Restaurant in Paris, France
High-ambition Paris dinner, not the usual script.

Oka is a Brazilian-French gastronomic address in Paris's 16th arrondissement, operating just four evenings a week and ranked among Opinionated About Dining's top European restaurants. Chef Raphaël Régo is chasing two Michelin stars with a format — intimate room, counter proximity to the kitchen — that makes it a strong pick for special occasions. Book as soon as your dates are set.
Oka is not difficult to get into by Paris gastronomic standards, but that window is narrower than it looks. Dinner service runs Tuesday through Friday, 8–9 pm only, which means the restaurant operates four evenings a week. If your travel dates clip a weekend or Monday, you will not get a seat regardless of how far ahead you plan. Within those four evenings, Oka has climbed from #537 in Opinionated About Dining's Leading Restaurants in Europe in 2024 to #640 in 2025 — a ranking movement that reflects growing demand from both Parisians and visitors who have tracked chef Raphaël Régo's progress. Book as soon as your dates are confirmed. Easy booking difficulty does not mean last-minute availability.
Oka operates as a dual-format address on Rue Duban in the 16th arrondissement: a gastronomic room aiming for two Michelin stars, and a high-end bistro running alongside it. The gastronomic side is where the ambition sits. The Brazilian influences in Régo's cooking make Oka genuinely distinct from the French fine dining norm , this is not a venue that retreads the same territory as Le Taillevent or Epicure. Opinionated About Dining has flagged it with a Remarkable category designation, which in their framework signals a restaurant operating above its current star count.
The 16th is a residential quarter , quieter than the restaurant-dense streets of the 1st or 6th, which means the physical experience at Oka is more intimate than its ranking position might suggest. The spatial feel matters here: Oka is not a large room designed for volume. For a special occasion, that scale works in your favour. You are not competing with a hundred other covers for attention from the kitchen or the floor.
The format at Oka , a gastronomic room with a counter-style proximity to the kitchen , puts the cooking itself in front of you in a way that conventional table service rarely does. At a counter, the pacing is set by the kitchen rather than negotiated between you and a waiter, which tends to produce a tighter, more intentional meal. For a date or celebration dinner, this works well: the structure removes the low-grade friction of timing decisions, and the physical closeness to the kitchen gives the meal a sense of occasion without requiring elaborate room design to achieve it. If you are coming to Oka for a birthday or anniversary, request counter seats if available. The experience is more direct, and for a restaurant chasing two Michelin stars, seeing how that ambition translates in real time is part of the point. Compare this format to L'Atelier de Joël Robuchon - Étoile, which built its entire reputation around counter-only dining in Paris.
Oka is the right call for diners who want a high-ambition Paris dinner that does not follow the standard French fine dining script. The Brazilian-French axis that Régo works is genuinely different from what you will find at La Table d'AkiHiro or Frenchie Bar au Vins, and the gastronomic room's Michelin trajectory makes this a reasonable bet for a special-occasion dinner that will feel significant in two or three years, when the stars likely arrive. If you want comparable ambition in a more established setting, consider the restaurants listed in our comparison section below. If you want to understand where Oka sits within the broader French gastronomic context, our full Paris restaurants guide maps the category clearly. For wider Paris planning, we also have hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences guides.
Solo diners are well served here, particularly at the counter, where single covers are easier to place and the format sustains a solo experience without the awkwardness of a large table for one. Groups larger than four will need to check availability carefully given the room size , Oka is not a venue designed for large-party dining.
Oka's gastronomic ambition places it in a tier of Paris restaurants working toward Michelin recognition rather than resting on it. For reference, France's established two- and three-star circuit includes destinations like 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. Internationally, Paris-trained kitchens with comparable ambition include Hotel de Ville Crissier in Crissier and L'Effervescence in Tokyo. Oka is earlier in its trajectory than any of these, but its OAD movement and critical attention make it worth booking now, before the seats become harder to get.
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Oka | Easy | — | |
| Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Kei | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| L'Ambroisie | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George V | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
| Pierre Gagnaire | €€€€ | Unknown | — |
Comparing your options in Paris for this tier.
Oka operates a tasting-format gastronomic room, which typically requires advance notice for dietary restrictions rather than menu substitutions at the table. check the venue's official channels before booking to discuss requirements. Given the Brazilian-French kitchen and its ranked standing in Europe, the cooking is ingredient-driven enough that early communication will get a better result than last-minute requests.
Yes, and it may be the format that suits solo diners best. Oka has a counter component that puts you close to the kitchen, which makes dining alone feel intentional rather than awkward. Tuesday through Friday dinner is the only window, so plan accordingly and book as early as possible for a counter seat.
Book at least three to four weeks out. Oka runs dinner service only four nights a week — Tuesday through Friday, 8–9 pm — which means available covers are genuinely limited. It has been described as the Paris restaurant everybody wants to go to right now, so the booking window is tighter than the address in the 16th might suggest.
Yes, with one qualification: this is a high-ambition room aiming for two Michelin stars, not a classic grand Parisian dining room. If the occasion calls for Brazilian-inflected French cooking with real culinary ambition, Oka is a strong choice. If the occasion calls for traditional Parisian ceremony, L'Ambroisie or Le Cinq will fit that brief better.
Oka only serves dinner, Tuesday through Friday from 8–9 pm. There is no lunch service, so this is not a decision you need to make. Plan your Paris schedule around an evening booking.
For established Michelin-level French cooking, Kei offers French-Japanese precision and is somewhat easier to book. L'Ambroisie is the benchmark for classical Paris fine dining at the highest tier. Pierre Gagnaire suits diners who want avant-garde French without Oka's Brazilian angle. Alléno Paris and Le Cinq are the right call when setting, scale, and grand-hotel formality matter as much as the food.
The concept is dual-format: a gastronomic room targeting two Michelin stars alongside a high-end bistro — make sure you book the right room for your expectations. The kitchen is Brazilian-French under chef Raphaël Régo, which is not a standard Paris fine dining proposition. Dinner runs 8–9 pm, Tuesday through Friday only, at 8 Rue Duban in the 16th arrondissement.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.