Restaurant in Saint Helier, United Kingdom
Bohemia
1,000ptsJersey's Michelin star: book for the tasting menu.

About Bohemia
Bohemia holds a Michelin star and the strongest tasting menu in the Channel Islands, set inside The Club Hotel & Spa in central St Helier. Dinner runs from £99 to £139 per person across three menu tiers; weekday lunch from £52 for two courses is the sharpest entry point. Book well ahead: tables at this level fill fast, and a new head chef took over in June 2025.
The Verdict
Bohemia is the right booking if you want the most technically accomplished tasting menu in the Channel Islands, served with the kind of service and wine depth that justify the ££££ price point. Holding a Michelin star since 2024 and rated 4.5 from 355 Google reviews, this is the reference point for fine dining in Jersey. If you are coming to St Helier and serious food is on your agenda, this is where you book first. If the eight-course menu at £139 per person feels steep, the four-course option at £99 per person or the weekday lunch at £52 for two courses make the kitchen accessible at a lower entry cost than most Michelin-starred peers on the mainland.
The Restaurant
Bohemia opened in 2003 inside The Club Hotel & Spa, a 46-room boutique property in the centre of St Helier, and has sustained its position as the Channel Islands' most decorated restaurant for over two decades. From the street it is discreet, but the interior has a considered identity: dark wood-panelled walls, leather chairs, Art Deco detail, and marble frontage give it the atmosphere of a vintage ocean liner that has been very tastefully refitted. Linen-clad tables are lit to stand out against the darker surrounds, making it feel formal without being stiff.
The kitchen operates under a philosophy of letting Jersey's produce lead. The island's fertile land and surrounding waters are the structural backbone of the menus, with dishes built around line-caught sea bass, Jersey mussels, and local apple brandy, while suppliers like the Cartmel Valley in Cumbria bring in venison where the island cannot source it. Artisan cheeses from Jean-Yves Bordier, one of Brittany's most respected affineurs, anchor the cheese course. France's proximity matters here, both on the plate and in the glass: the wine list runs deep into French regions, with reviewers specifically calling out the less familiar French vintages as a strength alongside the expected grand names. For a wine-focused traveller, this is a list worth exploring.
The menus run in three tiers. The four-course menu at £99 per person is the starting point and gives a genuine read of the kitchen's register. The 'Surprise' menu at £119 per person adds an element of chef's discretion across the selection. The eight-course tasting menu at £139 per person is where the full technical range is expressed, with vegetarian, pescatarian, and omnivorous tracks all available. Dishes in the extended format show how the kitchen uses technique to support rather than overshadow produce: a roast veal sweetbread sits on butternut and Parmesan purée with cacao nibs and toasted pumpkin seeds; a line-caught sea bass is paired with charred braised octopus, fennel, chicory, and bouillabaisse sauce; venison from Cumbria arrives with beetroot, fig, nasturtium, and Szechuan spice. These are not simple preparations, but reviewers consistently note that the flavours stay natural and balanced rather than overwrought.
Desserts continue that approach: a tarte tatin made with local apple brandy and clotted-cream ice cream, or a caramelised pear and mascarpone crémeux with roasted hazelnut and white balsamic vinegar. The kitchen's judgment about when to add contrast and when to hold back is what separates it from restaurants that reach for complexity for its own sake.
The Kitchen Transition
There is one piece of current intelligence worth factoring into your booking. Tom Earnshaw took over as head chef in June 2025, succeeding Callum Graham who built Bohemia's Michelin-starred reputation over recent years. Earnshaw is an internal promotion with serious credentials, having trained at Moor Hall and Northcote among others. The transition from a long-tenured chef always carries some uncertainty in a kitchen at this level. Ratings and reviewer feedback earned under Graham's tenure are strong, and the expectation is that Earnshaw continues in the same direction, but if you are planning a visit specifically around the guarantee of peak-form cooking, book in the next few months and treat the experience as an early read on a new chapter rather than a guaranteed continuation of what came before.
For context on how this compares to Michelin-starred tasting menus at comparable hotels elsewhere in the UK, consider that L'Enclume in Cartmel and Gidleigh Park in Chagford operate in similar hotel-restaurant formats at comparable or higher price points. Bohemia's advantage is the specificity of Jersey's terroir and its proximity to French supply lines, both of which give the menu a geographical identity that mainland equivalents cannot replicate. If you are interested in how a single island's produce can structure an entire tasting menu, this is one of the clearest examples in the British Isles.
