Skip to main content

    Restaurant in Manchester, United Kingdom

    The Bell

    190pts

    Michelin-recognised Modern British at pub prices.

    The Bell, Restaurant in Manchester

    About The Bell

    The Bell holds two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024–2025) and delivers Modern British cooking at a ££ price point — one of the more accessible routes into Michelin-recognised cooking in the West Oxfordshire area. Booking is easy, the kitchen earns its credential, and a 4.2 Google score across 552 reviews signals solid if not ceremony-level execution. Worth the drive from Manchester for food-first diners.

    The Bell, West Oxfordshire: Michelin-Recognised Modern British Worth the Drive from Manchester

    If you're weighing The Bell against Manchester's city-centre Modern British options like Higher Ground, the calculus is direct: Higher Ground gives you comparable price positioning and good cooking in NorthernQuarter, but The Bell, sitting in Church Street, West Oxfordshire under two consecutive Michelin Plate recognitions (2024 and 2025), has earned a credential that city alternatives haven't matched at the ££ price point. The question isn't whether The Bell is good — the Michelin Plate signals consistent, above-average cooking — the question is whether the journey and the service philosophy justify adding it to your itinerary.

    What to Expect

    The Bell holds a Google rating of 4.2 across 552 reviews, which for a Michelin-acknowledged Modern British venue at the ££ price tier is a solid, if not exceptional, signal. A score in that range typically reflects a kitchen doing reliable, well-executed work with occasional inconsistencies in the front-of-house or value perception , not a catastrophic failure, but not the near-faultless consensus you see around venues like mana or L'Enclume in Cartmel. For an explorer-type diner, that gap between the Michelin credential and the mid-range public score is worth understanding before you book.

    At ££, The Bell is positioned as an accessible entry point into Michelin-recognised cooking in the West Oxfordshire area , not in the same investment tier as Moor Hall in Aughton or Gidleigh Park in Chagford, and not trying to be. The Modern British menu format here fits the genre: seasonal produce, classical technique with contemporary presentation, the kind of cooking where ingredient quality does most of the heavy lifting. Sensory specifics aren't available from verified sources, so treat any dish-level descriptions you encounter elsewhere with scepticism , the reliable data is the Michelin Plate and the category positioning.

    Service Philosophy and Price Point

    This is where the 4.2 Google score becomes relevant to your decision. At ££, guests arrive with a reasonable expectation: cooking quality that justifies the Michelin recognition, service that feels informed and attentive without the formality of a starred room. When a venue at this price tier earns two consecutive Michelin Plates but sits below 4.5 in public ratings, the most common explanation is a service experience that doesn't fully match the kitchen's ambition. That doesn't make The Bell a poor booking , it makes it a booking where you should weight the food over the room experience. If you need the full front-of-house polish to feel the meal is worth it, venues like Waterside Inn in Bray or CORE by Clare Smyth in London operate at a different service register, at a correspondingly higher price. The Bell's value proposition is kitchen-forward at a moderate spend.

    For explorer-type diners who prioritise cooking craft and aren't dependent on ceremony, the ££ Michelin Plate combination is genuinely good value within the Modern British category. Compare it to hide and fox in Saltwood or Hand and Flowers in Marlow , both Michelin-holding Modern British venues at accessible price points , and The Bell sits in similar territory: ambitious cooking in a less formal setting than the starred tier.

    Booking and Logistics

    Booking difficulty at The Bell is rated Easy, which reflects the venue's location in West Oxfordshire rather than a high-profile city centre address. You are unlikely to need to plan weeks in advance, but confirming availability before making the journey from Manchester is sensible given the drive. Phone and online booking details aren't in our current database , check directly via the venue's own channels. Hours are not confirmed in our data, so verify before travelling.

    Practical Details

    DetailThe BellHigher GroundErst
    Price tier£££££££
    Michelin recognitionPlate (2024, 2025)Not listedNot listed
    Booking difficultyEasyModerateModerate
    CuisineModern BritishModern BritishBritish Contemporary
    Google rating4.2 (552 reviews)Not availableNot available

    Context: Where The Bell Sits in the Wider Modern British Landscape

    Two consecutive Michelin Plates is a meaningful credential. The Guide awards the Plate to kitchens producing good-quality cooking , it's a positive recognition, not a consolation for missing a star. Within the broader Modern British category, that puts The Bell in legitimate company: Restaurant Gordon Ramsay in London operates at a wholly different investment level, but the underlying cooking philosophy , quality British produce, classical grounding, seasonal thinking , is shared across the category. At ££, The Bell is one of the more affordable ways into that tradition.

