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    Restaurant in London, United Kingdom

    Portland

    1,230Pearl Points

    Michelin star, neighbourhood prices, no fuss.

    Portland, Restaurant in London

    About Portland

    Portland is a Michelin-starred Modern British restaurant on Great Portland Street offering ingredient-driven, seasonally reprinted menus and one of the most serious wine lists at the £££ price tier in London. Closed Monday and Sunday; book one to two weeks ahead for a reliable slot. A strong choice for food and wine enthusiasts who want starred cooking without the full ceremony of a ££££ room.

    Portland, London: The Verdict

    If you are weighing Portland against the heavier-hitting Modern British addresses in central London, the price point alone should settle the argument quickly. Portland sits at £££ while peers like CORE by Clare Smyth and The Ledbury operate at ££££. You get Michelin-starred cooking, a wine programme that punches well above its tier, and a room that does not perform luxury at you. For a food and wine enthusiast who wants genuine technical ambition without the full ceremony of a top-end tasting room, Portland is the better book. The caveat: if flawless service theatre is what you are paying for, go elsewhere.

    The Room and What It Tells You

    Portland occupies a narrow, modestly proportioned space on Great Portland Street, north of Oxford Street. The tables are unclothed, the kitchen is open at the back, and there is high seating at the window overlooking the street. Nothing in the room signals occasion in the conventional sense. That is deliberate. The spatial restraint is the first signal that Portland's priorities sit firmly on the plate and in the glass, not in the staging. For a diner who reads a bare table as confidence rather than neglect, this reads well. For someone expecting the full white-tablecloth register of a starred room, adjust expectations before you arrive.

    The layout is intimate enough that the open kitchen is genuinely present rather than decorative, and the compact scale means you are always close to what is happening. Seating at the window works well for lunch; the room tightens pleasantly at dinner when the kitchen is in full motion. Parties of two will feel well accommodated throughout. Larger groups should check ahead, as the proportions of the room limit how many covers can be configured together comfortably.

    The Menu Architecture

    Portland's approach to its menu is worth understanding before you book, because it affects what you will actually eat. The kitchen reprints menus after lunch as ingredients are used up, replacing dishes when a component runs out rather than holding dishes back artificially. In practice, this means the progression of the meal is tightly tied to what arrived that morning. It is a genuinely supply-led model, not a marketing position.

    The cooking philosophy is deliberate restraint: do as little as possible to the ingredient, avoid over-crowding the plate, and ensure every component has a reason to be there. Dishes are ingredient-led and assertive in flavour rather than technically baroque. The menu moves through structured courses with a clear logic: small appetisers set a flavour direction, middle courses build on that register, and the kitchen does not retreat into safe or crowd-pleasing territory at the dessert stage. Sourcing and seasonality are not decorative values here; they are the actual architecture of what you eat.

    Portland also offers a fully plant-based menu on request, developed to the same standard as the main menu. This is not a substitution track bolted onto an existing framework; it has been given recognition by the We're Smart Green Guide, which awarded it 4 Radishes, a meaningful credential in plant-forward fine dining. You need to request it specifically when booking, as it is not offered automatically.

    The Wine Programme

    The wine list is the other reason to choose Portland over comparably priced alternatives. It is given equal weight to the food, which is unusual at this price tier. Wines by the glass are available from £8 and the selection is constructed to be genuinely exploratory: the range moves through English sparkling, Sicilian rosato, and complex reds rather than defaulting to safe international names. Portland also holds a partnership arrangement with Château d'Yquem, with multiple vintages available by the small glass. At £££, access to Yquem by the glass is an anomaly worth noting. If wine is a significant part of why you dine out, Portland's list justifies the visit independently of the food.

    Booking and Timing

    Portland is closed Monday and Sunday. Tuesday through Saturday it runs lunch service from 12 PM to 2:15 PM and dinner from 5:30 PM to 9:45 PM. Booking difficulty is moderate, which means you should plan one to two weeks ahead for a direct slot, and slightly further out for Friday or Saturday dinner. The restaurant has held a Michelin star since its first year of operation and is ranked in the Opinionated About Dining Leading Restaurants in Europe list, sitting at #297 in 2024 and #448 in 2025. Its Google rating sits at 4.6 across 764 reviews, which is a strong signal of consistent execution across a broad sample. None of this makes it the hardest table in London to secure, but it is not a walk-in option on a weekend evening.

