

    About L'Ouzeri

    L'Ouzeri holds a Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025 and scores 4.9 on Google across nearly 400 reviews — the strongest quality-to-price ratio in Paris's Greek dining set. Sitting at €€ in Saint-Germain-des-Prés, it is the practical first choice over pricier Greek options like Mavrommatis if budget discipline matters. Easy to book, worth returning to more than once.

    Who Should Book L'Ouzeri — and When

    If you are looking for Greek cooking that earns a Michelin Plate two years running in one of Paris's most competitive arrondissements, L'Ouzeri on Rue Grégoire de Tours in the 6th is the right call. Book it for a mid-week dinner when you want something that sits outside the French bistro circuit without sacrificing the quality signal that matters in Saint-Germain-des-Prés. It is a particularly strong choice for food-focused travellers who want to eat well at a €€ price point and are willing to return more than once to get the full picture — because L'Ouzeri rewards repeat visits in a way that single-sitting venues rarely do.

    The Case for Coming Back More Than Once

    A 4.9 Google rating across 388 reviews is not a statistical accident. It signals a kitchen and front-of-house that are consistent enough to generate repeat customers and satisfied first-timers in roughly equal measure. For a Greek restaurant operating in Paris's Saint-Germain neighbourhood , where competition from French institutions is relentless , that kind of score points to something that has found its audience and is cooking to it reliably. The Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025 confirms that the quality is not a fluke: Michelin's inspectors returned and found the same standard.

    The multi-visit case for L'Ouzeri is built around the breadth that Greek cuisine allows at this price tier. Greek cooking spans mezze-led sharing formats, seafood-driven mains, slow-cooked meat dishes, and a pastry tradition that most Parisian diners have never seriously explored. A single visit will not cover all of it. On a first visit, prioritise the savoury core , the dishes that sit at the centre of the menu and give you a read on the kitchen's confidence with olive oil, lemon, and herb balance, which are the technical tells of Greek cooking done properly. On a second visit, push towards the edges: the mezze selection if you skipped it, or the dessert register if you rushed through it the first time. A third visit, if you are a regular or making a longer Paris stay, is when you test the kitchen's range rather than its reliability.

    This is the kind of restaurant that repays the explorer's instinct. The address , 17 Rue Grégoire de Tours, in the heart of the Left Bank , is easy to find and direct to return to, which removes the logistical friction that makes repeat visits to obscure addresses feel like effort. Booking difficulty is rated Easy, so you are not fighting a reservations system to come back. That accessibility is part of the value proposition: you can build L'Ouzeri into two or three nights of a Paris trip without it feeling like a special-occasion calculation each time.

    Positioning in the Paris Greek Dining Scene

    Paris has a small but serious cluster of Greek restaurants worth knowing. Mavrommatis operates at a higher price register and carries stronger Michelin credentials; it is the choice if you want a formal Greek dining experience with more ceremony. Etsi runs a more casual, natural-wine-forward format that appeals to a younger crowd in the 18th. Les Délices d'Aphrodite is a long-established neighbourhood address in the 5th that trades more on familiarity than on culinary ambition. Osmossi - Maison Mavrommatis sits in the Mavrommatis family orbit and leans into a modern Mediterranean register. L'Ouzeri's position in this set is clear: it delivers Michelin-recognised quality at a €€ price point in a neighbourhood that justifies the address without inflating the bill. If you are in the 6th and want Greek cooking you can trust, this is the practical first choice.

    For a broader read on where to eat in Paris, our full Paris restaurants guide covers the city's full range by cuisine and price tier. If you are planning a wider trip, our Paris hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide are all available. If Greek cuisine is a priority elsewhere in France, Mirazur in Menton and the wider Mediterranean-influenced kitchens at Flocons de Sel in Megève show what the Southern French kitchen borrows from Greek and Mediterranean traditions at a completely different price level. And if you are comparing Greek cooking across cities, OMA and AGORA in London are the relevant benchmarks for what ambitious Greek restaurants are doing right now in a European capital context.

    Practical Details

    L'Ouzeri is at 17 Rue Grégoire de Tours in the 6th arrondissement, a short walk from the Odéon metro station. The €€ price range puts it in the accessible end of the Saint-Germain bracket , expect a meal for two with wine to stay well below what the neighbourhood's French bistros charge for equivalent quality signals. Booking is rated Easy, which in practice means you are not planning three weeks out, but calling or booking a day or two ahead is sensible for dinner, particularly mid-week when the 6th fills up with both locals and visitors. Hours and booking method are not confirmed in our data, so check directly at the restaurant or via a booking platform before your visit. The Michelin Plate award, held in both 2024 and 2025, functions as a useful baseline guarantee: the kitchen is cooking at a standard that Michelin's inspectors found worth recognising in two consecutive years.

