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    Restaurant in London, United Kingdom

    Palomar

    725Pearl Points

    Soho's Bib Gourmand earns its reputation.

    Palomar, Restaurant in London

    About Palomar

    Palomar holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand for 2024 and 2025, making it one of Soho's most credentialled Israeli kitchens at the ££ price point. The refurbished zinc counter and wood-panelled dining room work equally well for solo diners and groups up to ten. Book a week ahead for midweek; allow two weeks for weekend evenings.

    Verdict

    Palomar is not the trendsetting newcomer it once was, and that is precisely why it is worth booking now. The room has been refurbished, the formula has been refined, and the Michelin Bib Gourmand it holds for 2024 and 2025 confirms what repeat visitors already know: this is one of Soho's most consistent Israeli kitchens at a price point that is hard to argue with. At ££, it sits well below the city's formal dining tier and delivers more personality than most restaurants at twice the cost. Book it for a date, a pre-theatre dinner, or any occasion where you want food that holds attention without demanding a financial commitment you will regret.

    What Palomar Actually Is

    The most common misconception about Palomar is that it is a casual mezze stop you can wander into on a whim. It is not. The zinc counter, the open kitchen, the wood-panelled dining room filling with noise by 6 pm: this is a destination restaurant operating at Bib Gourmand level, and it requires the same advance planning as any serious Soho booking. The recent refurbishment has made the room more functional without stripping the energy that made it popular in the first place. Velvet-lined booths now accommodate couples who want a degree of privacy. The counter has been extended to seat groups of four. Larger tables can handle parties up to ten. Each configuration gives you a different read on the same room, and the right choice depends entirely on why you are going.

    Spatially, the counter is the place to sit if you want to understand what Palomar is actually doing. The kitchen assembles dishes at speed, and watching what comes out of it is the most efficient way to decide what to order. It also puts you in direct contact with the kitchen team, which shifts the meal from a transaction into something more engaging. The booths work well for a date where conversation matters more than theatre. The larger tables are a reasonable option for group celebrations, though the noise level at peak hours means you will be leaning in to hear each other.

    The Food: Sourcing as the Argument

    The menu is rooted in modern Israeli cooking with strong threads of North African and southern Spanish influence. What makes it hold up against the volume of Middle Eastern restaurants that have opened in London since Palomar launched is the sourcing discipline behind it. The kubaneh bread arrives as a puffy, golden-brown dome built for tearing and sharing, and it is not incidental: it is the conduit through which you understand the quality of the sauces and dips that accompany almost everything else. Tomato and tahini sauces, confit garlic yoghurt, sunset-orange chimichurri: these are not garnishes but primary flavours, and they require base ingredients that hold up under that scrutiny.

    Fire cooking is central to the kitchen's approach. Meat and fish come off the grill with enough char to give them a structural point of view, but the kitchen uses that heat to open up the produce rather than to mask it. Vegetables get equivalent treatment: aubergine appears as baba ganoush and as a carpaccio with white miso, both preparations demanding that the ingredient itself is worth featuring. Freekeh risotto with kale and dukkah reads as a category exercise only until you eat it, at which point it becomes the argument for why the sourcing approach matters. When the base ingredient is good, the relatively simple preparations at Palomar pay off. When it is not, there is nowhere to hide.

    The drinks list is worth attention. The Lebanese Massaya Cinsault rosé functions as a house wine that earns its position rather than simply filling it. Cocktails are arguably the stronger call: the Bumblebee, built on gin with honey, ginger, and lemon, is calibrated to work with food rather than compete with it. For comparable Israeli and Middle Eastern cooking with a different register, Bavel in Los Angeles and Laser Wolf in New York City offer useful reference points for how the cuisine operates at different price tiers.

    Who Should Book

    Palomar works well as a date restaurant or a small-group celebration where you want energy and quality in the same room without committing to a formal tasting menu format. It is the right call for pre-theatre if you are eating before 7 pm and have confirmed your table time against the show. Solo diners at the counter get a full-service meal with the kitchen as entertainment. Groups of six or more should think carefully about whether the noise level serves their occasion: the room is lively, and that is a feature until it becomes a constraint.

    For London dining at a comparable price point with a different cuisine, Honey and Co offers a quieter Israeli kitchen in Fitzrovia worth knowing about. For the city's broader dining picture, our full London restaurants guide covers the range across price tiers. If you are planning a wider trip, the London hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide give you the full picture.

