Skip to main content

    Restaurant in Taipei, Taiwan

    Sens

    250pts

    20 seats, one menu, book early.

    Sens, Restaurant in Taipei

    About Sens

    Sens is Taipei's most focused classical French tasting menu, running a 20-seat room in Songshan with seasonal menus and sauce work that justifies the $$$$ tier. It is easier to book than logy or Taïrroir, making it the practical choice when you want France without the planning overhead. The pâté en croûte is a fixture for good reason.

    Sens, Taipei: The Verdict

    Most people assume a 20-seat French tasting menu restaurant tucked into a residential lane off Minsheng East Road will be either precious or overpriced. Sens is neither. This is the address for serious French technique in Taipei — a single tasting menu, seasonal changes, and sauce work that holds its own against the city's most credentialed kitchens. If you are already familiar with Taipei's fine dining circuit and are deciding where to spend your next $$$$-tier dinner, Sens belongs in the shortlist.

    Portrait

    The room seats just 20 people, and the first thing to register is that this does not feel cramped. Shiny surface finishes and vertical architectural lines pull the eye upward and outward, giving the space more breathing room than the numbers suggest. The mood is intimate without being hushed to the point of discomfort — a good room for a dinner where conversation matters.

    The format is fixed: one tasting menu, no à la carte. The menu rotates seasonally, so returning diners , and this is a restaurant that earns returns , will find meaningful changes between visits. One dish that does not rotate is the pâté en croûte, which has become a fixture precisely because it demonstrates what the kitchen does leading: classical French craft with real precision. The sauce work throughout is the clearest marker of the kitchen's technical level. Fresh herb use is confident and direct, not decorative. The meal follows a traditional French progression, including a cheese course served after the main , small bites rather than a full board, but the gesture signals that this kitchen respects the format it is working in.

    For a returning visitor, the strategic move is to time your next booking around a seasonal menu transition , late spring into summer, or the shift from autumn into winter , when the tasting menu is most likely to show new material. The pâté en croûte will anchor the meal regardless, which is reassuring rather than limiting.

    Group and Private Dining at Sens

    Sens is not a group restaurant in the conventional sense. With 20 covers total, there is no private dining room to speak of. A party of four to six could occupy a meaningful share of the room and have a dinner that feels semi-private simply by virtue of the scale, but anyone expecting a dedicated private event space will need to look elsewhere. For groups, the practical question is whether you can fill enough of the room to create the atmosphere you want , at $$$$, coordinating a group booking here requires commitment from everyone involved. Contact the restaurant directly to discuss what the room can accommodate for a specific party size, as there is no published group policy. For genuinely private dining in Taipei's French-leaning fine dining tier, Le Palais has more infrastructure for larger or more ceremonial bookings.

    Booking and Hours

    Sens operates Tuesday through Saturday. Dinner runs 6 PM to 10 PM across all open days. Lunch service (12 PM to 2:30 PM) is available Friday and Saturday only , which matters if you are choosing between formats. Monday and Sunday are closed. Booking is rated easy relative to Taipei's competitive fine dining pool, which is a meaningful advantage: you do not need to plan weeks ahead the way you would for logy or Taïrroir. That said, the 20-seat format means the room does fill , give yourself at least a week's notice for weekends, slightly less for mid-week dinners.

    Practical Details

    DetailSenslogyTaïrroir
    CuisineFrench ContemporaryModern European / AsianTaiwanese / French
    Price tier$$$$$$$$$$$$
    FormatTasting menu onlyTasting menuTasting menu
    Seating~20 coversSmallLarger room
    Lunch availableFri–Sat onlyCheck current hoursCheck current hours
    Booking difficultyEasyHardModerate
    Closed daysMon, SunVariesVaries

    How It Compares

    Among Taipei's $$$$-tier tasting menu restaurants, Sens occupies a clear niche: the most classically French option in the city, at a scale where the room itself becomes part of the experience. logy is the more technically daring choice , its Asian-European hybrid approach draws stronger critical attention and is harder to book , but if classical French technique, particularly saucing and structured progression, is what you are after, Sens is the more focused delivery. Taïrroir blends Taiwanese ingredients with French structure and offers a larger room with more event infrastructure, making it a better fit for groups or guests who want local produce woven into the meal. Sens is the pick when you want France, not fusion.

