Restaurant in Monte Carlo, Monaco
Yoshi
375ptsFusion Japanese at hotel-dining prices. Book it.

About Yoshi
Yoshi at the Hotel Métropole delivers fusion-oriented Japanese cooking with Michelin Plate recognition and a 4.5 Google rating — the most accessible booking at Monte Carlo's €€€€ tier. Chef Takeo Yamazaki's menu, built around premium ingredients and dishes like sake-marinated black cod and kombu shrimp balls, suits celebration dining and business meals where a polished room matters as much as the food.
Should You Book Yoshi?
Getting a table at Yoshi is genuinely direct by Monte Carlo standards — no months-long waitlist, no insider connections required. The harder question is whether it earns its place among the principality's most expensive dining options. The short answer: yes, for the right occasion. Chef Takeo Yamazaki's fusion-leaning Japanese menu, backed by a Michelin Plate recognition in 2025 and a 4.5 Google rating across 132 reviews, delivers enough technical credibility to justify the €€€€ price tier — particularly if you are celebrating something and want a room that feels genuinely special rather than merely expensive.
The Venue
Yoshi sits inside the Hotel Métropole at 4 Avenue de la Madone, which immediately signals what kind of experience this is: hotel dining at the Monaco level, where service polish and room design carry as much weight as what arrives on the plate. The setting is sophisticated rather than stuffy, which matters when you are spending this kind of money in a city that already has no shortage of formal rooms designed to intimidate as much as impress.
Chef Yamazaki's approach is worth understanding before you book. This is not a strict kaiseki programme or a purist sushi counter , Myojaku in Tokyo or Azabu Kadowaki would serve that need more authentically. Yamazaki's cooking is fusion in honest orientation, adapted deliberately for an international clientele that comes to Monaco from all over the world. Think premium Japanese technique applied to a broader palate, with ingredients sourced for quality rather than provenance orthodoxy. The Michelin recognition frames it well: a Plate rather than a star, acknowledging cooking of genuine quality without claiming it sits at the absolute summit of the form.
The Menu Architecture
Two dishes from the awards data illustrate the kitchen's register clearly. The ghindara no saiko yaki , black cod fillet marinated in sake and wrapped in Japanese magnolia leaf , is the kind of preparation where sourcing and patience do most of the work. Black cod at this quality level carries natural richness; the sake marinade adds depth and the magnolia leaf wrap introduces an aromatic dimension to the cooking process that is both functional and theatrical. It is the kind of dish that announces the kitchen's ambitions without overreaching.
The ebi shinjo, kombu-flavoured shrimp balls, pulls in a different direction: more delicate, more technically demanding in execution, and a better test of whether the kitchen has the precision its price point requires. Kombu brings a low, savoury depth that can easily overpower shrimp if the balance is off. When it works, it reads as a genuine command of Japanese flavour architecture rather than a surface-level gesture toward the cuisine.
The aromatic soups and the sushi and maki rounds complete a menu that moves through textures and temperatures with intention. For a special occasion dinner, this progression matters , you want a meal that builds rather than one that plateaus early. Based on the documented approach, Yoshi constructs that arc more carefully than most hotel Japanese restaurants at this price point.
Who Should Book This
Yoshi works leading as a celebration or date-night venue rather than a casual dinner. The Hotel Métropole context, the service style described as slick and sophisticated, and the €€€€ pricing all point toward an occasion where the full room experience , not just the food , is part of what you are paying for. For a business dinner with an international client, this is a strong call: the fusion orientation means it is unlikely to alienate anyone, and the Monaco setting does the room's work for you.
If you are a serious Japanese food traveller coming from or heading to Japan, temper your expectations appropriately. Yoshi is a good hotel Japanese restaurant in an extraordinary location, not a destination in the way that Kagurazaka Ishikawa in Tokyo or Isshisoden Nakamura in Kyoto are destinations. Its fusion framing is a feature, not a compromise , but it is worth knowing that going in.
For a broader view of what Monte Carlo's dining scene offers at this level, our full Monte Carlo restaurants guide covers the complete picture. If you are planning a trip around dining, also check our Monte Carlo hotels guide and bars guide to build the full itinerary.
Booking and Practical Details
Booking difficulty at Yoshi is rated easy relative to Monte Carlo's competitive dining tier , you do not need to plan weeks in advance the way you would for Alain Ducasse at Louis XV. That accessibility is a genuine advantage for last-minute occasion dining. Phone and online booking details are not confirmed in our current data; the Hotel Métropole concierge is the most reliable route to a reservation. If you are already a hotel guest, use that relationship.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty | Leading For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yoshi | Japanese (Fusion) | €€€€ | Easy | Celebration, date night |
| L'Abysse Monte-Carlo | Japanese | €€€€ | Moderate | Serious Japanese, omakase |
| Alain Ducasse , Louis XV | French Provençal | €€€€ | Hard | Landmark splurge |
| Blue Bay Marcel Ravin | Creative | €€€€ | Moderate | Creative tasting menu |
| Elsa | Mediterranean | €€€€ | Easy | Lighter, seasonal menu |
Related Dining in the Region and Beyond
If you are exploring the wider Riviera, Hostellerie Jerome in La Turbie is worth considering for a contrasting style. For something more casual in Monaco itself, Beef Bar Monaco sits at the other end of the occasion spectrum. For serious Japanese dining references in Asia, Ginza Fukuju in Tokyo and Kashiwaya Osaka Senriyama represent the benchmark against which fusion-oriented hotel programmes like Yoshi's are ultimately measured. Explore our Monte Carlo experiences guide and wineries guide to round out your trip planning.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Is Yoshi good for a special occasion? Yes , the Hotel Métropole setting, sophisticated service, and €€€€ pricing are all calibrated for celebration dining. The Michelin Plate recognition and 4.5 Google rating give you confidence that the food quality matches the occasion. For a comparable celebration in a French direction, Les Ambassadeurs by Christophe Cussac is worth comparing.
