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    Restaurant in Paris, France

    Pavyllon

    975Pearl Points

    Counter dining, Michelin star, book early.

    Pavyllon, Restaurant in Paris

    About Pavyllon

    Yannick Alléno's Michelin-starred counter restaurant inside the Pavillon Ledoyen complex is one of the better special-occasion picks in Paris's 8th arrondissement — refined classical cooking in a chic, lower-formality room. With only 32 seats, it's a hard reservation. Book three to four weeks ahead minimum, lead with lunch if dinner availability is tight, and expect €€€€ pricing throughout.

    Verdict: Book It — With Caveats

    32 counter seats. That single number tells you most of what you need to know about Pavyllon. Yannick Alléno's more accessible address inside the Pavillon Ledoyen complex holds a Michelin star, sits at number 158 on the Opinionated About Dining European Classical list for 2025, and scores 80 points in La Liste's 2026 ranking — credentials that, combined with the intimate counter format, make this one of the harder reservations to land in the 8th arrondissement. For a special occasion dinner in Paris that delivers serious technical cooking without the full ceremony of a multi-course tasting marathon, Pavyllon is the right call. If you want the maximalist Alléno experience, that's next door at Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen. Pavyllon is the smarter pick for dates, business meals, or solo visits where you want to eat well and still finish before midnight.

    The Room and the Experience

    Pavyllon sits inside one of Paris's most storied dining addresses, with a terrace that opens onto the greenery surrounding the Pavillon Ledoyen on the Champs-Élysées gardens side. The counter format keeps the room intimate and the energy lower than you'd expect from an address of this reputation. The atmosphere runs chic but not stiff , the kind of room where the noise level stays at conversation pitch even when the counter is full. For a date or a business dinner where the table isn't doing the talking for you, that matters. Compare that to Le Cinq at the Four Seasons George V, which delivers more grandeur but a significantly more formal register , better for impressing a client who measures restaurants by room size, less useful if you actually want to talk.

    The kitchen works from classic French foundations and builds outward with international details , refined and precise rather than showy. This is the style that earned Alléno his reputation across addresses including Flocons de Sel in Megève, and it shows in how Pavyllon balances technique with accessibility. The cooking is delicate without being timid. You're not here for a spectacle , you're here for food that rewards attention.

    Service at this level of award recognition generally runs well-calibrated: knowledgeable without being performative, attentive without hovering. For the Paris €€€€ tier, that's actually a meaningful differentiator. Venues like L'Ambroisie operate at a higher formality register; Pavyllon's counter format naturally softens the interaction between kitchen and guest.

    Late-Night Angle: How Far Does Pavyllon Go?

    Dinner service runs until 10:30 PM every night of the week , seven days, lunch and dinner, consistent hours across the full week. That's a more generous window than many comparable Paris addresses in this tier, where Saturday lunch is often the last seating and Monday closures are standard. For a city where dinner at 9 PM is a reasonable proposition, last seatings at 10:30 PM give you genuine flexibility, particularly on weeknights when an earlier reservation isn't always possible. This isn't a late-night bar crawl destination, but if your evening runs long and you want a serious kitchen still firing at 9:30 PM, Pavyllon's consistent hours make it a reliable option in a tier where that's not guaranteed.

    For late-night bars after dinner in the 8th, see our full Paris bars guide. For hotels nearby, our Paris hotels guide covers the arrondissement well.

    Booking and Practical Details

    Expect this to be hard to book. A 32-seat counter with a Michelin star, OAD Top 200 placement, and La Liste recognition means demand consistently outpaces supply. Plan on booking at least three to four weeks ahead for dinner, longer for weekend evenings. Lunch seatings (12 PM to 2:30 PM) are your leading option if availability is tight , the room runs at the same kitchen standard but with a more workday crowd and marginally more flexibility. There is no booking method listed in our database, so book directly or through a concierge service; do not rely on walk-in availability at this level.

    Pricing is €€€€. This is the upper tier of Paris dining, comparable to Kei and Pierre Gagnaire in cost positioning. Relative to those addresses, Pavyllon offers a more relaxed format for the price point , the counter removes some of the gravity that can make €€€€ dining feel effortful rather than enjoyable.

    For more context on where Pavyllon sits within Paris's broader dining scene, see our full Paris restaurants guide. If you're building a longer French itinerary, benchmark it against addresses like Mirazur in Menton, Troisgros in Ouches, or Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern , all are relevant reference points for serious French cooking at the highest tier. For something more compact and Paris-specific, Accents Table Bourse and Anona are worth knowing in lower price brackets.

    Other Paris restaurants worth cross-referencing depending on your brief: 114, Faubourg for a hotel dining alternative, Amâlia for a different register, and Auberge de Montfleury if you're extending outside the city. For international benchmarks in the same modern-cuisine tier, Frantzén in Stockholm and FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai are the closest comparable counter-format experiences. French regional alternatives worth knowing: Bras in Laguiole and Paul Bocuse in Collonges-au-Mont-d'Or round out the picture of where Alléno-style classical technique sits in the French canon.