    Practical Details

    DetailPalomarHoney & CoBarbary (sibling)
    CuisineIsraeli, Middle EasternIsraeli, Middle EasternNorth African
    Price range££££££
    Booking difficultyEasyEasyWalk-in only
    Counter seatingYes (extended)NoYes (main format)
    Groups up to 10YesLimitedNo
    Michelin recognitionBib Gourmand 2024, 2025Not listedNot listed
    Lunch serviceTue–Sun from 12 pmCheck directlyCheck directly

    Hours

    • Monday: 5–10 pm
    • Tuesday–Wednesday: 12–2:30 pm, 5–10 pm
    • Thursday: 12–2:30 pm, 5–10:30 pm
    • Friday–Saturday: 12–2:30 pm, 5–10:30 pm
    • Sunday: 12–2:30 pm, 5–9 pm

    How It Compares

    More from Pearl in London and Beyond

    • Our full London restaurants guide
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    • Our full London experiences guide

    Pearl Picks Nearby

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Palomar good for solo dining?

    Yes, and it may be the best format for it. The zinc counter seats solo diners facing the open kitchen, giving you a front-row view of the cooking without the awkwardness of a table for one. At ££ a head with Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition, it delivers serious value for a solo lunch or early dinner in Soho.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Palomar?

    Lunch is the lower-pressure option, available Tuesday through Sunday from 12 to 2:30 pm, and the better call if you want counter seats without a long wait. Dinner runs later and carries more energy, particularly Thursday through Saturday when the kitchen stays open until 10:30 pm. If atmosphere matters more than convenience, go at dinner.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Palomar?

    Palomar does not operate a formal tasting menu format. The menu is structured around sharing plates, so the value calculation is different: order a spread of dishes at the ££ price point rather than committing to a set progression. If a fixed chef-led format is what you want, Palomar is not the right venue.

    Can I eat at the bar at Palomar?

    Yes, and the counter is where Palomar works best. The zinc kitchen counter at 34 Rupert Street was designed for counter dining, with stools facing the open kitchen. The refurbishment extended it to accommodate groups of four, so counter seats are no longer just a solo or duo option.

    How far ahead should I book Palomar?

    Book at least one to two weeks ahead for weekend evenings, which fill fastest. Weekday lunches are more forgiving, but with Michelin Bib Gourmand status since 2024 sustaining demand, walk-in availability is unpredictable. Counter seats occasionally open up on the day, but don't rely on it for a Friday or Saturday dinner.

    Location

    34 Rupert St, London W1D 6DN, United Kingdom

    London, United Kingdom

    Compare Palomar

    Award Winners Like Palomar
    VenueAwardsPrice
    Palomar££
    Restaurant Gordon RamsayMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best££££
    CORE by Clare SmythMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best££££
    The LedburyMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best££££
    Sketch, The Lecture Room and LibraryMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best££££
    Dinner by Heston BlumenthalMichelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best££££

    Comparing your options in London for this tier.

    Also Consider

    Palomar sits in a different tier from most of its London comparison set. Restaurant Gordon Ramsay, CORE by Clare Smyth, The Ledbury, Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library, and Dinner by Heston Blumenthal all operate at ££££, require significantly more advance booking, and are structured around formal tasting menus or multi-course set formats. If those are your criteria, Palomar is not the right choice. If you want Michelin-recognised quality without the commitment of a three-hour tasting menu at £150+ per head, Palomar at ££ is the more practical answer for most occasions.

    For value-led decision-making: Palomar delivers more flavour-per-pound than any of the ££££ venues listed above, with the trade-off being a noisier room, a sharing-plate format that rewards engaged ordering, and a less polished service register. CORE by Clare Smyth and The Ledbury are the right call when the occasion demands that service depth and the budget supports it. Restaurant Gordon Ramsay and Sketch suit diners for whom the formal dining room and the prestige of the address are as important as the food itself.

    Within its own price tier and cuisine category, Palomar's closest competitor is Honey and Co in Fitzrovia, which offers a quieter, more intimate Israeli kitchen at a similar price point. Choose Honey and Co for a low-key dinner where conversation is the priority. Choose Palomar when you want the open kitchen, the counter energy, and the flexibility to seat larger groups. The Barbary, Palomar's Covent Garden sibling, is the walk-in-only alternative for the same cuisine in a counter-only format, with no reservations available.

    Hours

    Monday
    5–10 pm
    Tuesday
    12–2:30 pm, 5–10 pm
    Wednesday
    12–2:30 pm, 5–10 pm
    Thursday
    12–2:30 pm, 5–10:30 pm
    Friday
    12–2:30 pm, 5–10:30 pm
    Saturday
    12–2:30 pm, 5–10:30 pm
    Sunday
    12–2:30 pm, 5–9 pm

    Recognized By

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