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    Restaurant in Bangkok, Thailand

    Resonance

    1,045Pearl Points

    Michelin-starred Japanese precision, intimate house setting.

    Resonance, Restaurant in Bangkok

    About Resonance

    Resonance is a one-Michelin-star tasting menu restaurant in a quiet Sukhumvit house, where Japanese chef Shunsuke Shimomura runs a precise seasonal menu built on his global cooking history. The drinks pairing — spanning wine, beer, and sake — is one of the more considered options at this price tier in Bangkok. Book for a special occasion dinner or Saturday lunch.

    Verdict

    If you are planning a special occasion dinner in Bangkok and want Japanese-rooted precision in an intimate house setting, Resonance earns its Michelin star and your reservation. Chef Shunsuke Shimomura's seasonal tasting menu is the reason to come, and the drinks pairing — notably the tea pairing, available on advance request — is one of the more considered beverage options at this price tier in the city. Book it for a date night or a small group celebration. It is not the splashiest room in Bangkok's ฿฿฿฿ tier, but it may be the most focused.

    About Resonance

    A quiet residential stretch of Sukhumvit Soi 65 is not where most diners expect to find a Michelin-starred restaurant, but that is part of Resonance's appeal. The venue occupies the ground floor of a contemporary two-storey house, and the all-white minimalist interior signals immediately that the cooking is the point. There are no theatrical design flourishes competing for your attention. For a special occasion dinner, that restraint works in your favour, the atmosphere stays calm and conversation-friendly throughout the evening.

    Chef Shimomura built his menu around a personal culinary history: Japanese foundations layered with techniques and influences accumulated from working across multiple countries. The result is a seasonal tasting menu that moves through a range of registers, a clam soup noted for its delicacy, grilled seasonal vegetables, lamb, and beef preparations, without feeling like a survey of global cuisine. The through-line is precision and seasonality, which keeps the menu coherent even when individual dishes reference disparate traditions.

    On the drinks side, Resonance takes a more considered approach than most Bangkok tasting menu restaurants at this level. The wine list is strong on Burgundy, which pairs logically with the menu's Japanese-leaning precision and its use of subtle umami-forward profiles. But the drinks pairing goes further: it is compiled to include beer and sake alongside wine, making it genuinely more interesting than a standard wine flight. For the tea pairing, reportedly the subtlest option and well-suited to guests who prefer non-alcoholic pairings or want to extend the evening's sensory range, you need to request it a day or two in advance. That is a small logistical point, but worth knowing before you arrive. If drinks matter to you as much as food, Resonance is one of the few Bangkok venues where the pairing genuinely adds to the experience rather than simply accompanying it.

    The service model matches the room: detailed and welcoming without being formal or stiff. For a date night or a business dinner where the conversation should flow, that balance is the right call. The team is described as large relative to the room's scale, which means attentiveness without hovering.

    Resonance holds one Michelin star and appeared on La Liste's Leading Restaurants ranking in both 2025 (79.5 points) and 2026 (76 points). The Google rating sits at 4.7 across 156 reviews, which at this price point and format is a reliable signal of consistent execution. For context within Bangkok's broader ฿฿฿฿ tier, Resonance is among the more accessible options in terms of booking difficulty, harder to get into than a standard Bangkok restaurant, but easier than Sorn or Sühring on most timelines.

    The restaurant is open Tuesday through Saturday for dinner (6 PM to 10 PM), with Saturday lunch service added (12 PM to 2:30 PM). It is closed Sunday and Monday. If your schedule only allows a Saturday visit, the lunch sitting is a real option, rare at this format and price level. See the full picture of Bangkok's dining options in our full Bangkok restaurants guide.

    For other Michelin-level experiences in Thailand worth considering alongside Resonance, PRU in Phuket and Aeeen in Chiang Mai represent strong regional alternatives if your trip extends beyond Bangkok. Within the city, AVANT and Mia are worth a look if you want to compare formats before committing. For something lighter in tone, Bisou is a credible alternative. Exploring broader? Browse our full Bangkok bars guide, our full Bangkok hotels guide, and our full Bangkok experiences guide to plan around the meal. If you are curious about Japanese-influenced modern cuisine at comparable ambition elsewhere, Frantzén in Stockholm and FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai offer useful reference points for what the format can achieve at the highest level.

    Practical Details

    Reservations: Book ahead, walk-ins are unlikely to work at this format. Easy relative to Bangkok's hardest-to-book tables, but do not leave it to the last minute for weekend evenings. Hours: Tuesday–Friday dinner only, 6 PM–10 PM; Saturday lunch 12 PM–2:30 PM and dinner 6 PM–10 PM; Sunday–Monday closed. Price tier: ฿฿฿฿, this is a tasting menu commitment, not a drop-in dinner. Drinks: Request the tea pairing at least one to two days in advance if that is your preference; the standard drinks pairing includes wine, beer, and sake. Dress: No dress code data available, but the Michelin-star setting and price tier suggest smart-casual as a safe baseline. Getting there: Sukhumvit Soi 65, Phra Khanong Nuea, Watthana, accessible by BTS to On Nut or Phra Khanong, then a short taxi or rideshare. Also nearby: AKKEE in Pak Kret and AKKEE Thai delicacies and Tasting Counter in Nonthaburi are worth noting if you are building a broader Bangkok itinerary. For a change of scene entirely, Agave in Ubon Ratchathani and The Spa in Lamai Beach round out Thailand's wider dining picture. Check our full Bangkok wineries guide if you want to extend your wine exploration beyond the meal.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I order at Resonance?