    For Paris experiences beyond the table, see our Paris experiences guide and Paris wineries guide.

    Quick reference: Michelin 1 Star (2024) · OAD European Classical #158 (2025) · La Liste 80pts (2026) · Google 4.5/5 (1,582 reviews) · Open 7 days, lunch and dinner · Last seating 10:30 PM · Book 3–4 weeks ahead minimum.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How far ahead should I book Pavyllon?

    Book at least three to four weeks out, more if you're visiting on a weekend. A 32-seat counter with a Michelin star and OAD Top 200 placement means availability moves fast. Same-week slots do occasionally open from cancellations, but treating that as a backup plan is a gamble at this price point.

    Is Pavyllon good for solo dining?

    Yes, and it's one of the stronger solo dining cases in Paris at this level. The 32-seat counter format is built for it — you're watching the kitchen directly rather than occupying a table meant for two. For solo diners at €€€€, Pavyllon is a more natural fit than L'Ambroisie or Le Cinq, which are structured around table service and can feel awkward alone.

    What should I order at Pavyllon?

    Specific menu items are published details are limited, so naming dishes here would be speculation. What the awards record does confirm is that Alléno's cooking at Pavyllon is built on classical French foundations with international influences — refined and precise rather than avant-garde. Check the current menu on arrival or check the venue's official channels to plan ahead.

    What should a first-timer know about Pavyllon?

    Pavyllon is the more accessible entry point into Alléno's Pavillon Ledoyen complex — counter-format, a terrace surrounded by greenery on Avenue Dutuit, and a noticeably more relaxed atmosphere than his flagship. At €€€€, it's still a serious financial commitment, but the format rewards diners who want to watch the kitchen and engage with the meal rather than settle into a conventional fine dining room.

    Does Pavyllon handle dietary restrictions?

    No specific dietary policy is documented in the venue record. At a Michelin-starred restaurant operating at this level, dietary accommodations are standard practice across Paris's top tier, but confirming specifics directly with the restaurant before booking is advisable — particularly for anything beyond common intolerances.

    Can Pavyllon accommodate groups?

    The 32-seat counter format is not group-friendly. For parties of six or more, the layout creates practical problems — counter seating is linear, not communal in the way a private room allows. If a group dinner at this price point is the goal, Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen upstairs or a room-equipped option like Le Cinq is a more workable choice.

    Location

    8 Av. Dutuit, 75008 Paris, France

    Compare Pavyllon

    Value at a Glance: Pavyllon
    VenuePrice
    Pavyllon€€€€
    Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen€€€€
    Kei€€€€
    L'Ambroisie€€€€
    Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George V€€€€
    Pierre Gagnaire€€€€

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    Also Consider

    How Pavyllon Compares

    Within the Paris €€€€ tier, Pavyllon occupies a specific position: serious cooking, lower ceremony. If you're deciding between Pavyllon and Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen, the full-scale restaurant sharing the same building, the choice comes down to format and investment. Alléno Paris is the grander, more immersive experience; Pavyllon delivers the same kitchen pedigree in a counter format that feels considerably less formal and, for a date or business lunch, considerably more comfortable. For most diners visiting once, Pavyllon is the right starting point. Save Alléno Paris for a return trip or a genuinely landmark occasion.

    Le Cinq at the Four Seasons George V is the comparison that comes up most often in this price tier, more room grandeur, a deeper wine program, and stronger group and private dining infrastructure, but a more rigid formality that some guests find airless. Pierre Gagnaire is the pick if you want intellectual risk-taking over classical precision; the cooking is more challenging and more variable, which makes it a better choice for experienced fine-dining regulars than for a straightforward special occasion. L'Ambroisie operates at the highest formality register in Paris and is the correct answer if tradition and room gravitas are the primary brief, but it's harder to book, less accommodating for solo diners, and places a heavier demand on guests to match its register.

    Kei is the most useful comparison for diners who want modern technique at €€€€ without full classical formality. It's slightly easier to book than Pavyllon and brings a French-Japanese perspective that reads as fresher to some palates. For a first-time €€€€ Paris dinner, Kei and Pavyllon are the two most accessible entry points. Pavyllon wins on atmosphere and terrace setting; Kei wins on booking availability and a more contemporary flavour profile. Pick based on which variable matters more to you.

    Hours

    Monday
    12 PM-2:30 PM 7 PM-10:30 PM
    Tuesday
    12 PM-2:30 PM 7 PM-10:30 PM
    Wednesday
    12 PM-2:30 PM 7 PM-10:30 PM
    Thursday
    12 PM-2:30 PM 7 PM-10:30 PM
    Friday
    12 PM-2:30 PM 7 PM-10:30 PM
    Saturday
    12 PM-2:30 PM 7 PM-10:30 PM
    Sunday
    12 PM-2:30 PM 7 PM-10:30 PM

    Recognized By

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