Restaurant in Paris, France
Accessible booking, serious Japanese, €€€€ price.

A Michelin Plate Japanese restaurant at the €€€€ tier in Paris's 9th arrondissement, Marie Akaneya earns its price with consecutive recognition in 2024 and 2025 and a 4.7 Google score across nearly 500 reviews. Book it for a serious, full-format Japanese meal where the wine pairing is as important as the food. Booking is relatively easy at this tier — a week's notice usually suffices.
At the €€€€ price tier, Marie Akaneya is asking you to spend what a serious French tasting menu costs in Paris — and it delivers that spend in Japanese, which is a different proposition entirely. The question is whether refined Japanese cuisine at this price point makes sense in a city where competition from both French fine dining and a growing cohort of serious Japanese restaurants is fierce. The short answer: yes, with conditions. A Google rating of 4.7 across 477 reviews and consecutive Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and 2025 tell you this is a kitchen performing consistently at a level that justifies the price. If Japanese cuisine is what you want, this is one of the more credible addresses in Paris for it.
Marie Akaneya sits at 12 Rue Godot de Mauroy in the 9th arrondissement, a neighbourhood that has become a reliable corridor for serious dining without the tourist-trap pressure of Saint-Germain or the Marais. Visually, Japanese restaurants at this tier in Paris tend toward the spare and considered: clean lines, deliberate tableware, a room that signals restraint before the first dish arrives. That visual grammar matters at this price point because it sets the expectation for what follows — precision over abundance, composition over volume.
If you have been once and are returning, the experience becomes about reading the room more carefully. The format at this level of Japanese dining typically rewards attention: the sequence of courses, the way temperature and texture shift across a meal, the relationship between what is on the plate and what is in the glass. That last point connects directly to what separates a merely good meal from one that justifies the spend at €€€€.
For a Japanese restaurant operating at this price tier in Paris, the wine program is not a footnote , it is where a significant portion of your bill lands, and it is where the experience either coheres or fragments. Paris gives a Japanese kitchen an advantage that Tokyo venues rarely have in the same form: direct access to some of the world's most serious wine cellars and négociant relationships. A well-constructed list at a venue like this should be doing more than offering Burgundy by reflex; it should be making considered arguments for pairings that work with the cuisine's flavour register , umami-forward dishes, clean acidity, precise seasoning.
The pairing question at Marie Akaneya is worth thinking about before you go. Japanese cuisine at this level has a documented affinity with aged Burgundy, certain Alsatian whites, and high-acid Champagne , categories Paris is exceptionally well-placed to source. If the wine list is doing its job, you should find options that extend the logic of the food rather than compete with it. For returning visitors, this is the variable most worth interrogating: ask about the list before you order, and treat the wine pairing as part of the experience rather than an add-on. At €€€€, a wine-matched meal is the correct way to engage with a kitchen operating at this register.
For context on what serious Japanese fine dining looks like when the wine program is built with equal care, Myojaku in Tokyo and Azabu Kadowaki in Tokyo both demonstrate how the pairing argument can be made with rigour. Marie Akaneya is operating in a different context , Paris rather than Tokyo , but the standard of the wine conversation should be comparable if the kitchen is performing at the level the Michelin recognition suggests.
Paris has a credible Japanese dining ecosystem, and Marie Akaneya is not operating in isolation. L'Abysse au Pavillon Ledoyen sits at the leading of the Paris Japanese hierarchy with full Michelin Star recognition and a prestigious address. If your primary concern is prestige and you want the grandest setting, L'Abysse is the stronger argument. Sushi Yoshinaga and Hakuba offer more focused, counter-led experiences for those whose priority is sushi precision over a broader Japanese menu. Chakaiseki Akiyoshi moves toward the kaiseki register if ceremonial structure is what you want. For a more accessible entry point into Paris's Japanese dining, Abri Soba operates at a completely different price point and format.
Marie Akaneya's Michelin Plate recognition places it firmly in the category of restaurants worth taking seriously , not yet at the Star level, but consistent and deliberate. The 4.7 rating across nearly 500 reviews is notably stable, which is a more reliable signal than a handful of effusive responses.
Marie Akaneya is at 12 Rue Godot de Mauroy, 75009 Paris. Booking is rated Easy, which is relatively uncommon at the €€€€ tier in Paris , you are unlikely to need to plan weeks ahead, but booking at least a week out for weekend evenings is sensible. Phone and direct booking details are not confirmed in our current data; check availability through standard Paris reservation platforms. The price tier is €€€€, consistent with multi-course tasting menu pricing. Hours are not confirmed in our current data , verify before travelling. No dress code information is available from our records, but at this price point in Paris, smart-casual is the safe baseline; err toward the more formal end if in doubt.
For a broader picture of where Marie Akaneya fits in Paris dining, see our full Paris restaurants guide. If you are planning a longer Paris trip, our Paris hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide cover the full picture. For French fine dining beyond the capital, Mirazur in Menton, Flocons de Sel in Megève, Troisgros in Ouches, Bras in Laguiole, Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern, and Paul Bocuse in Collonges-au-Mont-d'Or are all worth considering as part of a broader France itinerary.
Quick reference: €€€€ price tier | Michelin Plate 2024 & 2025 | Google 4.7 (477 reviews) | 12 Rue Godot de Mauroy, 75009 Paris | Booking: Easy.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Marie Akaneya | Japanese | €€€€ | Easy |
| Plénitude | Contemporary French | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Pierre Gagnaire | French, Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen | Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Kei | Contemporary French, Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George V | French, Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Unknown |
Comparing your options in Paris for this tier.
check the venue's official channels before booking — Japanese tasting-format menus at the €€€€ tier typically require advance notice for dietary restrictions, and Marie Akaneya is no exception. Fish and shellfish allergies are particularly relevant given the cuisine style. If your restrictions are severe, flag them at the time of reservation rather than on the night.
Booking is rated Easy at Marie Akaneya, which is a meaningful advantage at the €€€€ tier in Paris — most comparable Japanese restaurants in the city require weeks of lead time. That said, 'easy' does not mean last-minute: aim for at least one to two weeks out, more for weekend slots. The relative accessibility makes it a practical choice when you're planning a Paris trip with a shorter horizon.
At €€€€ in central Paris, dress with intent — this is not a casual dinner. Parisian dining at this price point carries an unspoken expectation of considered dress without requiring black tie. Think business casual at minimum; polished and understated reads well in this neighbourhood and price bracket.
If you're committed to Japanese cuisine at a serious level, yes — Marie Akaneya holds a Michelin Plate for 2024 and 2025, which signals consistent kitchen quality without the premium of a starred room. The value case is strongest if you compare it against a French tasting menu at the same spend: you get a distinct format, not just a different ingredient set. If French technique is what you're after, look at Kei or Plénitude instead.
At €€€€, Marie Akaneya sits in the same spend bracket as serious French tasting menus in Paris, and the Michelin Plate recognition for both 2024 and 2025 supports the kitchen's consistency. The relatively easy booking access at this price tier adds practical value — you're not paying a scarcity premium on top of the food cost. For Japanese cuisine at this level in Paris, it's a considered choice; for the same spend on French cooking, Kei or Alléno offer a different value proposition.
Specific menu details are not available in the current data, so ordering advice would be speculative — ask the restaurant directly when booking, or confirm the current menu format. What the Michelin Plate recognition does confirm is that the kitchen is operating at a level where the set format is the way to experience it properly; this is not a venue where picking off a short à la carte list is likely to be the right call.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.