    Lunch on a weekday is the most accessible entry point, and the £££ pricing makes it a reasonable midweek commitment. Given the ingredient-driven reprinting of the menu between services, lunch and dinner may differ meaningfully in what is available, which adds a practical reason to consider returning rather than treating it as a single-visit destination.

    How It Compares

    Portland sits in a productive gap in London's Modern British market. For other restaurants operating at a similar register of ingredient focus and seasonal discipline, Kitchen W8 and Trinity are useful comparisons at similar price levels. For more technically ambitious tasting counter formats, Kitchen Table and Evelyn's Table offer a different kind of depth, though both require more planning and commitment per sitting. Beyond London, the ingredient-led philosophy Portland follows sits in a broader Modern British conversation that includes L'Enclume in Cartmel, Moor Hall in Aughton, and The Fat Duck in Bray, each operating at a different scale and price tier. For the full London dining picture, see our full London restaurants guide. If you are planning a wider trip, our London hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide cover the rest.

    FAQs

    Is Portland worth the price?

    • Yes, at £££ with a Michelin star and one of the more serious wine programmes at this price tier in London. You are not paying for a luxury room or extensive service; you are paying for cooking that has maintained a clear standard since opening and a wine list with unusual depth. If you want room polish and ceremony to match the food quality, step up to ££££ and book CORE by Clare Smyth. If you want the food-to-price ratio to work in your favour, Portland is the call.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Portland?

    • Portland's menu architecture is built around a progression that earns the tasting format. The kitchen reprints between services as ingredients run out, which means the meal you eat reflects genuine availability rather than a fixed script. The plant-based menu, available on request and awarded 4 Radishes by the We're Smart Green Guide, is equally considered. If you approach tasting menus as a way to understand a kitchen's priorities rather than simply to eat a lot, Portland rewards that framing. If you prefer à la carte flexibility, check the format before booking.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Portland?

    • Lunch is the more accessible and lower-commitment option at £££, and the weekday timing makes booking direct. Because the menu is reprinted after lunch as dishes sell through, dinner may offer a different selection. If exploring the full range of the kitchen matters to you, both services have a case. For a first visit, lunch is the practical recommendation: easier to book, easier on the budget, and the cooking quality does not drop between services.

    What should a first-timer know about Portland?

    • The room is informal by starred-restaurant standards: no tablecloths, compact space, open kitchen. Come expecting to focus on what is on the plate rather than the setting around it. The wine list is a genuine strength; asking for guidance by the glass is worthwhile given the range. The plant-based menu exists and is well-developed but must be requested at booking. Portland has held its Michelin star since its first year, so the cooking is proven, but the supply-driven menu means the specific dishes you eat will depend on what came in that day.

    Can Portland accommodate groups?

    • The room is modestly proportioned, which limits large group configurations. Parties of two or four are direct. If you are planning for six or more, contact the restaurant directly before booking to confirm what can be arranged. At £££ in central London, Portland works as a group dinner venue for those who want the food to be the point rather than a large-format private dining experience.

    Can I eat at the bar at Portland?

    • There is high seating at the window, which functions as counter-style seating and is a practical option for solo diners or pairs who want a more informal position in the room. Whether bar seating specifically is available for drop-in or same-day booking is worth confirming directly with the restaurant, as the database does not confirm a dedicated bar counter separate from the main room.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can I eat at the bar at Portland?

    Yes. Portland has high window seating overlooking Great Portland Street, which functions as counter-style dining and is suitable for solo diners or pairs. It is a practical option if you cannot secure a table booking, and the full menu is available from that position. Call ahead to confirm availability rather than assuming walk-in access.

    Can Portland accommodate groups?

    Portland is modestly proportioned, so large groups are difficult to seat comfortably. Parties of two to four are well served; anything larger should check the venue's official channels before booking. The open-kitchen layout and informal room work in favour of small groups, but this is not a venue built around private dining or event hire.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Portland?

