Restaurant in Paris, France
Book now before demand catches up.

Fana earned a Michelin Bib Gourmand in 2025 — one year after its first Michelin Plate — and holds a 4.9 Google rating from over 500 reviews. At a €€ price point in the 18th arrondissement, it offers serious modern cuisine at accessible prices. Book now while tables remain easy to secure; that will change as the awards bring more attention.
Fana earned a Michelin Bib Gourmand in 2025, one year after landing a Michelin Plate. That progression matters for your booking window: this is a small, neighbourhood-rooted address in the 18th arrondissement that has not yet priced or sized itself to absorb the attention those awards bring. Right now, securing a table is still direct. That will not be the case indefinitely. If you are planning a Paris trip and weighing where to spend your mid-range dining budget, Fana warrants serious consideration before the reservation window tightens.
Fana sits at 14 Rue Ferdinand Flocon, a quiet residential street in the upper 18th, away from the tourist concentration of Montmartre's summit. The Bib Gourmand designation is Michelin's signal that a restaurant delivers cooking worth seeking out at a price that does not require a special-occasion budget. At a €€ price point, Fana is positioned as an accessible modern cuisine address rather than a destination tasting-menu experience. Google reviewers have awarded it a 4.9 from 534 reviews, which is a high-confidence signal of consistent execution rather than occasional brilliance.
The cuisine is listed as Modern Cuisine, a designation that in Paris typically implies a kitchen working with French technique as its foundation while drawing from a wider set of references. Without confirmed dish descriptions in our data, Pearl does not invent specifics, but the Bib Gourmand standard requires genuine cooking at genuine value: that is the meaningful data point here.
Fana's price tier makes repeat visits practical in a way that €€€€ addresses cannot be. If you are in Paris for several days, or return regularly, the multi-visit logic here is real rather than aspirational.
First visit: test the format. Use an initial meal to understand the room, the service cadence, and the kitchen's register. At €€, the risk of a first visit is low. You are not committing €150+ per head to discover whether the style suits you. Come for lunch if the kitchen offers it, when neighbourhood restaurants in Paris often run shorter, tighter menus at a sharper price.
Second visit: go deeper. Once you understand the menu structure, a return visit is where you make deliberate choices rather than safe ones. In a modern cuisine kitchen at this level, the more interesting plates are rarely the most legible on the menu. A second visit, with some knowledge of the kitchen's tendencies, tends to yield a better meal.
Third visit or beyond: bring the right people. Fana's neighbourhood positioning, away from the centre, makes it the kind of place that rewards being a regular. If you are based in Paris or visit frequently, this is the sort of address worth introducing to others who share your interest in well-executed cooking at a price that does not demand justification.
The Bib Gourmand does not position Fana as a white-tablecloth celebration venue in the way that a Michelin-starred room does. But that is not a reason to dismiss it for a special occasion; it is a reason to match the occasion to the room. A birthday dinner for someone who cares about food quality over formal staging, an anniversary for a couple who prefers neighbourhood warmth to grand-hotel ceremony, or a celebratory meal for a smaller group: these all work well at a Bib Gourmand address with a 4.9 rating. If your occasion requires a room with visible luxury signals, look to a starred venue. If the quality of what is on the plate matters more than the weight of the silverware, Fana is a serious option at a fraction of the price.
The 18th arrondissement has a growing number of serious cooking addresses that operate outside the first-arrondissement prestige circuit. For a broader picture of where Fana sits in Paris's dining options, see our full Paris restaurants guide. If you are planning a trip around it, our Paris hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide cover the rest of the trip.
For comparable modern cuisine addresses in Paris at a similar mid-range price, Accents Table Bourse and Anona are worth considering. Amâlia and Auberge de Montfleury offer further alternatives depending on the style of cooking you are looking for. For a higher-spend option in Paris, 114, Faubourg covers the luxury end of the French modern cuisine spectrum.
If you are building a broader France itinerary around serious cooking, Pearl covers a number of the country's significant addresses: Flocons de Sel in Megève, Mirazur in Menton, Troisgros in Ouches, Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern, Bras in Laguiole, and Paul Bocuse in Collonges-au-Mont-d'Or. For modern cuisine comparisons further afield, Frantzén in Stockholm and FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai sit at the opposite end of the price spectrum but represent what the format looks like at its most ambitious. Our Paris wineries guide is also worth a look if wine is part of your trip planning.
Fana is worth booking now, specifically because the window of easy access at this price point is likely to narrow. A 4.9 Google rating across 534 reviews and back-to-back Michelin recognition signals a kitchen that is cooking well and consistently. At €€ in Paris, that combination is relatively rare. Book it while the table is easy to get.
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fana | Michelin Bib Gourmand (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 | €€€€ | — |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
At the same €€ price tier, Fana competes with other Bib Gourmand addresses in Paris's outer arrondissements rather than with starred rooms. If you want a step up in formality and prestige, Kei in the 1st offers Franco-Japanese precision at a higher price point. For a white-tablecloth celebration at the top of the market, L'Ambroisie or Le Cinq are the comparison, but expect to spend four to five times more per head. Fana's case is that you get serious, Michelin-recognised cooking at a price that makes it a genuine neighbourhood option rather than a once-a-trip occasion.
Fana holds a Bib Gourmand, not a starred distinction, and sits on a quiet residential street in the upper 18th — this is not a jacket-required room. Neat, presentable clothing is appropriate; treat it like a serious neighbourhood restaurant rather than a formal dining occasion. If you are coming straight from a day of walking, a quick change is worth it.
Book at least two to three weeks ahead now, and expect that window to tighten. Fana moved from a Michelin Plate in 2024 to a Bib Gourmand in 2025, and that kind of recognition reliably pulls in a wider audience within months of announcement. At €€ pricing with a strong Google rating, demand is not going to ease — book earlier than you think you need to.
Fana is at 14 Rue Ferdinand Flocon in the upper 18th, away from the Montmartre tourist circuit, so factor that into your evening routing. It is a Michelin Bib Gourmand restaurant — recognised for quality at a fair price — not a tasting-menu destination. First visit, treat it as a solid dinner at a neighbourhood address that has earned independent validation, rather than a formal occasion.
Yes, straightforwardly. A Michelin Bib Gourmand at a €€ price point means the recognition-to-cost ratio is among the better cases you will find in Paris right now. The Bib Gourmand is specifically awarded for good cooking at a price that does not require an occasion to justify — that is the point of the distinction. If you are comparing spend per head against starred addresses like Pierre Gagnaire or Alléno Paris, Fana is not in the same format, but it is not trying to be.
It depends on what the occasion needs. Fana is not a white-tablecloth celebration room in the way a Michelin-starred address is, and the €€ pricing and residential 18th setting reflect that. For a birthday dinner or anniversary where the atmosphere of a grand Parisian dining room matters, Le Cinq or L'Ambroisie are better fits. But if the occasion is about a genuinely good meal without the formality or the three-figure bill, Fana delivers on the substance.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.