    Resonance runs a seasonal set menu only — there is no à la carte. The format draws on chef Shunsuke Shimomura's Japanese roots and international cooking experience, with dishes shifting by season. Ask about the tea pairing when you book (it requires a day or two's notice) and consider the drinks pairing, which can include beer, sake, and Burgundy-forward wines.

    How far ahead should I book Resonance?

    Book at least two to three weeks out, more for weekend dinners or Saturday lunch. The restaurant occupies the ground floor of a two-storey house, so capacity is limited and walk-ins are not a realistic option for this format. If you want the tea pairing, flag it at the time of booking.

    What should I wear to Resonance?

    The setting is a contemporary house with minimalist, all-white décor and a relaxed atmosphere — the Michelin inspectors describe it as 'relaxed and friendly.' A neat, polished casual look fits the tone; formal attire is not required, but the ฿฿฿฿ price point suggests you should dress accordingly.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Resonance?

    Dinner is the main event. Resonance is open for lunch only on Saturdays (noon to 2:30 PM), while dinner runs Monday through Saturday. If Saturday lunch fits your schedule it is worth considering, but the core experience is the evening tasting menu.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Resonance?

    For a structured, chef-driven evening in Bangkok, yes. The seasonal set menu carries a 1 Michelin star and a La Liste score of 79.5 points (2025), and the kitchen's approach — Japanese precision blended with Shimomura's broader international experience — gives it a distinct identity. If you prefer flexibility or à la carte dining, this format is not for you.

    Is Resonance worth the price?

    At ฿฿฿฿ in Bangkok, Resonance sits in the city's top pricing tier, but it delivers Michelin-starred cooking in an intimate, house-based setting with a strong drinks programme. Compared to Sühring or Gaa at similar price points, Resonance is a quieter, more personal experience — worth it for those who value that over a larger-scale production.

    Does Resonance handle dietary restrictions?

    The venue data does not specify a formal dietary restriction policy, but the format is a chef-driven seasonal tasting menu. check the venue's official channels when booking — advance notice gives the kitchen the best chance to accommodate any requirements.

    Location

    108, 4 สุขุมวิท 65 Phra Khanong Nuea, Watthana, Bangkok 10110, Thailand

    Bangkok, Thailand

    Compare Resonance

    Award Winners Like Resonance
    VenueAwardsPrice
    Resonance฿฿฿฿
    SornMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best฿฿฿฿
    Baan TepaMichelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best฿฿฿฿
    Côte by Mauro ColagrecoMichelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best฿฿฿฿
    GaaMichelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best฿฿฿฿
    SühringMichelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best฿฿฿฿

    What to weigh when choosing between Resonance and alternatives.

    Also Consider

    At ฿฿฿฿, Resonance sits in a competitive bracket with Bangkok's most-awarded tasting menu restaurants. Against Sorn, which focuses on Southern Thai cuisine and holds two Michelin stars, Resonance offers a different proposition: quieter atmosphere, Japanese-influenced cooking, and a drinks pairing that goes beyond wine. Sorn is the harder booking and carries more prestige, but Resonance is the better call if you want a calm, conversation-friendly room with a non-Thai menu focus.

    Against Baan Tepa (Thai contemporary, ฿฿฿฿) and Gaa (Modern Indian, ฿฿฿฿), Resonance is the most Japan-leaning of the group and the easiest to book of the three. If you want to understand Bangkok's indigenous flavours at the fine dining level, Baan Tepa or Sorn will serve you better. If a globally-informed tasting menu with strong Burgundy-focused wine and the option of a sake pairing is more your preference, Resonance wins the comparison. Sühring (German, ฿฿฿฿) is the closest match in terms of format and intimacy, with a house setting and European culinary roots, worth comparing directly if your group is split between the two.

    Côte by Mauro Colagreco (Mediterranean, ฿฿฿฿) is the most high-profile international name in the peer group and suits diners who want a well-known chef's imprimatur on the evening. Resonance is the right choice if you prefer a lower-profile room with a tighter, more personal menu. For a special occasion where the dining experience itself is the event rather than the name above the door, Resonance and Sühring are the two to weigh seriously against each other in Bangkok's ฿฿฿฿ field.

    Hours

    Monday
    6 PM-10 PM
    Tuesday
    6 PM-10 PM
    Wednesday
    6 PM-10 PM
    Thursday
    6 PM-10 PM
    Friday
    6 PM-10 PM
    Saturday
    12 PM-2:30 PM 6 PM-10 PM
    Sunday
    closed

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