    For Manchester-based diners building a regional dining itinerary, The Bell works as a destination addition rather than a weekly local. If you want that level of Michelin-recognised Modern British cooking closer to the city, the honest answer is that Manchester's current scene skews toward the higher-spend creative end (Skof, mana) rather than affordable Michelin-recognised Modern British. The Bell fills a gap that the city itself doesn't currently cover at the same price point. See our full Manchester restaurants guide for the complete city picture, and our Manchester hotels guide if you're planning an overnight stay around a wider regional dining trip.

    How It Compares

    FAQs

    Does The Bell handle dietary restrictions?

    • Modern British kitchens at this level typically accommodate common dietary requirements with advance notice, but The Bell's specific policy isn't confirmed in our data. Contact the venue directly before booking if dietary needs are a factor , don't assume flexibility without confirmation.

    Can The Bell accommodate groups?

    • Group bookings at a venue of this style and price tier are usually possible, but capacity details aren't available in our database. If you're planning a group of six or more, call ahead. For larger groups in Manchester itself, 20 Stories is better set up for event-scale bookings.

    Can I eat at the bar at The Bell?

    • Bar seating availability isn't confirmed in our data. Given the venue's West Oxfordshire pub-style address, informal seating options may exist, but verify directly. In Manchester, 10 Tib Lane and Skof both offer counter or bar options for solo diners.

    What are alternatives to The Bell in Manchester?

    • For Modern British at a similar price, Higher Ground is the closest city-centre equivalent. For a step up in ambition and spend, mana and Skof are both ££££ but represent Manchester's most credentialled cooking. Erst sits between them on price and suits wine-forward diners. See the full Manchester restaurants guide for more options.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at The Bell?

    • Menu format and specific pricing aren't confirmed in our data, so a direct verdict on tasting menu value isn't possible here. What the two Michelin Plates do confirm is that the kitchen is producing cooking the Guide considers worth recommending. At ££, even a multi-course format should represent reasonable value by Michelin-category standards , but verify the current menu before booking.

    Is The Bell good for a special occasion?

    • Two Michelin Plates and a ££ price point make it a reasonable choice for a low-key celebration where good food matters more than formal ceremony. If you want full special-occasion service and atmosphere, the 4.2 Google score suggests the room may not deliver the level of polish that higher-spend venues like Waterside Inn in Bray provide. For a special occasion in Manchester itself, mana is the higher-stakes booking.

    Compare The Bell

    Is The Bell Worth It?
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    The Bell££Easy
    mana££££Unknown
    Skof££££Unknown
    MAYA££Unknown
    Erst£££Unknown
    Higher Ground££Unknown

    Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Does The Bell handle dietary restrictions?

    The Bell's database record does not include published dietary policy, so check the venue's official channels before booking. At the ££ price point with Michelin Plate recognition for two consecutive years, kitchens at this level typically accommodate common dietary requirements with advance notice — but confirm rather than assume, particularly for tasting menu formats.

    Can The Bell accommodate groups?

    No group capacity data is documented for The Bell. Given its West Oxfordshire village setting rather than a city-centre footprint, assume space is limited and contact the venue ahead of any party larger than four. Booking difficulty is rated Easy, which works in your favour for securing a slot.

    Can I eat at the bar at The Bell?

    Bar seating specifics are not in the available venue data. As a Michelin Plate-recognised Modern British pub in West Oxfordshire, a bar area is plausible — but check directly whether walk-in bar dining is offered, particularly if you want flexibility without a full table booking.

    What are alternatives to The Bell in Manchester?

    If you're staying in Manchester, Higher Ground and Mana are the more direct city-centre comparisons in the Modern British space — Higher Ground for accessible, produce-led cooking at a similar price band, and Mana if you want tasting-menu ambition with serious credentials. The Bell is the right call if you're already in or near West Oxfordshire and want Michelin-acknowledged cooking without a city price premium.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at The Bell?

    Whether The Bell runs a tasting menu is not confirmed in the available data. At ££ with two consecutive Michelin Plates, any set or tasting format here would likely represent strong value relative to city-centre equivalents charging £££ or more for comparable recognition. Verify the current format directly before booking.

    Is The Bell good for a special occasion?

    Two consecutive Michelin Plates at the ££ price tier makes The Bell a credible special-occasion choice if you want quality cooking without the spend of a full Michelin-starred room. It suits couples or small groups who prefer a quieter West Oxfordshire setting over a Manchester city-centre atmosphere. If the occasion demands a full tasting menu with wine flight and destination pull, Mana in Manchester sets a higher bar.

    Recognized By

    Keep this place

    Save or rate The Bell on Pearl

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