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    Paris, France

    Restaurants in Paris

    Explore the best restaurants in Paris, France, curated by Pearl with awards from Michelin, World's 50 Best, and more.

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    1158 places

    1153 mapped
    Arpège, Paris, France
    1Restaurants

    Arpège

    Paris, France

    Points

    2,745

    Arpège is the strongest case in Paris for a milestone dinner built around vegetables. Alain Passard's three-Michelin-star kitchen sources daily from three biodynamic farms, the menu shifts with the seasons — meaning no two visits are identical. At €€€€, it is worth booking if this specific philosophy excites you; if you need protein at the centre of the plate, look elsewhere.

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    Le Taillevent, Paris, France
    2Restaurants

    Le Taillevent

    Paris, France

    Points

    2,595

    Le Taillevent holds two Michelin stars, a La Liste score of 94 points, one of Europe's deepest wine cellars — 3,800 selections across 40,000 bottles. Book 4–6 weeks out minimum; the restaurant closes weekends and availability is tight. The wine list is the deciding factor: engage with it fully and the $$$$-per-head spend is justified. Skip it and you're paying grande table prices for food alone.

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    Pierre Gagnaire, Paris, France
    3Restaurants

    Pierre Gagnaire

    Paris, France

    Points

    2,465

    Pierre Gagnaire holds three Michelin stars and a La Liste score of 98 points (2026), making it one of Paris's most decorated creative French restaurants. At €€€€ and near-impossible to book, it is best reserved for milestone occasions or high-stakes business meals. Plan four to six weeks ahead minimum and contact the restaurant directly.

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    Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George V, Paris, France
    4Restaurants

    Le Cinq holds three Michelin stars, 97.5 La Liste points, a 50,000-bottle wine list under Eric Beaumard — making it one of the strongest cases for a special-occasion dinner in Paris. Booking difficulty is near impossible: plan eight to twelve weeks out. The dining room is quiet enough for conversation and the wine program alone justifies the return visit.

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    Epicure, Paris, France
    5Restaurants

    Epicure

    Paris, France

    Points

    2,275

    Epicure at the Hôtel Bristol holds three Michelin stars, a 98-point La Liste score (2026), and an OAD Classical Europe ranking of #24. Chef Arnaud Faye leads a kitchen with two decades of three-star consistency and a 135,000-bottle wine cellar. Book 8-10 weeks out minimum — closed Monday and Sunday, near-impossible to secure without serious lead time.

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    Le Pré Catelan, Paris, France
    6Restaurants

    Le Pré Catelan

    Paris, France

    Points

    2,275

    Le Pré Catelan holds three Michelin stars, a 98-point La Liste ranking (2026), and one of Paris's deepest wine cellars at 300,000 bottles. Book Wednesday or Thursday lunch for your best chance at availability. The classical French kitchen under Frédéric Anton, trained by Joël Robuchon, is as consistent as it gets at this level — but the Bois de Boulogne location requires a taxi and advance planning.

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    Restaurant David Toutain, Paris, France
    7Restaurants

    Points

    2,275

    Restaurant David Toutain holds 2 Michelin Stars and a Green Star in Paris's 7th arrondissement, with a nature-driven surprise tasting menu and a wine list that includes accessible price points by two-star standards. Ranked #92 in Opinionated About Dining's Top Restaurants in Europe (2025). Book six to eight weeks out minimum; this is a near-impossible reservation at peak periods.

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    Guy Savoy, Paris, France
    8Restaurants

    Guy Savoy

    Paris, France

    Points

    2,245

    Guy Savoy scores 99 points on La Liste 2026 and holds two Michelin stars, making it one of Paris's most decorated classical French kitchens. Dinner-only, Wednesday through Sunday, with a 34,000-bottle wine cellar and a Seine-side address on the Quai de Conti. Book six to eight weeks out at minimum — ideally three months for weekend dates.

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    Le Clarence, Paris, France
    9Restaurants

    Le Clarence

    Paris, France

    Points

    2,225

    Le Clarence is a two-Michelin-star restaurant in an 1884 Paris mansion off the Champs-Élysées, with the deepest Bordeaux and Burgundy wine list in its peer group — 1,800 selections, Star Wine List #1 (2025). Chef Christophe Pelé's surprise menu blends Breton coastal produce with global influences. Open Wednesday to Saturday only; book well in advance. Best for a serious special occasion where the wine program is as important as the food.

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    Plénitude, Paris, France
    10Restaurants

    Plénitude

    Paris, France

    Points

    2,215

    Plénitude at Cheval Blanc Paris holds three Michelin stars, 99 points from La Liste, the #1 ranking in Opinionated About Dining's Classical Europe list for 2025. Chef Arnaud Donckele's sauce-centred tasting menu, paired with Maxime Frédéric's award-winning pastry work and a dining room overlooking the Seine, makes it one of the strongest cases for a splurge meal in Paris — if you can secure the near-impossible reservation.