Know Before You Go
- Price range: ££££ — four-course menu £99 pp / 'Surprise' menu £119 pp / eight-course tasting menu £139 pp / weekday lunch from £52 for two courses
- Hours: Monday to Sunday, 12:00 PM–2:30 PM and 6:00 PM–10:00 PM
- Booking difficulty: Hard — book as early as possible, particularly for dinner and weekends
- Location: Green Street, St Helier, Jersey , inside The Club Hotel & Spa
- Awards: Michelin 1 Star (2024)
- Google rating: 4.5 from 355 reviews
- Current kitchen: Tom Earnshaw (head chef from June 2025, ex-Moor Hall, Northcote)
- Lunch tip: £52 for two courses at lunch is the most accessible entry point to the kitchen
- Wine list: France-heavy with notable depth in lesser-known French regions
- Menus: Vegetarian, pescatarian, and omnivorous tasting tracks available
How It Compares
Within St Helier, Bohemia has no direct competitor at the same level. Tassili matches it on price tier (££££) and ambition, and is worth considering if you want a second fine-dining option or a different stylistic read on the island's produce. For something less formal at a lower spend, Samphire and Pêtchi both operate at £££ and offer modern cooking without the tasting-menu commitment. Awabi at ££ is the practical choice if you want quality without the full fine-dining outlay. See our full Saint Helier restaurants guide for the complete picture.
FAQ
- Can I eat at the bar at Bohemia? The venue includes a bar where cocktails are specifically recommended as part of the arrival experience, but Bohemia is structured around the dining room and its tasting menus. If you are looking for a bar-only visit, the cocktail bar functions well as a pre-dinner option; eating a full menu at the bar is not confirmed as available. Book the dining room if the food is your priority.
- Is Bohemia worth the price? At £99 to £139 per person for dinner, yes, if a structured tasting menu format suits you. The Michelin star, 4.5 Google rating, and depth of the wine list position it competitively against mainland UK equivalents like hide and fox in Saltwood or Hand and Flowers in Marlow. The weekday two-course lunch at £52 is where the value is sharpest , you access the same kitchen and sourcing at roughly a third of the dinner cost.
- Is the tasting menu worth it at Bohemia? The eight-course menu at £139 per person is the format that leading demonstrates the kitchen's technical range, with the full scope of Jersey and Normandy sourcing, the cheese course from Jean-Yves Bordier, and the most complete wine pairing opportunity. If you are travelling specifically for the food, this is the format to choose. The four-course menu at £99 is a solid alternative if you want a shorter commitment.
- Is Bohemia good for solo dining? Nothing in the available data confirms counter or bar seating for solo diners. At ££££ and with a tasting-menu-focused format, Bohemia is better suited to pairs or small groups who share the same pace through a long meal. Solo visitors should contact the venue directly to confirm seating arrangements before booking.
- Is Bohemia good for a special occasion? This is Bohemia's strongest use case. The combination of Michelin-starred cooking, the hotel setting at The Club Hotel & Spa, the formal-but-warm service, and the depth of the wine list make it the obvious choice for a significant celebration in Jersey. Reviewers specifically call it out for this purpose. For comparable celebration dining elsewhere in the UK, Waterside Inn in Bray or Restaurant Gordon Ramsay in London operate in the same register, but Bohemia's island location and produce identity make it a more distinctive setting.
Explore more: Saint Helier hotels | Saint Helier bars | Saint Helier wineries | Saint Helier experiences
Compare Bohemia
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bohemia | Modern Cuisine | ££££ | “The variety of dishes on the tasting menus is second to none” – “exceptional dishes from quality locally sourced produce” – according to fans of this smart and contemporary venue in a 46-room boutique hotel and spa in the centre of St Helier, where the entry level option is a four-course menu for £99 per person, there’s a ‘Surprise’ menu for £119 per person; and an eight-course tasting menu for £139 per person. There’s also a “stunning wine list, including the big names you’d expect at a top restaurant but with less well-known but brilliant French vintages… I guess being so close to France helps” . Tom Earnshaw succeeded Callum Graham leading the kitchen in June 2025, after our annual diners’ poll had concluded, but we have rated the establishment assuming that its historic high standards continue. Top Tip – lunch is £52 for two courses.; If you have something special to celebrate, this marble-fronted restaurant inside The Club Hotel & Spa is the place to come – and cocktails in the bar are all part of the experience. It’s a chic place, where bright linen-clad tables stand out against dimly lit, dark wood walls. Eye-catching dishes offer natural, well-balanced flavours and an occasional hint of playfulness, while the kitchen clearly understands how to use techniques to enhance rather than overshadow the fine produce. Go for the tasting menu inspired by the chef's travels, with accompanying wines.; *Callum Graham is leaving and being replaced by the restaurant's former sous-chef Tom Earnshaw (ex-Moor Hall, Northcote etc).