Restaurant in Los Angeles, United States
Somni
1,700ptsThree Michelin stars. Nearly impossible to book.

About Somni
Somni is a 14-seat Californian-Spanish tasting counter in West Hollywood holding three Michelin stars (2025) and 96 points from La Liste 2026. Chef Aitor Zabala's avant-garde menu blends Basque and Catalan technique with Californian ingredients. Booking difficulty is near impossible — plan two to three months ahead. At $$$$ pricing with a serious wine list, it is the highest-stakes tasting counter currently operating in Los Angeles.
Verdict: One of the hardest tables in Los Angeles to book, and worth every effort
Expect to spend well over $300 per person before wine at Somni — this is a $$$$-tier tasting counter with no la carte option, a 14-seat format, and three Michelin stars earned in 2025. La Liste ranked it 96 points in its 2026 global list. If you are spending at this level in Los Angeles, Somni delivers a technically precise and personally felt experience that most comparably priced rooms in the city do not match. Book it if avant-garde Californian-Spanish cuisine and theatrical presentation matter to you. Skip it if you want a conventional fine dining room, a la carte flexibility, or a table that seats more than a small group.
About Somni
Somni sits at 9045 Nemo St in West Hollywood, operating as a 14-seat chef's counter under Chef and Owner Aitor Zabala. The name means "dream" in Catalan, which signals the culinary territory: this is Basque and Catalan cooking filtered through a Californian lens, with technique drawn from Zabala's time at El Bulli, the Spanish restaurant widely credited with defining modernist cuisine for a generation of chefs. That lineage matters when you are deciding whether to book: Somni is not a nostalgia play or a comfort-food experience. It is a precision-driven tasting menu where the cooking is the entertainment.
What separates Somni from other high-end tasting counters is the balance Zabala maintains between technical spectacle and actual flavor. A dish built around a quenelle of caviar resting on a dashi meringue shaped like a fish demonstrates that level of craft. So does shiso tempura topped with beef tartare and covered in borage flowers. These are not gimmicks: they are dishes where the technique serves the taste rather than distracting from it. The final savory course — an homage to txuleton beef, using steak from a seven-year-old cow grilled and served with riffs on piquillo peppers , shows a chef willing to step back from complexity when a great ingredient warrants it. This range, from theatrical precision to earned simplicity, is what three Michelin stars in 2025 and a 96-point La Liste score reflect.
Wine Director Caroline Costarella oversees a list of 1,050 selections and 345 inventory positions, with strength in Spain, California, and France. Wine pricing is $$$, meaning the list carries many bottles above $100. Corkage is $150 per bottle if you bring your own. For an explorer who wants to pair Spanish or Californian wines with the menu's Basque-Catalan spine, this is a serious list worth engaging with. Budget accordingly: wine can add $150 to $300 or more to the per-person total at this tier.
The Counter vs. a Private Experience
Somni's 14-seat communal chef's counter is the only format on offer. There is no separate private dining room listed. At this scale, the counter itself functions as the intimate experience: you are close to the kitchen, close to Zabala, and close to the other guests. For a party of two or three, this works well , the counter format at this size is closer to a private dinner than a conventional restaurant seat. For groups of six or more, understand that Somni's capacity means your group could occupy nearly half the room, but you will still be seated at a shared counter rather than around a private table. If total privacy is your priority, Somni is not structured for it. If the shared counter and the chef's presence are part of what you are paying for, that is exactly what you get.
Compare this to larger tasting-menu rooms in Los Angeles: Vespertine offers a more architecturally theatrical setting, while Hayato runs a similarly intimate Japanese kaiseki counter in Downtown LA. Neither has the same Spanish-Californian culinary framing as Somni. For groups who want a private room with tasting-menu ambition, Providence or Mélisse may have configurations worth asking about.
Booking
Booking difficulty at Somni is rated Near Impossible. Fourteen seats across a limited number of sittings per week means demand consistently exceeds supply at a three-Michelin-star counter. Expect to book two to three months out at minimum, and possibly longer for weekend slots or celebratory dates. Check the reservation platform regularly for cancellations , at this booking difficulty, monitoring release windows and cancellation slots is the realistic path to a near-term table. Do not treat this as a spontaneous dinner option; plan well ahead or be prepared to be flexible on timing.
For context on booking difficulty across comparable US tasting counters: The French Laundry in Napa and Alinea in Chicago operate on similarly competitive reservation windows. Atomix in New York City and Lazy Bear in San Francisco are comparable in scale and booking difficulty. Plan Somni the way you would plan any of those rooms: calendar-first, not impulse.