    For context on the wider French dining canon , the three-star and long-established addresses that set the benchmark this city is measured against , see L'Ambroisie, Troisgros in Ouches, Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern, Bras in Laguiole, and Paul Bocuse in Collonges-au-Mont-d'Or. L'Ouzeri is not playing in that register , it is doing something more focused and more affordable , but knowing the field helps calibrate expectations accurately.

    The Verdict

    Book L'Ouzeri if you want Michelin-recognised Greek cooking in Saint-Germain at a price that does not require a special-occasion justification. Plan for two visits if your schedule allows: the first to get a baseline read on the kitchen, the second to go deeper into the menu's range. It is the most accessible quality-to-price option in Paris's Greek dining set, and the 4.9 Google rating across nearly 400 reviews suggests it is getting the execution right consistently.

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    Frequently Asked Questions

    What are alternatives to L'Ouzeri in Paris?

    Mavrommatis is the main Greek alternative, but it operates at a higher price register and carries stronger Michelin credentials — go there if budget is not the deciding factor. For non-Greek options at a similar €€ price point in Saint-Germain, the 6th arrondissement has a dense cluster of bistros near Odéon worth considering. L'Ouzeri is the clearest choice if you want Michelin Plate Greek cooking without a fine-dining price tag.

    What should I wear to L'Ouzeri?

    L'Ouzeri holds a Michelin Plate at a €€ price range, which signals a relaxed but thoughtful setting rather than a formal dining room. There is no evidence of a dress code. Neat casual clothing is a reasonable baseline — the kind of thing you would wear to a good neighbourhood bistro in the 6th arrondissement.

    Is L'Ouzeri good for solo dining?

    A €€ price point and a neighbourhood address on Rue Grégoire de Tours make L'Ouzeri a practical solo option — there is no financial penalty for dining alone and no indication of a format that requires groups. The 4.9 Google rating across 388 reviews suggests a front-of-house that handles regulars well, which tends to translate to solo diners being looked after rather than ignored.

    What should I order at L'Ouzeri?

    Specific menu items are not documented in available data, so a firm recommendation on individual dishes is not possible here. What is documented is that the kitchen has earned a Michelin Plate in 2024 and 2025, which points to consistent quality across the menu rather than a single standout dish. Ask staff for the day's recommendations — at a venue with this rating consistency, that is usually the most reliable approach.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at L'Ouzeri?

    There is no confirmed tasting menu format in the available data for L'Ouzeri. At a €€ price range, an à la carte or set menu structure is more typical than a full tasting format. Check directly with the restaurant before planning around a multi-course format.

    Is L'Ouzeri worth the price?

    At €€ pricing with two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) and a 4.9 Google rating across 388 reviews, L'Ouzeri delivers a strong value case by Paris standards. You are getting Michelin-recognised cooking in the 6th arrondissement without the price escalation that usually comes with that credential. If you want Greek food at a higher level of ambition and are willing to pay for it, Mavrommatis is the comparison — but for the price, L'Ouzeri is hard to argue against.

    Location

    17 Rue Grégoire de Tours, 75006 Paris, France

    Compare L'Ouzeri

    L'Ouzeri vs. Similar Venues
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking Difficulty
    L'OuzeriGreek€€Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024)Easy
    Alléno Paris au Pavillon LedoyenCreative€€€€Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    KeiContemporary French, Modern Cuisine€€€€Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    L'AmbroisieFrench, Classic Cuisine€€€€Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George VFrench, Modern Cuisine€€€€Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Pierre GagnaireFrench, Creative€€€€Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    Also Consider

    L'Ouzeri operates at €€ in Saint-Germain-des-Prés; every venue in its Paris comparison set charges €€€€ and sits in the French fine dining tradition. That price gap is the first decision variable. If you are weighing L'Ouzeri against Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen or Pierre Gagnaire, you are not choosing between better and worse, you are choosing between two entirely different restaurant categories. L'Ouzeri is the right call if you want Michelin-recognised cooking without the three-star price and ceremony. Alléno and Pierre Gagnaire are the right call if technique-forward French haute cuisine is specifically what you are after and budget is secondary.

    Kei and Le Cinq at the Four Seasons George V both operate at €€€€ with strong Michelin credentials and more formal service environments than L'Ouzeri offers. Le Cinq in particular delivers a hotel grand dining experience that L'Ouzeri does not attempt to replicate. If the occasion is a significant milestone dinner where room and service formality matter as much as the food, Le Cinq or L'Ambroisie, the most classically composed of the €€€€ set, are better fits. L'Ouzeri is not competing in that register.

    The practical conclusion: for a food-focused visitor who wants quality assurance at a manageable price in central Paris, L'Ouzeri is the stronger booking than any of its €€€€ peers. For a special-occasion dinner where the theatre of French fine dining is part of the point, L'Ambroisie or Le Cinq are the cleaner choices. The comparison set is not really a competition, they serve different decisions.

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