Restaurant in Maidla, Estonia
Manor house dining with Michelin recognition.

SOO at Maidla Manor holds two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) and a 4.9 Google rating, making it the most credentialled fine-dining option in Rapla County. At the €€€€ tier in Estonia, the price-to-quality ratio compares favourably to Tallinn's top tables. The manor house setting makes it a stronger case for an overnight trip than a casual dinner run from the capital.
If you are weighing a fine-dining meal somewhere in Estonia's countryside, SOO at Maidla Manor is a harder case to make on paper than NOA Chef's Hall in Tallinn or 180° by Matthias Diether, simply because you have to mean it. Getting to Maidla takes effort. But that is precisely the argument for booking: SOO is not a restaurant you stumble into, and the 4.9 Google rating across 39 reviews — small sample, yes, but unusually consistent — suggests that the guests who do make the trip leave without regret. Two consecutive Michelin Plate recognitions (2024 and 2025) confirm that professional inspectors found the kitchen performing at a level worth flagging. For an explorer willing to build a trip around a meal, SOO earns serious consideration.
Maidla is a small settlement in Rapla County, roughly between Tallinn and Pärnu in western Estonia. Maidla Manor , the manor house that gives the restaurant its address , is the kind of setting that frames a meal before a single plate arrives. Manor houses of this type in Estonia typically date to the Baltic German era, with stone or rendered facades, high-ceilinged rooms, and grounds that shift dramatically with the season. What you see when you arrive matters here: the architecture does work that a city restaurant has to achieve through interior design. That visual anchor is part of why the timing of your visit is worth thinking through carefully.
Spring and early summer, when Estonia's light stretches late into the evening and the surrounding landscape turns green, give the setting its leading argument. A late-June dinner at a manor house in this part of Estonia means eating in near-continuous daylight, the kind of atmospheric condition that no amount of clever restaurant lighting can replicate. Autumn is the second strong window: the Rapla County countryside turns amber and the manor grounds read as deliberately composed rather than accidentally pretty. Winter visits are possible but require more commitment from you, and the setting gives less back.
SOO's cuisine is listed as Modern Cuisine at the €€€€ price tier. At that price point in Estonia , where even Tallinn's leading tables rarely match Western European pricing , you are almost certainly looking at a tasting menu format. Modern Cuisine at a rural manor in this region typically means produce drawn from the immediate environment: foraged ingredients, local protein, dairy from nearby farms. This is not a claim about SOO's specific menu, which is not available in the data, but it is the operating logic of nearly every serious rural fine-dining project in the Nordic-Baltic region, and it is the context in which the Michelin Plate recognition makes sense. Michelin awards Plates to kitchens with good cooking, and in this category that usually means disciplined technique applied to high-quality local sourcing.
For food and travel enthusiasts who follow what is happening in the Nordic and Baltic fine-dining circuit, the reference points are worth naming. The broader movement , serious kitchens choosing rural settings over capital-city visibility , has precedents from Frantzén in Stockholm to smaller Baltic projects. SOO sits within that context: a kitchen that has chosen place over profile. That choice has costs (harder to fill seats, less walk-in traffic) and benefits (a captive, motivated guest base, and a setting that city restaurants cannot buy). The two Michelin Plates in consecutive years suggest the kitchen is consistent enough to hold its audience.
Compared to other destination restaurants in Estonia's countryside, SOO's position is specific. Alexander at Pädaste on Muhu Island operates in a similar manor-hotel format and sits at the €€€€ tier with stronger name recognition. Hiis in Manniva and Wicca in Laulasmaa are further rural references in the same conversation. SOO at Maidla is not the most famous of these, but the Michelin recognition places it on the same tier of seriousness. For a traveller planning a circuit of Estonia's countryside restaurants, Maidla's location between Tallinn and Pärnu makes SOO a logical stop rather than a detour.
Booking is rated Easy. For a Michelin-recognised restaurant at the €€€€ tier in a rural Estonian manor, that is a genuine advantage. You are unlikely to need to plan months ahead the way you would for a comparable Tallinn reservation during peak summer. That said, the manor setting means seat count is almost certainly limited, and summer weekends will fill faster than midweek slots. Booking a few weeks out for a summer Saturday is sensible; a Tuesday in May you could probably manage with less notice.