    Lunch is the sharper value play. Both services run the same ingredient-led menu, but lunch at £££ in a Michelin-starred room north of Oxford Street is meaningfully cheaper than equivalent dinner covers elsewhere in central London. The kitchen reprints its menu after lunch as ingredients are used up, so dinner sometimes offers different dishes — worth considering if variety matters to you.

    What should a first-timer know about Portland?

    Portland is closed Monday and Sunday, so plan accordingly. The room is informal — unclothed tables, open kitchen — and the food philosophy is restrained: minimal intervention, ingredient-forward, no crowded plates. The wine list is given equal weight to the food and includes a partnership with Château d'Yquem, so the glass selection is worth paying attention to. Ranked #297 in Europe by Opinionated About Dining in 2024, it has a consistent critical track record across nearly a decade.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Portland?

    Portland's approach rewards sequential eating: the kitchen builds dishes so each component enhances another rather than competing for attention. If you prefer exploring the menu freely, that format works here too given how the à la carte is constructed. For pure tasting-menu value at this price tier, Portland is a stronger case than heavier-priced alternatives like CORE by Clare Smyth, provided you are comfortable with a pared-down, produce-led style rather than elaborate technique.

    Is Portland worth the price?

    Yes, clearly so for what it delivers at £££. A Michelin star held since its first year, a ranking of #297 in Europe (Opinionated About Dining, 2024), and a wine programme with Château d'Yquem access put it well above its price bracket. Against comparably priced Modern British options in central London, Portland's combination of seasonal sourcing rigour and a serious wine list is difficult to match. If you want more theatrical cooking or a grander room, look at The Ledbury or Sketch; if value-to-quality ratio is the priority, Portland wins.

    Location

    113 Great Portland St, London W1W 6QQ, United Kingdom

    London, United Kingdom

    Compare Portland

    Value Check: Portland and Peers
    VenuePriceBooking Difficulty
    Portland£££Moderate
    CORE by Clare Smyth££££Unknown
    Restaurant Gordon Ramsay££££Unknown
    Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library££££Unknown
    The Ledbury££££Unknown
    Dinner by Heston Blumenthal££££Unknown

    Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.

    Also Consider

    Portland's clearest advantage over its London peers is price. CORE by Clare Smyth, Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library, and The Ledbury all operate at ££££ with tasting menus that price accordingly. Portland delivers Michelin-starred, ingredient-led Modern British cooking at £££. If your priority is getting the most cooking quality per pound spent, Portland wins that comparison. If you want the full service ritual, a formal room, or the credentialing that comes with a higher-profile name, the ££££ tier delivers more of that.

    Restaurant Gordon Ramsay and Dinner by Heston Blumenthal both sit at ££££ and offer a more produced experience: polished rooms, defined service arcs, and menus that are more fixed in structure. Portland's supply-driven, reprinted menu model is the opposite of that approach. For a diner who finds the scripted quality of a formal tasting room slightly airless, Portland's informality and genuine ingredient dependency make it a more interesting book. For a diner who wants certainty and occasion, the ££££ options are more reliable in that register.

    On booking difficulty, Portland sits in the middle of the field. It is harder to secure than a standard neighbourhood bistro but considerably easier than the most sought-after counters in London. If you are planning a trip specifically around a dinner, one to two weeks' notice is usually sufficient for Tuesday through Thursday. For Friday and Saturday dinner, build in more lead time. The ££££ peers generally require more advance planning and in some cases have waitlists, which makes Portland the more practical choice for shorter planning horizons without sacrificing Michelin-level cooking.

    Hours

    Monday
    closed
    Tuesday
    12 PM-2:15 PM 5:30 PM-9:45 PM
    Wednesday
    12 PM-2:15 PM 5:30 PM-9:45 PM
    Thursday
    12 PM-2:15 PM 5:30 PM-9:45 PM
    Friday
    12 PM-2:15 PM 5:30 PM-9:45 PM
    Saturday
    12 PM-2:15 PM 5:30 PM-9:45 PM
    Sunday
    closed

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