Restaurant in Paris, France
Michelin-recognised, easy to book, worth it.

19 Saint Roch holds back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition (2024 and 2025) and sits at €€€ — meaningfully below the €€€€ starred tier dominating Paris's serious creative dining scene. With a 4.6 Google rating from 94 reviews and easy booking, it's a practical choice for a special occasion dinner in the 1st arrondissement when you want verified quality without the full ceremony of a starred room.
If you've been to 19 Saint Roch before, the question on a return visit is whether the kitchen has stayed consistent or drifted. Based on two consecutive Michelin Plate recognitions — awarded in both 2024 and 2025 — the answer is that this address on Rue Saint-Roch has held its line. The Michelin Plate signals cooking that is carefully executed and worth the trip, without yet crossing into the star tier. At €€€ pricing, that positioning is the whole argument for booking it: you're getting recognised creative cooking in the 1st arrondissement at a price point that sits meaningfully below the €€€€ bracket dominating Paris's serious-restaurant scene.
For a special occasion that doesn't demand the full ceremony of a starred room, 19 Saint Roch is a practical choice. The address places it close to the Palais-Royal and Tuileries, in a part of Paris where the surrounding streets feel occasion-appropriate without requiring theatre. If your evening calls for a restaurant that reads as considered and serious without the formality of jacket-required dining at Le Meurice Alain Ducasse or the weight of a full tasting menu at Arpège, this fills that gap competently.
The cuisine classification is Creative, which in Paris's current restaurant vocabulary means a kitchen not anchored to a single regional tradition. At this price and recognition level, that typically translates to a menu built around seasonal French produce with technique-led presentation , though no specific dishes from the database are available to confirm particulars. What the Michelin Plate designation does confirm is that inspectors found the cooking consistently sound across visits, which is the more useful signal than any single dish description.
On the question of whether the food travels well for takeout or delivery: this is not a format built for off-premise. Creative cooking at this level depends on plating, temperature, and service context. Ordering 19 Saint Roch to your hotel room would lose most of what the kitchen is trying to do. If you're planning a celebration dinner and considering eating in versus ordering in, eat in. The physical dining experience , and the occasion framing that comes with it , is the product here, not a portable meal. For delivery-friendly creative cooking in Paris, you're looking at a different category of restaurant entirely.
For comparison, the broader French creative dining scene has reference points across the country: Flocons de Sel in Megève, Mirazur in Menton, and Troisgros in Ouches represent what the creative format looks like at its most ambitious in France. 19 Saint Roch isn't competing at that level, but it doesn't need to. Its case is a different one: accessible creative cooking in a central Paris location, recognised by Michelin, priced below the starred tier.
Booking at 19 Saint Roch is rated Easy. In practical terms, that means you are unlikely to need more than a week's lead time for most midweek slots, though weekend evenings around Paris's main cultural calendar , fashion weeks, major public holidays, the summer influx , warrant booking further ahead. No phone number or booking platform is listed in the available data, so your most reliable route is checking their direct website or searching the venue on a Paris-specific reservation platform.
Google reviews sit at 4.6 across 94 ratings, which is a meaningful signal at that sample size: consistent satisfaction rather than a handful of outlier scores inflating the average. For a special occasion booking, 94 reviews at 4.6 gives you a reasonable confidence baseline that the experience delivers reliably, not just on good nights.
No dress code data is available, but at €€€ with Michelin recognition in Paris's 1st arrondissement, smart casual is the safe assumption. Arriving underdressed at this kind of address in this neighbourhood carries social friction you don't need on a celebration evening.
| Venue | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Leading For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 19 Saint Roch | €€€ | Michelin Plate (2024, 2025) | Easy | Special occasion, mid-tier creative |
| Le Gabriel - La Réserve Paris | €€€€ | Michelin starred | Harder | Full luxury occasion dining |
| Blanc | €€€ | , | Easy | Accessible contemporary Paris dining |
| Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen | €€€€ | Michelin starred | Harder | Prestige creative, splurge occasions |
Paris's serious creative dining runs deep. At the leading end, you have addresses like Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen and venues internationally comparable to Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona or Enrico Bartolini in Milan. 19 Saint Roch sits below that tier on recognition and above the neighbourhood bistro on ambition. That's a useful position for a specific kind of Paris evening: one where you want the kitchen to be doing something considered, you want Michelin's endorsement as a quality floor, and you don't want to spend €€€€ or plan three months ahead.
For a broader view of where this fits in Paris dining, see our full Paris restaurants guide. For the rest of your trip, our Paris hotels guide, Paris bars guide, and Paris experiences guide cover the surrounding decisions. If wine is a priority, our Paris wineries guide rounds out the picture. Elsewhere in France, Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern, Bras in Laguiole, and Paul Bocuse in Collonges-au-Mont-d'Or represent the wider context of French serious dining that 19 Saint Roch is operating within, at its own level.
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| 19 Saint Roch | Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024) | €€€ | — |
| Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | €€€€ | — |
| Kei | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | €€€€ | — |
| L'Ambroisie | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | €€€€ | — |
| Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George V | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | €€€€ | — |
| Pierre Gagnaire | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | €€€€ | — |
Comparing your options in Paris for this tier.
Booking is rated Easy, so a week's lead time covers most midweek slots. For Friday and Saturday evenings, aim for two weeks out to be safe. This is one of the more accessible Michelin Plate addresses in Paris's 1st arrondissement — you are not competing with a months-long waiting list.
The Easy booking rating and creative format work in a solo diner's favour — you are easier to seat and less constrained by party logistics. Paris's creative-leaning kitchens at the €€€ tier tend to use counter or compact table formats that suit one diner well. Nothing in the venue data flags a specific solo counter, but availability should not be an obstacle.
Two consecutive Michelin Plate recognitions (2024 and 2025) give it a credible occasion anchor at the €€€ price point. It sits below the full Michelin star tier, so if the occasion demands the most formal setting possible, addresses like L'Ambroisie or Le Cinq carry more weight. For a meaningful dinner without that level of formality or price, 19 Saint Roch is a practical choice.
No specific dietary policy is documented in the available venue data. For a creative kitchen at the €€€ level, calling ahead is always the right move — this is standard practice at Paris restaurants in this tier, regardless of venue. Contact details are not currently listed, so reach out via reservation platform when booking.
The €€€ price range and Michelin Plate status (two consecutive years) suggest a kitchen operating at a level where a multi-course format makes sense. Whether a tasting menu is specifically offered is not confirmed in the venue data, so verify the format when booking. If tasting menus are your preferred format at this price point, the Michelin recognition gives reasonable confidence in kitchen consistency.
Kei is the closest peer comparison — creative cuisine in central Paris with Michelin recognition, though at a higher price point. Pierre Gagnaire is the benchmark for ambitious creative cooking in the city if you want to spend significantly more. For a step down in formality at a similar €€€ tier, Paris's 1st arrondissement has several strong options worth comparing before you commit.
At €€€ with back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and 2025, the kitchen clears a reasonable bar for the spend. The Plate designation means Michelin considers the cooking good without awarding a star — solid value for the category, but not the ceiling of Paris creative dining. If you want starred validation at this price range, Kei is worth comparing directly.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.