Restaurant in Paris, France
Michelin-noted modern cuisine, no trophy price.

Nonos par Paul Pairet holds back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition and a 4.8 Google rating across nearly 700 reviews — strong signals for a €€€ modern cuisine table in the 8th arrondissement. It is the right call for food enthusiasts who want credentialed, serious cooking without the €€€€ overhead of Paris's grand rooms. Booking is rated Easy, but give yourself one to two weeks for weekend seats.
Seats at Nonos par Paul Pairet move quickly for a restaurant of its size and relative profile in the 8th arrondissement — this is not a walk-in kind of place, and if a particular date matters to you, book sooner rather than later. That scarcity is the first signal worth paying attention to: a 4.8 rating across 676 Google reviews, backed by back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and 2025, puts Nonos firmly in the tier of Paris dining rooms where demand consistently outpaces availability.
The verdict is direct: at the €€€ price point, Nonos par Paul Pairet offers one of the more compelling value propositions in the 8th for modern cuisine with genuine culinary credibility. You are not paying €€€€ for a grand dining room or a full Michelin star brigade, but you are getting cooking that Michelin's inspectors consider worth noting two years running. For food and wine enthusiasts who want depth without the full ceremonial overhead of Paris's top-tier tables, this is worth booking.
Nonos is located at 6 Rue Boissy d'Anglas in the 8th arrondissement, placing it squarely in one of Paris's most commercially dense neighbourhoods — close to Place de la Madeleine and the Faubourg Saint-Honoré corridor. That address alone tells you something about the intended clientele: this is a room that attracts serious diners who are already in the neighbourhood for business or high-end retail, but it is not a tourist-trap by association. The cooking is the draw, not the postcode.
The cuisine is classified as modern, which in practice at this level means a kitchen that is working with classical French foundations but making deliberate, considered departures. Paul Pairet's name carries weight in this context: internationally, he is known for pushing the boundaries of dining experience, most notably through his work in Shanghai. Nonos in Paris reads as a more focused, less theatrical expression of that sensibility , a room where the food earns attention on its own terms without requiring a production around it.
The wine program at a €€€ modern cuisine restaurant in the 8th arrondissement carries specific expectations, and this is where the explorer diner should pay close attention. Paris's 8th has no shortage of neighbouring restaurants with deep, expensive cellars designed to pad a check rather than serve the food. Nonos, at its price tier, is more likely to offer a list built around pairing logic rather than trophy bottles , a practical choice for a kitchen focused on modern technique, where the wine needs to follow the food rather than compete with it.
For comparison: the full grand-cellar experience is available at venues like Le Cinq at the Four Seasons Hôtel George V, where you are paying for both the wine architecture and the room. At Nonos, the wine spend stays in proportion to the food spend, which is a meaningful practical advantage if you want a serious meal without a five-figure bill. If wine depth is your primary objective for a Paris evening, it is worth cross-referencing Pearl's full Paris wineries guide and our full Paris bars guide to round out the evening.
The current season is the right moment to visit if you are interested in how modern French kitchens handle the transition into autumn and winter ingredients. Kitchens at this level in Paris are seasonally responsive, and the Michelin Plate recognition suggests the inspectors found consistency across visits , not just a one-time peak performance. That consistency matters more than a single spectacular dish when you are deciding whether to commit a dinner reservation.
Booking at Nonos is rated Easy by Pearl's difficulty index, which means you are not dealing with the six-week wait of a star-chasing table. That said, Easy does not mean last-minute , for a Friday or Saturday evening, plan at least one to two weeks ahead. The 8th arrondissement location makes Nonos accessible from central Paris by Metro (Concorde or Madeleine are the closest stations) or on foot from the 1st. If you are building a full Paris itinerary around food, our full Paris restaurants guide gives broader context on how Nonos fits into the city's current dining picture, alongside our full Paris hotels guide if you are deciding where to stay in relation to your dinner reservations.
