Restaurant in Paris, France
Serious French cooking, easy to book.

Sellae delivers Michelin Plate-recognised modern French cooking in the 13th arrondissement at a €€ price point that's hard to match in Paris right now. Chef Thibaut Sombardier's kitchen ranks in the OAD Casual Europe top 500 two years running. Easy to book, serious on the plate, and worth the trip across town.
If you've already eaten at Sellae once, the question on a return visit isn't whether it's still good — it's whether Thibaut Sombardier's kitchen has moved. The short answer: it's consistent in the way that serious neighbourhood bistros rarely manage, which is itself a reason to go back. For first-timers in the 13th arrondissement, Sellae sits at the €€ price point with a Michelin Plate and back-to-back Opinionated About Dining recognition (ranked #414 in Europe's casual category for 2025, up from #379 in 2024), making it one of the more credible value plays in Paris right now. Book it.
Sellae is on Rue des Wallons, a quiet side street in the 13th that draws Parisian food enthusiasts rather than tourists. The visual register here is pared-back: the kind of room where the plates do the framing, not the décor. What you see when a dish arrives is cooking that reads as deliberate — clean lines, considered composition , rather than the studied rusticity some modern bistros perform. For an explorer who cares about what's on the plate more than the room's Instagram coefficient, this works in the venue's favour.
Chef Sombardier has built a reputation rooted in French technique applied with restraint. The cuisine sits in the French bistro and modern cuisine category, which in practice means you're getting seasonal, produce-led cooking that takes classical foundations seriously without wearing them as costume. That framing is relevant to how you should approach the menu: this is not a kitchen trying to surprise you with conceptual leaps. The progression across a meal at Sellae follows a more traditional arc , from lighter, precise starters through to more substantive mains , but each stage is executed with a level of care that the price point makes genuinely impressive.
The editorial angle here is worth addressing directly for food-focused visitors. Sellae's menu structure rewards the kind of attention a two-hour lunch or dinner allows. Coming in summer or autumn, the seasonal availability in Paris means markets at their leading, and a kitchen like this one , where the menu reflects what's actually in season , responds to that. The Opinionated About Dining ranking places Sellae in the top tier of Europe's casual restaurants, which means the cooking punches above what the price implies, but the experience doesn't carry the formality of a tasting menu at a starred destination. You're in control of pacing in a way that longer, fixed-format meals don't allow.
The lunch service (12:15–3:00 pm, Tuesday through Saturday) is the practical choice for visitors combining a meal here with time elsewhere in Paris. Dinner runs until 11:30 pm on the same days, which suits a longer evening in the 13th. The restaurant is closed Sunday and Monday, so plan around that , it's a detail that catches visitors out.
Sellae holds a Michelin Plate for 2024 and 2025, which signals food quality worth noting without the full star commitment. More useful for calibrating expectations: the OAD Casual Europe ranking has improved year-on-year, from #379 in 2024 to #414 in 2025. Google Reviews sit at 4.5 across 555 reviews, which is a reliable signal of consistent execution at this price tier. For context, that combination of recognition , Michelin acknowledgement plus OAD casual ranking , puts Sellae in a relatively small group of Paris restaurants where critical credibility and accessibility overlap.
Booking at Sellae is rated Easy. This is not a venue where you need to plan weeks in advance or refresh a booking page at midnight, which is a meaningful advantage in a city where restaurants at this quality level often require more effort. The address is 18 Rue des Wallons, 75013 Paris. The venue is closed Sundays and Mondays. For those coming from central Paris, the 13th is accessible by metro and the quieter neighbourhood feel is part of what makes this work as a destination rather than a convenience stop. No phone or website data is available in our records , check current booking platforms for availability.
For context on where Sellae sits in the broader French dining picture, it's worth noting that the same OAD list that ranks Sellae also tracks standouts across France, from Flocons de Sel in Megève to Mirazur in Menton and Troisgros in Ouches. Within Paris specifically, the restaurant sits comfortably alongside the city's most credible mid-range options , more focused than a typical brasserie, less austere than a destination tasting menu. For explorers who want to understand the full range of what Paris and France offer at different price points, our full Paris restaurants guide covers the breadth. You can also explore Paris hotels, Paris bars, Paris wineries, and Paris experiences for trip planning beyond the meal.
Sellae occupies a specific and useful niche: serious French cooking, accessible price, low booking friction, and a track record of recognition that's been building rather than fading. For food-focused visitors to Paris who want more than a reliable bistro but aren't ready to commit to a €€€€ tasting menu, this is one of the clearer yes decisions in the city. Quick reference: Tue–Sat lunch 12:15–3 pm, dinner 7:15–11:30 pm; closed Sun–Mon; 18 Rue des Wallons, 75013 Paris.
Sellae's €€ positioning puts it in a different category from the four-star institutional names that dominate Paris's formal dining circuit. If you're considering L'Ambroisie, Le Cinq at the Four Seasons George V, or Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen, you're looking at €€€€ spend, formal service, and a significantly higher commitment of time and money. Those are valid choices for a once-in-a-trip occasion meal. Sellae is a different calculation: lower stakes financially, easier to book, and more suited to a visitor who wants to eat well twice on a short trip rather than blow the budget in one sitting.
For creative modern French at the high end, Kei offers a Franco-Japanese tasting experience at €€€€ that's worth considering if format and occasion justify the price step. Arpège is the reference point for produce-focused cooking in Paris at the starred level, but at a cost that makes Sellae's value ratio look even sharper by comparison. Pierre Gagnaire operates at the furthest end of conceptual ambition and price. None of those is a direct substitute for what Sellae does , the value-to-quality ratio at this price tier is the point, not a consolation.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sellae | French Bistro, Modern Cuisine | €€ | Opinionated About Dining Casual in Europe Ranked #414 (2025); Michelin Plate (2025); Opinionated About Dining Casual in Europe Ranked #379 (2024); Michelin Plate (2024) | Easy | — |
| Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen | Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Kei | Contemporary French, Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| L'Ambroisie | French, Classic Cuisine | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George V | French, Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Pierre Gagnaire | French, Creative | €€€€ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
A quick look at how Sellae measures up.
Bar seating details are not confirmed in available venue data for Sellae. Given the bistro format and the 13th arrondissement location, this is worth confirming directly when you book. Sellae is rated easy to book, so a quick enquiry at reservation time is straightforward.
Sellae sits at the €€ price point in a neighbourhood that draws Parisian food enthusiasts rather than tourists, so the register is relaxed but considered — think put-together casual rather than formal. A jacket is not required. Overdressing would feel out of place with the bistro setting on Rue des Wallons.
Specific dietary accommodation policy is not documented in the venue record. At a kitchen operating at Michelin Plate level with a seasonal, chef-driven menu, it is worth flagging restrictions at the time of booking rather than on arrival — this is standard practice at restaurants of this format in Paris.
Lunch is the stronger case here. Sellae is open for both services Tuesday through Saturday, and at €€ pricing, the midday sitting typically offers the best value-to-quality ratio at bistros of this calibre in Paris. The two-hour lunch window suits the menu's seasonal, attention-rewarding format without the pressure of an evening service pace.
If you want to stay in the €€ bistro tier with genuine kitchen ambition, Sellae is among the stronger options in Paris — ranked #379 and #414 in consecutive years on Opinionated About Dining's Casual Europe list. For those willing to spend significantly more, Kei offers Franco-Japanese precision at a higher price point, and L'Ambroisie represents the institutional end of Parisian fine dining. Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen and Le Cinq at the Four Seasons George V sit in a different category altogether in terms of price and formality. Pierre Gagnaire is the option if you want avant-garde over bistro craft.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.