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    Le Meurice Alain Ducasse, Paris, France
    11Restaurants

    Points

    2,205

    Le Meurice Alain Ducasse holds 2 Michelin stars and 95 La Liste points (2026), with chef Amaury Bouhours delivering kitchen credentials that stand independently of the palace address. Dinner only, Tuesday–Friday, with a 970-selection wine list and near-impossible booking difficulty. Book months ahead for special occasions.

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    Kei, Paris, France
    12Restaurants

    Kei

    Paris, France

    Points

    2,085

    One of Paris's most credentialed three-star restaurants, Kei delivers French haute cuisine with Japanese plating precision across lunch and dinner sittings Tuesday through Saturday. La Liste rates it 99/100 for 2026. Booking is Near Impossible — plan eight weeks out minimum. Thursday or Friday lunch is the sharpest value entry point into Kei Kobayashi's kitchen.

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    Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen, Paris, France
    13Restaurants

    Points

    2,030

    Yannick Alléno's three-Michelin-star flagship delivers tasting-menu precision built around his sauce-extraction technique, housed in a neoclassical pavilion near the Champs-Élysées. The room runs quiet and formal, the progression demands focus, the €€€€ price justifies itself only if you value methodical exploration over ingredient spectacle. Book three to four months ahead; if unavailable, Le Gabriel or Blanc offer comparable technique with better odds.

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    Le Gabriel - La Réserve Paris, Paris, France
    14Restaurants

    Points

    1,975

    Le Gabriel holds three Michelin stars and a 97.5 La Liste score inside La Réserve hotel in Paris's 8th arrondissement. Chef Jérôme Banctel runs a creative menu with a plant-based five-course option available at lunch only — a compelling reason to return. Book six to eight weeks ahead; this is near-impossible on short notice at Paris's €€€€ tier.

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    Table - Bruno Verjus, Paris, France
    15Restaurants

    Points

    1,820

    Table - Bruno Verjus holds two Michelin stars and ranked #3 in the World's 50 Best in 2024, with counter seating that puts every guest directly in front of the open kitchen. The daily-changing set menu is built entirely around what Verjus sourced that morning. Booking is near impossible — reserve the moment a slot opens and build your Paris trip around the date.

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    Tour d'Argent, Paris, France
    16Restaurants

    Tour d'Argent

    Paris, France

    Points

    1,760

    Tour d'Argent holds a Michelin star, a Les Grandes Tables du Monde designation, a 300,000-bottle cellar with 14,000 selections — making it the strongest wine-led dining choice in Paris at the €€€€ tier. The Seine view and classical French cooking under Chef Yannick Franques justify the price most clearly when you engage the cellar. Book four to six weeks ahead for weekday evenings; closed Sunday and Monday.

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    L'Astrance, Paris, France
    17Restaurants

    L'Astrance

    Paris, France

    Points

    1,715

    L'Astrance is one of Paris's most consistently awarded fine dining rooms, with Pascal Barbot's produce-driven, Asian-influenced contemporary French cooking earning Michelin recognition and over a decade in the World's 50 Best. Booking is near impossible and the format is tasting menu only. Worth pursuing for serious food enthusiasts, especially for a midweek lunch.

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    Septime, Paris, France
    18Restaurants

    Septime

    Paris, France

    Points

    1,705

    Septime delivers Michelin-starred seasonal French cooking at €85 lunch / €135 dinner, a price point that undercuts most peers by 30–40%. Chef Bertrand Grébaut's produce-forward tasting menus and natural wine list have kept the neo-industrial dining room on the World's 50 Best list for over a decade. Reservations open exactly three weeks ahead and vanish in minutes.

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    La Scène, Paris, France
    19Restaurants

    La Scène

    Paris, France

    Points

    1,630

    La Scène holds two Michelin stars, a Les Grandes Tables du Monde award, a 4.7/5 from nearly 940 reviews — and it closes entirely on weekends. Chef Stéphanie Le Quellec's intimate room on Avenue Matignon is one of Paris's harder reservations to land. Book four to six weeks out, plan for a weekday, expect a €€€€ menu that justifies the price across multiple independent credential bodies.

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    Le Grand Restaurant, Paris, France
    20Restaurants

    Le Grand Restaurant

    Paris, France

    Points

    1,600

    Le Grand Restaurant holds two Michelin stars, a 97-point La Liste score, Gault & Millau's Sommelier of the Year — making it the 8th arrondissement's strongest case for contemporary French fine dining. Jean-François Piège's kitchen is technically precise and design-forward. Book weeks out; the room closes Saturday and Sunday, dinner reservations are near impossible to secure.