* .Launched in 2003, Bohemia is the brightest culinary star in all the Channel Islands – though, from the outside, it cuts a discreet figure, huddled beneath a luxury hotel not so far from the sea in St Helier. Stepping inside, there’s a whiff of a vintage ocean liner to its dusky wood-panelled walls, leather chairs and Art Deco flourishes, although no one seriously doubts the radiance of the cooking. Feedback suggests that head chef Callum Graham has ‘hit new heights’ and added ‘another element of refinement’ to his intricate and ceaselessly imaginative menus – an ongoing seasonal celebration of produce from Jersey’s fertile fields and the bountiful waters surrounding the island. Tasting menus come in vegetarian, pescatarian and omnivorous incarnations, although re-imaginings of dishes and meditations on textures are a recurring leitmotif across the board. This is evident in a pairing of Normandy sand carrot with Jersey mussels, coriander and sea buckthorn or roast veal sweetbread on a silky butternut and Parmesan purée with cacao nibs, toasted pumpkin seeds and chicken jus. Local supplies also shine in a dish of line-caught sea bass with charred braised octopus, fennel, chicory and bouillabaisse sauce, although venison is sourced from the Cartmel Valley in Cumbria and served with beetroot, fig, nasturtium and venison jus, all invigorated with Szechuan spices. Artisan cheeses from Jean-Yves Bordier warrant special attention, while desserts might usher in a tarte tatin laced with local apple brandy and served with clotted-cream ice cream or a caramelised pear and mascarpone crémeux with roasted hazelnut and a dash of white balsamic vinegar. The food is matched by service that is ‘warm, welcoming and professional’ to a fault. France dominates a heavyweight wine list, parts of which may have you reaching into the deepest fathoms of your pocket. One aficionado was also delighted to discover that Bohemia is the modern-day home of Lanique – an iconic and delectable rose-scented liqueur.; If you have something special to celebrate, this marble-fronted restaurant inside The Club Hotel & Spa is the place to come – and cocktails in the bar are all part of the experience. It’s a chic place, where bright linen-clad tables stand out against dimly lit, dark wood walls. Eye-catching dishes offer natural, well-balanced flavours and an occasional hint of playfulness, while the kitchen clearly understands how to use techniques to enhance rather than overshadow the fine produce. Go for the tasting menu inspired by the chef's travels, with accompanying wines.; Michelin 1 Star (2024) | Hard | — |
| Awabi | Asian | ££ | Unknown | — | |
| Tassili | Modern Cuisine | ££££ | Unknown | — | |
| Pêtchi | Modern Cuisine | £££ | Unknown | — | |
| Samphire | Modern Cuisine | £££ | Unknown | — |
What to weigh when choosing between Bohemia and alternatives.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I eat at the bar at Bohemia?
Bohemia's bar is part of the experience, particularly for cocktails before or after dinner at this Michelin-starred venue inside The Club Hotel & Spa. Whether the bar operates as a standalone dining option is not confirmed in available venue detail, so check the venue's official channels on Green St before arriving with that expectation.
Is Bohemia worth the price?
At £99 for four courses and £139 for eight, Bohemia sits at the top of Jersey's price bracket, but it holds a Michelin star and draws consistent praise for locally sourced produce and technically accomplished cooking. The lunch offer at £52 for two courses is the sharpest entry point if you want to test the kitchen before committing to a full tasting menu spend. For the Channel Islands, there is nothing comparable at this level.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Bohemia?
Yes, particularly the eight-course menu at £139, which is where the kitchen's range and technique show most clearly. Fans single out the variety of dishes and the quality of locally sourced Jersey produce as the strongest arguments for the full format. The £119 'Surprise' menu is the right call if you prefer to hand over the decision entirely. One caveat: head chef Tom Earnshaw took over in June 2025, so the menus are in transition, though his background includes Moor Hall and Northcote.
Is Bohemia good for solo dining?
Bohemia is a workable solo booking given the tasting menu format, which suits single diners well at counter or smaller table settings. The service is described as warm and professional, which helps when dining alone in a formal room. That said, the venue is described as a celebration destination, so solo diners who prefer a more anonymous or casual atmosphere may find the setting weighted toward couples and groups.
Is Bohemia good for a special occasion?
This is Bohemia's strongest use case. The marble-fronted dining room inside The Club Hotel & Spa, the Michelin-starred kitchen, and cocktails in the bar before dinner make it the most complete special occasion package in Jersey. Book the eight-course tasting menu at £139 and consider adding the wine pairing given the France-heavy list that reviewers single out as a genuine strength.
Hours
- Monday
- 12 PM-2:30 PM 6 PM-10 PM
- Tuesday
- 12 PM-2:30 PM 6 PM-10 PM
- Wednesday
- 12 PM-2:30 PM 6 PM-10 PM
- Thursday
- 12 PM-2:30 PM 6 PM-10 PM
- Friday
- 12 PM-2:30 PM 6 PM-10 PM
- Saturday
- 12 PM-2:30 PM 6 PM-10 PM
- Sunday
- 12 PM-2:30 PM 6 PM-10 PM
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