Restaurant in Paris, France
Serious 7th dining without the starred price.

A Michelin Plate-recognised modern cuisine restaurant in the 7th arrondissement, Table Penja earns its place with two consecutive guide recognitions (2024 and 2025) and a 4.9 Google rating. At €€€, it delivers a serious dinner without the formality or cost of Paris's starred tables. Book here if you want a credible 7th-arrondissement meal that is easier to reserve and lighter on the wallet than its neighbours.
Table Penja is not the grand 7th-arrondissement showpiece that its address near the Eiffel Tower might suggest. First-timers often arrive expecting a formal Parisian dining room with ceremonial service and a price tag to match. What you get instead is a Michelin Plate-recognised modern cuisine restaurant that earns its recognition through a tighter, more personal operation than most of its neighbourhood peers. At €€€ pricing, it sits a tier below the €€€€ heavyweights of Paris, and that gap matters both for your wallet and for the type of evening you should expect. Book it if you want a serious meal in the 7th without committing to the full ritual of a starred table.
The 7th arrondissement has a particular gravity to it: grand boulevards, embassy buildings, the weight of old Paris money. Restaurants in this part of the city can sometimes trade on location and reputation rather than what is actually on the plate. Table Penja has earned two consecutive Michelin Plate recognitions (2024 and 2025), which signals consistent kitchen quality without the theatre of full star service. A Michelin Plate is not a consolation prize — it reflects a kitchen the guide considers worth knowing about, a step above the noise of ordinary neighbourhood dining.
For a first-timer, the atmosphere here reads as composed rather than hushed. This is not the kind of room where silence falls when you walk in, nor is it a loud, buzzy bistro where conversation requires effort. The energy is measured and professional, which suits the 7th's quieter residential character. If you are used to the controlled formality of somewhere like Le Cinq at the Four Seasons George V, Table Penja will feel lighter in register. That is not a criticism — for many diners, it is the right call.
The cuisine is listed as modern, which in Paris in 2024 and 2025 covers a wide spectrum. Without access to the current menu, what the Michelin recognition and the 4.9 Google rating across 92 reviews makes clear is that the kitchen is consistent and the room is doing something that earns genuine repeat visits and strong word-of-mouth. A 4.9 across nearly 100 reviews is not a fluke , it reflects a restaurant that is meeting or exceeding what guests come expecting.
At €€€ in Paris, you are paying for more than food. You are paying for the room, the pacing, and the attention that separates a serious restaurant from a good bistro. The service philosophy at this price point is where the value question gets real. Table Penja's consistent Michelin Plate recognition over two years suggests the overall experience , including how the front of house operates , is delivering at a level the guide finds credible. For a first visit, expect professional service rather than the choreographed formality of a starred room. If you have eaten at places like Accents Table Bourse or Anona, the service register will feel familiar: attentive and informed without being performative.
The practical question for a first-timer is whether €€€ feels like fair exchange here. Against comparable modern cuisine restaurants in Paris at the same price level, a 4.9 Google rating and two years of Michelin recognition is a strong signal that the kitchen and service are working together. That combination is harder to find than it looks.
Reservations: Booking difficulty is rated Easy , you can likely secure a table without weeks of advance planning, which is a practical advantage over the €€€€ Paris tables where 4-to-6-week lead times are standard. Address: 2 Rue Sedillot, 75007 Paris , a short walk from the Eiffel Tower and well-served by Métro lines to Bir-Hakeim and École Militaire. Budget: €€€ per head, which positions this as a serious but not eye-watering dinner. Dress: No dress code is listed, but the 7th arrondissement and the Michelin Plate context suggest smart casual at minimum , arrive underdressed and you will feel it. Awards: Michelin Plate 2024 and 2025. Google rating: 4.9 from 92 reviews.
For Paris dining at €€€€, the comparison set includes Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen, Kei, L'Ambroisie, Le Cinq, and Pierre Gagnaire. Table Penja operates at a lower price tier than all of them, which changes the calculus significantly. If your priority is the full ceremony of Parisian grand dining , the deep wine list, the formal brigade, the tasting menu with ten courses , one of those €€€€ tables is the right answer. If you want a credentialled, consistent modern cuisine dinner in the 7th without the full commitment in time, money, or formality, Table Penja is the more practical choice.
For context on what Michelin recognition means across France, the guide's standards are applied consistently from Flocons de Sel in Megève to Mirazur in Menton. A Plate recognition in Paris means the kitchen cleared the same bar of basic quality that the guide applies everywhere , which, in a city with thousands of restaurants, is a meaningful filter.
Table Penja works well for a first visit if you want a serious dinner in the 7th without the formality or cost of a starred table. It suits couples, small groups, and business dinners where the setting needs to be credible but not theatrical. If you are planning a wider Paris eating itinerary, use our full Paris restaurants guide to build a list across price points. For places to stay nearby, our Paris hotels guide covers the 7th and surrounding arrondissements. For pre- or post-dinner drinks, our Paris bars guide has options that fit the neighbourhood's register.
If you are specifically looking at the 7th's modern cuisine options alongside Table Penja, 114, Faubourg and Amâlia are worth comparing for different occasion profiles. For a more rural French fine-dining reference point, Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern and Bras in Laguiole show what the Michelin framework produces outside the capital. And for an international modern cuisine comparison, Frantzén in Stockholm and FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai are useful benchmarks for what the format can achieve at its ceiling.
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Table Penja | €€€ | — |
| Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen | €€€€ | — |
| Kei | €€€€ | — |
| L'Ambroisie | €€€€ | — |
| Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George V | €€€€ | — |
| Pierre Gagnaire | €€€€ | — |
A quick look at how Table Penja measures up.
If the kitchen offers a tasting format, it is the most coherent way to assess what Table Penja does at the €€€ price point. The Michelin Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025 signals consistent kitchen execution, which is what you need to justify a multi-course commitment. For a la carte flexibility in the same price range, L'Ambroisie operates at a completely different budget and formality tier, so Table Penja is the more accessible test of serious modern cuisine in the 7th.
The 7th arrondissement address on Rue Sedillot and the €€€ pricing suggest a polished but not black-tie setting. Business casual or neat evening dress is a safe read for this part of Paris at this price level. Arriving underdressed in a Michelin-recognized restaurant in the 7th will stand out — err toward a jacket for dinner.
Booking difficulty is rated Easy, which means securing a table for a small group should not require weeks of lead time. For larger parties of six or more, check the venue's official channels to confirm room configuration and availability. Groups wanting a private-room experience at this price tier in Paris should ask explicitly when booking.
Any Michelin Plate-recognized modern cuisine kitchen in Paris at €€€ is expected to accommodate standard dietary requirements with advance notice. Flag restrictions clearly when booking — do not leave it to the night. For severe allergies or highly specific needs, call ahead rather than noting it only on a booking platform.
Yes, with the right expectations. Table Penja delivers a Michelin-recognized dinner in one of Paris's most prestigious residential neighbourhoods at a price point below the city's starred rooms. It suits a celebratory dinner where the occasion matters more than status-signalling the reservation. If the occasion demands a Michelin-starred room, Le Cinq or L'Ambroisie are the step up — at a significantly higher cost.
At €€€ with two consecutive Michelin Plate recognitions, Table Penja offers a credible return on spend for modern cuisine in the 7th arrondissement. It is not the value play you'd find in the 11th or 18th, but the address and consistent quality justify the price for what it is. If you want a starred experience at this budget, Kei or similar one-star options are worth the comparison before booking.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.