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    Restaurant in Paris, France

    Bistro Là-Haut

    210pts

    Michelin cooking without the Michelin price tag.

    Bistro Là-Haut, Restaurant in Paris

    About Bistro Là-Haut

    Bistro Là-Haut in Suresnes holds Michelin Plate recognition for 2024 and 2025, with a 4.8 Google rating across nearly 5,000 reviews — all at a €€ price point. The slight distance from central Paris is the trade-off for getting Michelin-credentialled modern cuisine at a fraction of flagship prices. Book for lunch first; return for dinner on a special occasion.

    Verdict: Don't Let the Postcode Put You Off

    The most common mistake people make about Bistro Là-Haut is writing it off because of the address. Suresnes sits just across the Seine from the 16th arrondissement, a 20-minute journey from central Paris, and that distance is precisely why this Michelin Plate-recognised address at 70 Avenue Franklin Roosevelt punches so far above its price tier. At €€ pricing with back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and 2025, and a Google rating of 4.8 across nearly 5,000 reviews, this is one of the most consistently praised modern cuisine venues in the greater Paris area. If you are planning a special occasion and want serious cooking without a four-figure bill, this is where the maths work in your favour.

    What to Expect

    Bistro Là-Haut is a modern cuisine restaurant operating in a register that sits well above what the word "bistro" typically signals. The Michelin Plate designation, awarded in both 2024 and 2025, confirms the kitchen is cooking at a level that Michelin inspectors consider worthy of attention — not a star, but a clear signal of consistent quality and above-average ambition. For a venue at the €€ price point, that credential matters. It means the kitchen is not coasting on neighbourhood goodwill; it is being held to a higher standard and meeting it.

    The atmosphere here is the first thing that recalibrates expectations. This is not the charged, high-decibel energy of a packed Paris brasserie, nor the hushed formality of a three-star dining room. The mood sits somewhere in between: convivial without being loud, considered without being stiff. For a date, a birthday dinner, or a business lunch where conversation needs to flow, that balance is exactly right. The room rewards unhurried eating.

    Lunch vs Dinner: Where the Value Lands

    At a €€ venue with Michelin Plate recognition, the lunch sitting is almost always the sharper play on value, and Bistro Là-Haut follows that logic. Michelin-tracked kitchens at this price level typically offer weekday lunch formulas that deliver the same kitchen standards at a compressed price. If your goal is to experience the cooking at its most cost-efficient, a Tuesday or Wednesday lunch is the move. You get the full kitchen, fewer covers, and a calmer room.

    The dinner experience shifts the register. The room is fuller, the occasion feel is more pronounced, and for a celebration or a date where the evening itself is the point, dinner earns that framing. The 4.8 rating across nearly 5,000 Google reviews holds consistently, which suggests the kitchen does not drop in quality between services — a meaningful reassurance when you are planning something that matters. That said, for a first visit on a budget, lunch is the practical recommendation. Come back for dinner once you know the kitchen.

    The Suresnes location, slightly removed from the tourist circuits of central Paris, also means the dinner crowd skews local and regular rather than tourist-heavy. That has a direct effect on the room's energy: less performative, more genuinely engaged with the food. For a special occasion where you want to feel like you are eating somewhere real rather than somewhere staged, that distinction counts.

    Who Should Book

    Bistro Là-Haut works particularly well for couples planning a celebration dinner who want Michelin-credentialled cooking without committing to the €€€€ pricing of central Paris flagships. It also works for small groups (two to four people) where the quality of the meal matters more than the postcode. Business diners who value a room with enough quiet to hold a conversation will find it more functional than the louder bistros closer to the business districts.

    Solo diners should know that French modern cuisine restaurants at this level are generally table-service oriented rather than counter-focused, which can make solo dining feel slightly more formal than at a bar-seat venue. That said, the warm reception signalled by the review volume suggests the room is not unwelcoming to solo guests. If solo dining with a bar option is a priority, venues like Accents Table Bourse or Anona in central Paris offer that setup more reliably.

    For visitors already exploring the broader Paris dining scene, Bistro Là-Haut sits in interesting company. Paris has no shortage of Michelin Plate addresses, but very few that combine that recognition with a €€ price band and a near-5-star review average at scale. For context on what else is happening in the city's modern cuisine space, our full Paris restaurants guide covers the full range. If you are also planning your stay, the Paris hotels guide and Paris bars guide round out the trip. Further afield, the cooking ambition at Bistro Là-Haut sits in the same quality conversation as destinations like Flocons de Sel in Megève or Maison Lameloise in Chagny , both worth knowing if you are touring France for serious food.