- What should a first-timer know about Yoshi? Expect fusion-oriented Japanese cooking adapted for an international clientele , not strict kaiseki or purist sushi. The kitchen uses premium ingredients and solid technique, and the service is polished. At €€€€ in Monaco, this is high-end hotel dining; the room and service are part of what you are paying for, not just the food. Book through the Hotel Métropole directly until confirmed online booking details are available.
- Can I eat at the bar at Yoshi? Seat count and bar seating configuration are not confirmed in our current data. Contact the Hotel Métropole directly to ask about counter or bar options before your visit.
- What are alternatives to Yoshi in Monte Carlo? For Japanese specifically, L'Abysse Monte-Carlo is the direct peer and takes a more focused approach to the cuisine. For the landmark French splurge, Alain Ducasse at Louis XV is the reference point, though booking is considerably harder. Blue Bay Marcel Ravin suits diners who want a creative tasting menu with Caribbean-influenced flavours at a similar price tier.
- What should I order at Yoshi? The documented standouts are the ghindara no saiko yaki (black cod marinated in sake, wrapped in magnolia leaf) and the ebi shinjo (kombu-flavoured shrimp balls). Both represent the kitchen's technical range. The aromatic soups are also cited in Michelin's assessment. Beyond these, menu specifics are not confirmed in our current data , ask your server what is in season on the night.
- Is the tasting menu worth it at Yoshi? If your benchmark is the leading Japanese tasting menus in Japan , Azabu Kadowaki or Myojaku in Tokyo , Yoshi will not match that depth. If your benchmark is a special occasion dinner in Monte Carlo where Japanese technique and fusion creativity make the meal feel different from the French fine dining that dominates the principality, it justifies the spend. Michelin's Plate recognition in 2025 supports that framing: genuine quality, sensibly priced relative to what a star-level programme would cost.
Compare Yoshi
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Yoshi | Category: Remarkable; Michelin Plate (2025); Monte-Carlo is famous for its casino, its princely family, its clay tennis courts and its high-flying restaurants! That of the Hotel Métropole pays tribute to Japanese cuisine with premium ingredients and flawless technique. Aromatic soups, sushi and maki are crafted with a focus on yoshi (goodness) by chef Takeo Yamazaki, whose cuisine, which is more fusion in style than authentically Japanese, has adapted to suit his international clientele. Examples include ghindara no saiko yaki (fillet of black cod marinated and cooked in sake and wrapped in a Japanese magnolia leaf) or ebi shinjo, kombu-flavoured shrimp balls. Slick, sophisticated service. | €€€€ | — |
| Pavyllon, un restaurant de Yannick Alléno, Monte-Carlo | Michelin 1 Star | €€€€ | — |
| Alain Ducasse- Louis XV | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | — | |
| Blue Bay Marcel Ravin | Michelin 2 Star | €€€€ | — |
| L'Abysse Monte-Carlo | Michelin 2 Star | €€€€ | — |
| Elsa | Michelin 1 Star | €€€€ | — |
Comparing your options in Monte Carlo for this tier.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Yoshi good for a special occasion?
Yes — it is one of the stronger choices in Monaco for a celebration. The Hotel Métropole setting, Michelin Plate recognition, and the slick service style all frame the meal as an event rather than a casual dinner. At €€€€ pricing, the occasion needs to justify the spend, but the premium ingredients and technique are there to support it.
What should a first-timer know about Yoshi?
Come expecting fusion rather than orthodox Japanese — chef Takeo Yamazaki's cooking adapts to an international Monaco clientele, so dishes like black cod marinated in sake or kombu-flavoured shrimp balls sit closer to Japanese-influenced fine dining than traditional omakase. The Michelin Plate signals solid execution rather than a two-star revelation. Booking is relatively easy by Monte Carlo standards, so you do not need to plan far ahead.
Can I eat at the bar at Yoshi?
Bar seating details are not confirmed in available records for Yoshi. Given the Hotel Métropole context and the slick, formal service style noted in the Michelin recognition, this is primarily a sit-down dining venue — check the venue's official channels at 4 Avenue de la Madone to confirm seating options before arriving and expecting counter dining.
What are alternatives to Yoshi in Monte Carlo?
For Japanese specifically, L'Abysse Monte-Carlo is the direct comparison and skews more toward precision sushi. If you are open to French fine dining at a higher prestige tier, Alain Ducasse's Le Louis XV is the room to consider. Blue Bay Marcel Ravin offers a more creative, Caribbean-influenced menu at a comparable price level if you want something outside the Japanese or classical French lane.
What should I order at Yoshi?
The two dishes flagged in Michelin's own notes are the ghindara no saiko yaki — black cod marinated in sake, wrapped in Japanese magnolia leaf — and the ebi shinjo, kombu-flavoured shrimp balls. Both illustrate the kitchen's fusion register and premium ingredient focus, making them reliable anchors for a first visit.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Yoshi?
Tasting menu specifics are not confirmed in available records, so a direct price-per-course verdict is not possible here. What is documented is €€€€ pricing, Michelin Plate recognition, and a kitchen focused on premium ingredients with flawless technique — which positions this as a venue where a longer format, if offered, would be the appropriate way to experience the range of the cooking.
Recognized By
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