For France's broader fine dining context, it is useful to position Nonos against what is happening elsewhere in the country. The Michelin Plate sits below star level, which means you are in different territory from multi-star rooms like Mirazur in Menton, Flocons de Sel in Megève, or Bras in Laguiole. Those rooms demand more planning, more budget, and often more travel. Nonos is the argument for staying in Paris and eating well without building a pilgrimage around a single meal. Internationally, the equivalent calculation applies when comparing against rooms like Frantzén in Stockholm or Maison Lameloise in Chagny , both demand more commitment and budget than Nonos requires.
Nonos par Paul Pairet is the right call for food and wine enthusiasts who want a credentialed modern cuisine experience in central Paris at a price point that leaves room in the budget for wine, a digestif, or a second stop of the evening. It is not the right call if your primary goal is a starred tasting menu with full brigade service and sommelier-led wine pairing , for that, look at Plénitude or Pierre Gagnaire. It is also not the place if you want traditional French cooking without modern intervention , consider 114, Faubourg nearby for a more classically anchored experience in the same neighbourhood.
For solo diners, couples, and small groups of three or four who want a dinner that rewards attention without requiring a special-occasion budget, Nonos is a practical, well-credentialed choice. The 4.8 rating across nearly 700 reviews suggests this is a room that performs consistently , the kind of reliability that matters when you have one dinner in Paris and cannot afford a miss. Other modern cuisine rooms worth comparing in Paris include Accents Table Bourse, Anona, and Amâlia, each of which targets a slightly different diner profile at comparable or adjacent price tiers. Also worth considering if you are exploring Paris's broader dining geography: Auberge de Montfleury and our full Paris experiences guide for building a complete itinerary around the meal.
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nonos par Paul Pairet | €€€ | Easy | — |
| Plénitude | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Pierre Gagnaire | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Kei | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George V | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
How Nonos par Paul Pairet stacks up against the competition.
Go in knowing this is a Michelin Plate-recognised modern cuisine restaurant in the 8th arrondissement at €€€ pricing — credentialed but not in star-chasing territory. Booking is rated Easy by Pearl, so you are not fighting a six-week wait. The 8th places you in a commercially dense part of Paris, close to the Madeleine and the Faubourg Saint-Honoré corridor, so plan your evening around the neighbourhood. Compared to a three-star room like Alléno Paris, Nonos is the better call if you want serious cooking without the full ceremony.
Specific menu items are not confirmed in available data for this page, so arriving with an open mind is the practical move here. At a Michelin Plate modern cuisine venue at €€€, the kitchen typically structures a focused menu where the tasting format offers the clearest picture of what the kitchen does. Ask the front-of-house team what is leading the menu that week — that question alone separates good visits from average ones at this price level.
Specific dietary accommodation policies are not confirmed in available data, but at a €€€ Michelin-recognised address in Paris, flagging restrictions at the time of booking is standard practice and almost always results in workable alternatives. check the venue's official channels ahead of your visit rather than raising it on arrival — the kitchen needs lead time to adjust at this level.
A dress code is not listed in available data for Nonos, but the 8th arrondissement context and Michelin Plate recognition put this in the territory where neat, considered clothing is the practical default. Think of it this way: you would not arrive in trainers and a t-shirt at this address and feel comfortable. Dressing as you would for a mid-tier business dinner is a safe read.
Pearl rates Nonos booking as Easy, which is a positive sign for solo diners — tight, in-demand rooms tend to deprioritise single seats. At a modern cuisine restaurant in the 8th at €€€, a counter or bar seat (if available) is the ideal solo format; confirm with the restaurant whether that option exists. Solo dining here is a reasonable proposition, and at this price point it is more manageable than committing to a solo table at Pierre Gagnaire or Le Cinq.
Bar seating specifics are not confirmed in available data for Nonos. At a €€€ modern cuisine venue in the 8th, some rooms offer counter or bar access and others do not — it is worth calling or emailing ahead to ask. If bar dining flexibility is a priority, Kei in the 1st arrondissement is one Paris alternative that has historically offered more informal seating options.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.