For the explorer diner, the full case for SOO is this: it is a Michelin-recognised modern kitchen in a manor house setting, in a part of Estonia that rewards visitors who look beyond the capital. The price is €€€€ but Estonian €€€€ is not Paris €€€€. The setting is the kind of visual and atmospheric experience you cannot replicate in a city. And the guest satisfaction data, thin as the sample is, points in one direction. If you are already travelling between Tallinn and Pärnu, building an evening around SOO is an easy call. If you are coming specifically from Tallinn for dinner, it is a bigger commitment , but one with a clear rationale.
Quick reference: €€€€ price tier, Michelin Plate 2024 and 2025, 4.9 Google rating (39 reviews), Maidla Manor, Rapla County. Booking: Easy. Leading timing: late spring through early autumn, evening sittings for the long Estonian daylight.
For more on dining in the region, see our full Maidla restaurants guide, our Maidla hotels guide, our Maidla bars guide, our Maidla wineries guide, and our Maidla experiences guide. Other rural Estonian restaurants worth comparing: Kolm Sõsarat in Lüllemäe, Lahepere Villa in Kloogaranna, Mere 38 in Võsu, Rado Haapsalu in Haapsalu, and Hõlm in Tartu. For international Modern Cuisine comparisons at a similar ambition level, see Maison Lameloise in Chagny and FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SOO | Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024) | Easy | — |
| NOA | Modern European, Modern Cuisine | €€ | Unknown | — | |
| 180° by Matthias Diether | Estonian Fusion | €€€€ | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| NOA Chef’s Hall | Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Alexander | Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Unknown | — | |
| Fellin | Traditional Cuisine | €€ | Unknown | — |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Bar seating details are not confirmed in available records for SOO. Given the manor house setting at Maidla mõis 1 and the €€€€ price point, the experience is almost certainly structured around formal dining rather than casual bar service. check the venue's official channels to confirm seating options before planning around it.
Specific menu items are not documented here, so naming dishes would be guesswork. What is confirmed: SOO operates in the Modern Cuisine category at a €€€€ price point and has held a Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025, which points to a kitchen with consistent output. At this price level in a remote manor setting, a tasting menu format is the likely centrepiece — ask when booking whether à la carte is an option.
Two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) are a credible baseline for quality, and the rural manor setting justifies a longer, more ceremonial format. At €€€€, this is a full-commitment meal in terms of both cost and travel — Maidla is not a quick detour. If you are already planning a trip between Tallinn and Pärnu, the case for staying and eating here is stronger than making it a standalone journey.
Exact booking windows are not confirmed, but at a €€€€ manor restaurant with Michelin recognition operating in a small Estonian settlement, seats are finite and demand from both domestic and visiting guests is real. Book at least three to four weeks out for a weekend table; aim for six or more weeks if your dates are fixed. There is no walk-in culture at restaurants at this level and in this location.
Yes, the format suits it. A Michelin-recognised modern cuisine restaurant inside a historic manor house in Rapla County carries enough occasion weight for a milestone dinner. The remoteness works in your favour here — arriving at Maidla mõis 1 is a deliberate act, which adds to the sense of event. Groups should confirm private dining availability when booking.
At €€€€ with back-to-back Michelin Plates, SOO is priced at the top of the Estonian dining market and delivers Michelin-level consistency to justify it. The honest qualifier is location: you are committing to a trip to Rapla County, not a restaurant inside a city where alternatives are steps away. If the manor setting and relative solitude are part of what you want, the price holds up. If you want comparable cooking with easier access, NOA Chef's Hall in Tallinn is the practical alternative.
There are no direct fine-dining alternatives within Maidla itself. The relevant comparisons are in Tallinn: NOA Chef's Hall and Alexander both operate at a high level and are easier to reach. For something with a similar destination-dining character, 180° by Matthias Diether is worth considering. Fellin in Viljandi is a regional option if your route takes you further south.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.