    Know Before You Go

    Practical Details

    • Address: 70 Av. Franklin Roosevelt, 92150 Suresnes, France
    • Price range: €€ (mid-range; strong value given the Michelin Plate recognition)
    • Awards: Michelin Plate 2024 and 2025
    • Google rating: 4.8 / 5 (4,889 reviews)
    • Booking difficulty: Easy , advance reservation recommended for dinner and weekend lunch
    • Leading for: Date nights, celebrations, business lunch, small groups
    • Getting there: Suresnes is accessible via the western RER or by car from central Paris; allow 20–25 minutes from the 8th arrondissement
    • Paris guides: Restaurants | Hotels | Bars | Wineries | Experiences

    FAQ

    What should a first-timer know about Bistro Là-Haut?

    • It is in Suresnes, not central Paris , factor in 20–25 minutes of travel from the city centre.
    • Michelin Plate recognition (2024, 2025) at a €€ price point is the core draw: serious cooking, accessible pricing.
    • A 4.8 rating across nearly 5,000 Google reviews is a strong signal of consistency, not just hype.
    • First visit? Go for lunch to test the kitchen before committing to a full dinner spend.

    Is Bistro Là-Haut good for a special occasion?

    • Yes, for the right kind of occasion. If you want a thoughtful, relaxed celebration dinner with Michelin-credentialled cooking at a fraction of central Paris prices, this works well for two to four people.
    • The atmosphere skews warm and unhurried rather than grand or theatrical, which suits birthdays, anniversaries, and intimate dinners better than large group celebrations.
    • For higher-ceremony occasions where the address and room formality matter as much as the food, Le Cinq at the Four Seasons George V sets a different standard , at a much steeper price.

    Can I eat at the bar at Bistro Là-Haut?

    • Bar seating is not confirmed in the available data for this venue. Bistro Là-Haut operates as a modern cuisine restaurant, which typically means table-service dining rather than a dedicated bar counter.
    • If bar or counter dining is a priority, Accents Table Bourse and 114, Faubourg offer that option in central Paris.

    Is Bistro Là-Haut good for solo dining?

    • Possible, but not the venue's natural format. French modern cuisine restaurants at this tier are table-service oriented, which can feel more formal when dining alone.
    • The consistently high review scores suggest a welcoming room, so solo diners are unlikely to feel out of place , but do not expect a lively bar counter to anchor the experience.
    • For solo dining in Paris with more flexible seating, Amâlia or Anona are worth comparing.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Bistro Là-Haut?

    • Specific menu formats are not confirmed in the available data. At a €€ venue with Michelin Plate recognition, a multi-course set menu is plausible and likely represents the leading expression of the kitchen's range.
    • The value case is strong at this price tier: Michelin Plate cooking at €€ pricing is rare in the Paris area, and a tasting format at that intersection is almost always worth exploring once.
    • For comparison, tasting menus at central Paris €€€€ addresses like Plénitude or Pierre Gagnaire operate at a fundamentally different price level , Bistro Là-Haut is the value alternative, not a direct competitor in ambition or ceremony.

    Compare Bistro Là-Haut

    Award Winners Like Bistro Là-Haut
    VenueAwardsPriceValue
    Bistro Là-HautMichelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024)€€
    PlénitudeMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best€€€€
    Pierre GagnaireMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best€€€€
    Alléno Paris au Pavillon LedoyenMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best€€€€
    KeiMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best€€€€
    Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George VMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best€€€€

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

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should a first-timer know about Bistro Là-Haut?

    The address in Suresnes is the main thing that trips people up — it sits just across the Seine from Paris's 16th arrondissement, not a long haul. The Michelin Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025 signals cooking that consistently punches above a standard bistro; expect modern cuisine with real technical intent at a €€ price point. Book in advance rather than walking in, and treat the lunch sitting as the sharper-value entry point if your schedule allows.

    Is Bistro Là-Haut good for a special occasion?

    Yes, particularly if you want Michelin-credentialled cooking without the €€€ commitment you'd face at Paris addresses like Le Cinq or Pierre Gagnaire. Two consecutive Michelin Plate recognitions confirm the kitchen is consistent, which matters when you're booking around a celebration. It's better suited to an intimate dinner for two than a large group.

    Can I eat at the bar at Bistro Là-Haut?

    Bar seating details are not confirmed in available venue data for Bistro Là-Haut. Given the modern cuisine format and Michelin Plate positioning, the experience is primarily table-service oriented — check the venue's official channels to confirm bar or counter options before planning around it.

    Is Bistro Là-Haut good for solo dining?

    The €€ price range makes solo visits financially accessible compared to full Michelin-starred alternatives in central Paris. A modern cuisine format at Michelin Plate level tends to work well for solo diners who want a proper sit-down meal rather than a casual counter experience. If solo bar seating is a priority, verify availability directly, as seating configurations are not confirmed in the venue data.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Bistro Là-Haut?

    Specific menu formats and pricing are not confirmed in the venue data, so a direct comparison against per-course alternatives is not possible here. What the data does support: two years of Michelin Plate recognition at a €€ price point suggests that whatever the format, the cooking justifies the spend relative to comparably priced Paris options. At €€ versus the €€€–€€€€ required at Kei or Alléno Paris, the value case is already favourable — but confirm current menu structures with the restaurant before booking around a specific format.

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