    For pure value at the $$$$ tier, Le Palais delivers Cantonese cooking at a level that attracts Michelin recognition, which makes it worth comparing if your party has mixed cuisine preferences. Mudan Tempura at the same price tier is a single-product dining experience that suits a specific occasion better than a generalist fine dining night. If you want French, Sens is the most direct answer in Taipei , more intimate than L'Atelier de Joël Robuchon Taipei and more focused in format than Molino de Urdániz, which brings a Spanish contemporary perspective.

    Sens is the easiest to book of the serious fine dining options in this tier, which is a real practical advantage for visitors or last-minute planners. That accessibility does not signal a lower ceiling , it reflects the restaurant's modest room size and lower profile relative to award-chasing peers. Book it when you want a dinner that rewards attention to classical detail without requiring six weeks of advance planning.

    Explore More in Taipei and Beyond

    Compare Sens

    Sens vs. Similar Venues
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    Sens$$$$ · French ContemporaryThe 20-seater is not particularly spacious, but the clever use of shiny materials and vertical lines more than compensates. It only opens for dinner with a single tasting menu that changes according to the season (although the ever-popular pâté en croûte remains a firm fixture). The chef’s sauces are second to none and he uses fresh herbs to great effect. In echo of traditional French meals, small cheese bites are served after the main course.Easy
    logyModern European, Asian Contemporary$$$$Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Le PalaisCantonese$$$$Michelin 3 StarUnknown
    TaïrroirTaiwanese/French, Taiwanese contemporary$$$$Michelin 3 StarUnknown
    Mudan TempuraTempura$$$$Michelin 2 StarUnknown
    Golden FormosaTaiwanese$$Michelin 1 StarUnknown

    A quick look at how Sens measures up.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How far ahead should I book Sens?

    Book at least three to four weeks in advance. With only 20 seats and no walk-in culture for a $$$$-tier tasting menu, the room fills well ahead of service. Lunch on Fridays and Saturdays tends to have slightly more availability than dinner, but do not count on it.

    What are alternatives to Sens in Taipei?

    For a different take on tasting menu dining at a similar price point, Taïrroir applies French technique to Taiwanese ingredients and is the stronger pick if you want local flavour woven into the format. Le Palais is the choice for classical Cantonese at $$$$. Logy offers a more ingredient-driven, seasonal approach closer to Japanese omakase sensibility. Sens is the most purely French option of the group.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Sens?

    Dinner is the core experience: the full tasting menu runs Tuesday through Saturday evenings from 6 PM to 10 PM. Lunch (Friday and Saturday, 12 PM to 2:30 PM) is worth considering if you prefer the same menu at a pace that leaves your evening free, but the format is the same either way. There is no abbreviated lunch menu noted in available venue data.

    What should I order at Sens?

    Sens runs a single tasting menu with no à la carte option, so ordering decisions are made for you. The pâté en croûte is a fixture on the menu regardless of seasonal changes, and the kitchen's sauces are a consistent strength. Cheese bites are served after the main course in the style of a traditional French meal progression.

    Is Sens good for solo dining?

    Yes. A 20-seat room with a counter-style or intimate layout and a set tasting menu is well-suited to solo diners — there is no social awkwardness of occupying a table meant for two, and the single-menu format means you are not making decisions alone. Book ahead regardless; the room does not have spare capacity to absorb walk-ins.

    Can Sens accommodate groups?

    Only in a limited sense. At 20 covers total, there is no private dining room, and a large group would effectively take over the restaurant. Parties of four to six are manageable but should be arranged well in advance and confirmed directly with the venue. Groups of eight or more should look elsewhere: Taïrroir or Le Palais have more capacity for that format.

    Can I eat at the bar at Sens?

    No bar seating is documented for Sens. The venue is a 20-seat dining room focused on a set tasting menu, which does not typically include bar or counter walk-in options. If counter-style flexibility is what you want, Logy in Taipei is a closer match for that format.

    Hours

    Monday
    closed
    Tuesday
    6 PM-10 PM
    Wednesday
    6 PM-10 PM
    Thursday
    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
    closed

    Recognized By

    Keep this place

    Save or rate Sens on Pearl

    Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.