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    Restaurant in Paris, France

    Sola

    805Pearl Points

    Franco-Japanese precision. Book well ahead.

    Sola, Restaurant in Paris

    About Sola

    Sola holds a Michelin star and an Opinionated About Dining Top 207 ranking in Europe for its French-Japanese creative menu on the Left Bank. Chef Victor Garvey's kitchen — known for Sakura-smoked duck liver and technically precise fish preparations — rewards repeat visits as the menu evolves across seasons. Book six to eight weeks ahead minimum; demand is consistent and tables move fast.

    Sola, Paris: The Verdict

    If you have been to Sola once, you already know whether you want to go back. The answer, almost certainly, is yes. For a returning visitor, the real question is not whether Sola is worth it, but how to get the most out of a second or third visit given that the menu moves with the seasons and chef Victor Garvey's creative range is broader than a single sitting can capture.

    Portrait

    The address places Sola squarely in the Latin Quarter, steps from the Seine, in a space that reads as contemporary and refined without announcing itself. The interior is deliberate: aesthetic without spectacle, which suits a kitchen that asks you to pay attention to the plate rather than the room. The name means heaven in Japanese, the concept follows that orientation, a French-Japanese team cooking with global produce, reconciling the vegetable and the animal in combinations that have earned their critical reputation through specificity rather than novelty.

    The aroma that greets you before the first course is a fair preview of the kitchen's register: something between woodsmoke and precision, grounded by the scent of Sakura wood that the kitchen uses for smoking. The duck liver preparation smoked on Sakura wood with almond crumble is one of the dishes that has defined Sola's reputation, if it appears on the menu during your visit, it is the strongest single argument for the kitchen's point of view. Sakura wood smoking is not a technique you encounter across the standard Paris fine-dining circuit, the combination of liver, smoke, almond crumble demonstrates why the French-Japanese framing here is a culinary logic rather than a marketing label.

    For a returning diner, the lamb crown with seasonal vegetables is worth tracking across visits. The execution depends heavily on what the season offers, which means the dish you encounter in spring is a different argument from the one you encounter in autumn. If mackerel mi-cuit appears, served with a celery granite and Granny Smith apple, it is the kitchen's clearest statement on restraint: a cold preparation with acid and crunch that reads as technically demanding without drawing attention to the effort. These are the dishes to anchor a second visit around, asking at reservation whether they are currently on the menu before confirming your date.

    The broader menu strategy at Sola rewards repeat attendance precisely because the kitchen draws from products across the world, filtered through a Japanese sensibility applied to French technique. A first visit gives you the signature logic; subsequent visits reveal the range. Across two or three visits you will encounter different expressions of the same underlying philosophy, which is more useful than any single sitting at a comparable address where the menu is fixed and the novelty is exhausted after one experience. Venues like Arpège or Le Meurice Alain Ducasse offer their own versions of seasonal evolution at the top tier of Paris dining, but Sola's price-to-ambition ratio and its more intimate scale make repeat visits more financially sustainable at the €€€€ bracket.

    For context on how Sola sits within the broader French creative scene, it is worth comparing the ambition here to addresses like Mirazur in Menton, Flocons de Sel in Megève, or Bras in Laguiole, all of which work within the same framework of product-driven, technique-first cooking. What distinguishes Sola is the Japanese thread running through everything, a consistent axis that makes the menu coherent across seasons rather than simply seasonal. That same cross-cultural seriousness is visible at venues like Quique Dacosta in Dénia and Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona, where the creative framework is the point rather than the backdrop.

    For those planning a Paris trip around multiple restaurant experiences, Sola pairs well with a broader programme. See our full Paris restaurants guide for the wider picture, our full Paris hotels guide if you are staying in the 5th or nearby. The Paris bars guide and Paris experiences guide are worth consulting if you are building a multi-day itinerary around a Sola dinner.

    Ratings and Recognition

    • Michelin 1 Star (2025)
    • Opinionated About Dining Leading Restaurants in Europe: #207 (2025), #217 (2024)
    • Opinionated About Dining Leading New Restaurants in Europe: Highly Recommended (2023)

    Booking

    Sola is hard to book. The combination of a Michelin star, a rising OAD ranking, a format that appears to run at intimate scale means that tables move quickly. Book as far in advance as your travel plans allow, six to eight weeks minimum is a practical target for weekend dates; weekday lunch slots may open closer to the date but should not be relied upon. There is no booking method listed in current data, so check the restaurant's own channels directly. If you are planning a multi-visit strategy, stagger your bookings across seasons to get a different expression of the menu each time.