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    Le Jules Verne, Paris, France
    21Restaurants

    Le Jules Verne

    Paris, France

    Points

    1,575

    Le Jules Verne holds 2 Michelin Stars and a Les Grandes Tables du Monde Award, with Frédéric Anton's classical French kitchen operating from the Eiffel Tower's second floor. It is the strongest choice in Paris for a special-occasion dinner where the setting matters as much as the food. Booking difficulty is near impossible — plan two to three months out minimum.

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    L'Ambroisie, Paris, France
    22Restaurants

    L'Ambroisie

    Paris, France

    Points

    1,445

    Three Michelin stars and 98 La Liste points anchor L'Ambroisie as one of Paris's most technically accomplished classic French kitchens. Chef Chikara Yoshitomi executes the haute cuisine canon—lobster, langoustine, turbot—with restraint and precision in a formal 17th-century dining room on Place des Vosges. Reservations open roughly three months out and fill fast; expect ceremony, punctuality, a €€€€ bill. Worth the effort if mastery in the grand tradition is your priority.

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    L'Oiseau Blanc, Paris, France
    23Restaurants

    L'Oiseau Blanc

    Paris, France

    Points

    1,445

    L'Oiseau Blanc holds two Michelin stars under chef David Bizet and scores 80.5 on La Liste 2025, making it one of the more reliable contemporary French tables in Paris's 16th arrondissement. At €€€€ pricing, the kitchen consistently delivers. Book four to six weeks out minimum — demand is steady and availability is tight.

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    Maison Rostang, Paris, France
    24Restaurants

    Maison Rostang

    Paris, France

    Points

    1,340

    Maison Rostang holds two Michelin stars in Paris's 17th with a kitchen anchored in French classical technique, led by Nicolas Beaumann. The 1,500-reference wine list is one of the most substantive at this price point in the city. Book for a significant occasion and plan your reservation well in advance: this is Near Impossible to secure at short notice.

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    Sushi Yoshinaga, Paris, France
    25Restaurants

    Sushi Yoshinaga

    Paris, France

    Points

    1,275

    Paris's most credentialled Japanese restaurant, Sushi Yoshinaga holds two Michelin stars (2025) and. At €€€€, Chef Tomoyuki Yoshinaga delivers a counter-format experience that competes with Tokyo-standard omakase. Near-impossible to book and not suited to large groups, but the strongest choice in Paris for a serious Japanese special occasion.

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    Pur' - Jean-François Rouquette, Paris, France
    26Restaurants

    Points

    1,230

    The kitchen excels on meat and fish — if that matches your palate, this is a technically accomplished and properly occasioned booking. Reserve 3–4 weeks out minimum.

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    Frenchie, Paris, France
    27Restaurants

    Frenchie

    Paris, France

    Points

    1,225

    Frenchie holds a Michelin star and ranks #145 in Europe on the 2025 Opinionated About Dining list — a hard booking (plan 4–6 weeks ahead) that pays off if ingredient-led, seasonally driven cooking is what you are after. Located at 5 Rue du Nil in Paris's 2nd arrondissement, it runs dinner only, Tuesday through Friday, with two sittings per night.

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    Akrame, Paris, France
    28Restaurants

    Akrame

    Paris, France

    Points

    1,185

    Akrame is a chef-driven creative French restaurant near La Madeleine, running a no-choice carte blanche format at €€€€. La Liste rates it 82 points (Prestige, 2026) and OAD places it at #94 in Classical Europe. Book for a special occasion or a serious lunch — closed weekends, so plan accordingly.

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    Lucas Carton, Paris, France
    29Restaurants

    Lucas Carton

    Paris, France

    Points

    1,150

    Lucas Carton at Place de la Madeleine holds a Michelin star, an OAD Classical Europe ranking, one of Paris's most significant dining rooms — Art Nouveau woodwork by Louis Majorelle, in place since 1900. Chef Hugo Bourny's Contemporary French kitchen is precise and classically grounded. Book three to six weeks out; lunch Tuesday to Saturday is the best entry point at €€€€.

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    Bellefeuille, Paris, France
    30Restaurants

    Bellefeuille

    Paris, France

    Points

    1,130

    Bellefeuille earns its Michelin star with vegetable- and seafood-focused French gastronomic cooking inside a 19th-century private mansion in Paris's 16th. The wine list runs to 1,450 selections with serious depth across French regions. At the $$$ price tier with easy booking and, it is one of the more accessible fine-dining rooms in the city without sacrificing atmosphere or technical ambition.

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