Restaurant in Paris, France
Affordable precision dining, book Tuesday–Friday.

A Michelin Plate-recognised modern kitchen on Rue Paul Bert, Le 6 delivers serious cooking at the €€ price tier — ranking 36th in OAD's Casual Europe list for 2024. Open Tuesday through Friday for lunch and dinner, plus Monday evenings. Booking is easy by Paris standards, making it one of the more accessible well-credentialled dinner options in the 11th arrondissement.
The common assumption about Rue Paul Bert is that it belongs to the natural wine crowd: casual, lo-fi, and more interested in provenance than precision. Le 6 shares the address but not the posture. This is a Michelin Plate-recognised kitchen running a genuinely considered modern cuisine programme in a neighbourhood better known for convivial bistros than technical cooking. If you walk in expecting a direct zinc-counter dinner, you will be surprised. That surprise is mostly welcome.
Under chef Bertrand Auboyneau, Le 6 has built a reputation that the Opinionated About Dining guide has tracked closely: ranked 36th in its Casual Europe list for 2024, up from 109th in 2023. That kind of upward movement over a single year signals a kitchen that is executing with increasing consistency, not coasting on a fixed identity. The Michelin Plate, held in both 2024 and 2025, confirms that the cooking sits above the neighbourhood average without crossing into the formality bracket where price expectations shift dramatically.
The price tier sits at €€, which in Paris's 11th arrondissement means you are getting a serious kitchen at a price point well below what comparable technical ambition would cost in the 1st or 8th. For a special occasion dinner where the bill should not overshadow the evening, that combination of credential and value is genuinely difficult to find elsewhere in the city at this register.
The editorial angle that leading explains Le 6 is sourcing. Modern cuisine at the €€ level in Paris lives or dies on ingredient decisions: whether the kitchen is working with suppliers who deliver produce worth cooking carefully, or whether the technique is being used to compensate for average raw material. The OAD ranking trajectory and the repeat Michelin recognition together suggest the former. Auboyneau's kitchen is not dressing up middling product with sophisticated method. The cooking reflects what is available and what is worth cooking now, which is why the menu moves with the season rather than anchoring itself to a fixed identity. In spring and early summer, that means the kitchen is building around what French market gardens are actually producing at their leading, and you should expect the menu to reflect that directly.
Format suits a date or a small celebratory dinner more than a large group. Le 6 operates Tuesday through Friday for both lunch and dinner, and adds Monday evening service. Saturday and Sunday are closed, which matters practically: if you are planning around a weekend in Paris, this cannot anchor your Saturday night. Book it for a Thursday dinner or a Friday lunch instead. Getting a table is not difficult by Paris standards; booking difficulty here is low, meaning you are not competing against a reservation scarcity problem the way you would at OAD Top 10 addresses.
Lunch is worth flagging specifically. Running from 12:30 to 2:30 pm Tuesday through Friday, it offers the same kitchen at a timing that suits a business meal or a post-museum afternoon. For visitors staying in the Marais or moving through the eastern arrondissements, a Friday lunch at Le 6 is a practical and well-credentialled option that does not require early-morning reservation strategy. See our full Paris restaurants guide for broader context on how Le 6 sits within the city's wider dining picture.
For context on what the Michelin Plate recognition means in competitive terms: it places Le 6 in the company of kitchens the guide considers worth a visit without yet warranting a star. That is a useful calibration. You are not coming here for the theatre of a starred tasting menu, but you are not settling for something merely adequate either. The cooking has earned external validation from two independent sources in the same year, which is enough to book with confidence.
If your frame is special occasion and you want to understand where Le 6 sits relative to France's broader serious-kitchen landscape, consider that the country's most celebrated addresses — Mirazur in Menton, Troisgros in Ouches, Bras in Laguiole, Flocons de Sel in Megève, Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern, and Paul Bocuse in Collonges-au-Mont-d'Or — operate at a different scale and price register entirely. Le 6 is not competing in that bracket, nor does it need to. It is competing on the more useful question of where a serious dinner at a fair price point in Paris is actually worth your evening. On that question, its credentials are clear.
Paris visitors looking for other well-sourced, modern-format restaurants in the city might also consider Anona, Accents Table Bourse, Amâlia, and Auberge de Montfleury for comparable positioning across different arrondissements. For a broader look at where to eat, drink, and stay, see our full Paris bars guide, our full Paris hotels guide, our full Paris wineries guide, and our full Paris experiences guide.
Le 6 is at 6 Rue Paul Bert, 75011 Paris. Open Monday evenings (7:30–10 pm) and Tuesday through Friday for both lunch (12:30–2:30 pm) and dinner (7:30–10 pm). Closed Saturday and Sunday. Booking difficulty is low , this is not a hard reservation to secure, and weekend visitors should plan accordingly by targeting a weekday slot. No website or phone number is available in current records; book through a third-party reservation platform or walk in if you are flexible on timing.
For additional Paris options at various price points and formats, see 114, Faubourg and Amâlia. For international modern cuisine reference points, Frantzén in Stockholm and FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai illustrate how the format scales at higher price tiers.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Le 6 | Modern Cuisine | €€ | Easy |
| Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen | Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Kei | Contemporary French, Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Unknown |
| L'Ambroisie | French, Classic Cuisine | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George V | French, Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Pierre Gagnaire | French, Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
Comparing your options in Paris for this tier.
Dietary accommodation details are not documented in the venue record. Given the €€ price range and small-restaurant format typical of this part of the 11th, it is worth contacting the restaurant directly before booking if dietary restrictions are a factor. Le 6 is open for lunch and dinner Tuesday through Friday, and Monday dinner only, which gives you reasonable windows to call or email ahead.
The specific format of the menu is not documented in the available venue data, so confirming tasting menu structure or pricing here would be speculation. What is confirmed: Le 6 holds a Michelin Plate and ranks 36th in OAD Casual Europe (2024), suggesting the kitchen executes at a level where a multi-course format, if offered, would be consistent with that standing. Check directly when booking for current menu options.
Yes, at €€ it over-delivers relative to its price point. A Michelin Plate and an OAD Casual Europe ranking of 36th (2024) place it well above what the price tag suggests. For the 11th arrondissement, it competes with venues charging considerably more. If you want precision cooking without the bill that usually comes with it, this is a strong case for booking.
Specific dishes are not listed in the venue data, and inventing menu items would be misleading. Chef Bertrand Auboyneau runs a modern cuisine kitchen with enough consistency to earn OAD recognition two years running. Ask the team when you arrive what is performing best that day — at this format and price level, the kitchen's current focus is usually worth following.
Le 6 is a credible solo option. The Rue Paul Bert address and casual-leaning OAD classification (ranked 36th in Casual Europe 2024) suggest a format that is less ceremonial than a tasting-menu destination, which tends to work well for single diners. Lunch slots Tuesday through Friday (12:30–2:30 pm) are usually more accommodating for solo bookings than prime dinner hours.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.