    Practical Details

    Address: 12 Rue de l'Hôtel Colbert, 75005 Paris. Price: €€€€, budget for a full tasting menu experience at the upper end of Paris fine dining, consistent with other one-star addresses in the city. Reservations: Book well ahead; six to eight weeks is a realistic minimum for prime slots. Dress: Smart; the interior is contemporary and refined, the room's tone suggests that guests dress to match. Group size: No seat count is confirmed in current data, contact the restaurant directly for groups of four or more to confirm configuration options. Solo dining: A counter or bar seat may be available; ask at booking. Dietary needs: The kitchen works with a range of products and applies precision technique, communicate restrictions at the time of reservation. Getting there: The 5th arrondissement is well served by Paris's Métro network; Maubert-Mutualité (Line 10) is the closest station.

    How It Compares

    See the comparison section below for how Sola sits against Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen, Le Gabriel, and Blanc, among others in the Paris creative dining tier.

    Pearl Picks: More Paris and France

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I wear to Sola?

    Sola's interior is described as contemporary and refined, which points toward dressed-up rather than dressed down. Smart attire — jacket for men, equivalent for women — fits the room and the €€€€ price point. This is not a place to show up in trainers.

    What should a first-timer know about Sola?

    Sola runs a creative Franco-Japanese format under chef Victor Garvey, built around a tasting menu that combines Japanese technique with global produce. Expect dishes in the style of duck liver smoked on Sakura wood or mackerel mi-cuit, not a traditional French or Japanese meal. At €€€€, you are paying for precision and concept — come with that expectation, not hoping for à la carte flexibility.

    Can Sola accommodate groups?

    Sola operates at intimate scale, which makes large group bookings difficult and likely unavailable. Parties of two to four are the practical target. If you are planning a group celebration in Paris at this price tier, Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen has more physical capacity to consider.

    Is Sola good for solo dining?

    A counter or chef's table format — common at restaurants of this type and scale — can work well for solo diners, but Sola's specific seating configuration is not publicly detailed. Given the tasting menu format and the intimate room, solo dining is plausible and likely more comfortable here than at a large, table-heavy room. Worth asking directly when booking.

    How far ahead should I book Sola?

    Book four to six weeks out as a minimum. Sola holds a Michelin star, an OAD Top 250 Europe ranking that has climbed year-on-year, an intimate format — that combination means availability disappears fast. Last-minute tables are unlikely outside of cancellations.

    Does Sola handle dietary restrictions?

    Tasting menu restaurants at this level typically accommodate dietary restrictions with advance notice, but Sola's specific policy is not documented in available venue data. check the venue's official channels before booking, especially for serious allergies or vegetarian requirements, given that the menu is built around specific protein-vegetable pairings.

    Location

    12 Rue de l'Hôtel Colbert, 75005 Paris, France

    Compare Sola

    Worth the Price? Sola vs. Peers
    VenuePrice
    Sola€€€€
    Plénitude€€€€
    Pierre Gagnaire€€€€
    Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen€€€€
    Kei€€€€
    Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George V€€€€

    A quick look at how Sola measures up.

    Also Consider

    At the €€€€ tier in Paris, Sola's strongest differentiator is its French-Japanese creative axis at a scale that still feels personal. Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen operates at a significantly higher price point with three Michelin stars and a formal grandeur that Sola does not attempt to match, if maximum technical ambition and a monumental room are priorities, Alléno is the answer, but Sola is the more accessible entry point into this level of creative cooking. Pierre Gagnaire offers comparable creative range and a longer critical track record, but the room and service register feel more traditional; Sola's contemporary interior and Japanese thread make it the stronger choice for diners who want something that does not feel like classic Paris fine dining.

    Kei is the most direct peer comparison: also a Michelin-starred French-Japanese kitchen in Paris, with a chef whose training bridges both traditions. Kei's cooking leans more toward classical French structure with Japanese ingredients; Sola inverts that logic, with Japanese technique applied to global produce. If you have done Kei, Sola is the next move, the two kitchens share a premise but arrive at different conclusions. Plénitude operates at a higher luxury register as part of the Cheval Blanc hotel and carries three Michelin stars; it is the right choice if hotel dining and a more theatrical service experience are what you are after, but it is a different type of evening from Sola.

    Le Cinq at the Four Seasons George V is the booking for power-dining and a formal room with deep service infrastructure; Sola is the booking when the plate is the priority and the setting should not compete with it. On booking difficulty, all five venues at this tier require significant advance planning, Sola is not easier than the others, but its rising OAD ranking means the window is narrowing. If you are choosing between them on value, Sola at one Michelin star delivers a price-to-ambition ratio that the three-star addresses in this set cannot match.

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