Practical Details
| Detail | Somni | Hayato | Kato |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cuisine | Californian / Spanish | Japanese Kaiseki | New Taiwanese |
| Format | Chef's Counter (14 seats) | Chef's Counter | Tasting Menu |
| Price Range | $$$$ | $$$$ | $$$$ |
| Michelin Stars | 3 (2025) | 2 | 2 |
| Wine / Drinks | $$$, 1,050 selections | Sake-focused | Natural wine focus |
| Booking Difficulty | Near Impossible | Very Difficult | Very Difficult |
| Location | West Hollywood | Downtown LA | West LA |
Where It Fits in the LA Fine Dining Picture
For the food and wine explorer working through Los Angeles's leading tasting-menu rooms, Somni is the highest-stakes and most technically ambitious option currently operating in the city. It sits above Kato and Hayato on the Michelin scale, and its Spanish-Californian identity makes it distinct from the Japanese-leaning counters that dominate the LA tasting-menu tier. If you are building a serious dining itinerary in Los Angeles, see our full Los Angeles restaurants guide. For where to stay nearby, the Los Angeles hotels guide covers options close to West Hollywood. Our Los Angeles bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide round out the trip.
For explorers mapping the broader US avant-garde tasting-menu circuit: minibar in Washington D.C. and Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg occupy related territory. Le Bernardin in New York and Osteria Mozza in Los Angeles serve different dining purposes entirely but are worth knowing if your trip has room for a second or third serious dinner.
FAQ
- Is the tasting menu worth it at Somni? Yes, for the right diner. Three Michelin stars in 2025 and 96 points from La Liste place Somni among the most technically credentialed tasting counters in the US. The menu blends Spanish-Californian modernist cooking with genuine flavor discipline , dishes earn their complexity. At this price tier ($$$$ cuisine, $$$ wine), it justifies the spend if avant-garde tasting menus are your format. It does not justify the spend if you prefer la carte dining or conventional fine dining presentation.
- How far ahead should I book Somni? Book two to three months out at a minimum for a realistic chance at the date you want. Weekend slots and celebratory dates book faster. At a 14-seat counter with three Michelin stars in 2025, supply is structurally limited. Monitor reservation platforms for cancellations if you need a nearer date. This is comparable in booking difficulty to The French Laundry in Napa or Alinea in Chicago.
- Does Somni handle dietary restrictions? Contact Somni directly to confirm. The 14-seat counter format and multi-course tasting menu structure at this level typically allows for advance communication about dietary needs, but specific accommodation policies are not confirmed in available data. Do not assume , contact the restaurant before booking.
- Is Somni good for solo dining? Yes. The 14-seat communal chef's counter is well-suited to solo guests: you are seated at a shared counter, close to the kitchen and to Chef Zabala, which removes the awkwardness of a solo table in a conventional dining room. For a solo food traveler in Los Angeles, Somni's counter format is one of the better settings in the city at this price tier.
- Is Somni worth the price? At $$$$-tier cuisine pricing with a $$$ wine list and a $150 corkage fee, the total spend per person is substantial. The 2025 three-Michelin-star rating and 96-point La Liste score provide verifiable benchmarks for the quality level. Against comparable US tasting counters , Atomix in New York, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, or Alinea in Chicago , Somni holds its own on both culinary ambition and the intimacy of the 14-seat format. Worth it if you are spending at this level intentionally.
- Can Somni accommodate groups? The restaurant seats 14 in total at a communal chef's counter. A group of six occupies nearly half the room. There is no confirmed private dining room. For groups who want a dedicated private space, Somni is not the right choice. For small groups of two to four who are comfortable at a shared counter, the format works well. Larger parties should contact the restaurant directly to understand what is possible.
Compare Somni
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the tasting menu worth it at Somni?
Yes, if technically ambitious tasting menus are your format. Somni holds three Michelin stars as of 2025 and earned 96 points on La Liste's 2026 ranking, placing it among the most credentialed restaurants in the country. Chef Aitor Zabala's background at El Bulli informs the precision, but the cooking prioritises flavour over spectacle. At $300+ per head before wine, this is a significant spend — but among LA's top tasting counters, Somni is the most technically ambitious option on the list.
How far ahead should I book Somni?
Book as early as possible — Somni's 14-seat format makes it one of the hardest reservations in Los Angeles, with demand consistently outpacing supply. Treat this like a Michelin three-star in Paris or Tokyo: check the booking window the moment it opens, and plan around the restaurant's schedule rather than your own. Last-minute availability is not a realistic expectation.
Does Somni handle dietary restrictions?
The venue data does not include specific detail on dietary accommodation, so contact Somni directly before booking. At a 14-seat chef's counter running a single tasting format, advance communication about restrictions is standard practice and typically expected at this tier of restaurant.
Is Somni good for solo dining?
Yes — the 14-seat communal chef's counter format is well-suited to solo diners. You are seated at the counter, not isolated at a table for one, and the theatrical pacing of a tasting menu keeps the experience engaging throughout. Compared to Hayato or Kato, which also run counter formats, Somni is the most overtly performative, which works in favour of solo visits.
Is Somni worth the price?
At $300+ per person before wine and with a corkage fee of $150 if you bring your own bottle, Somni is one of LA's most expensive meals. Three Michelin stars and a 96-point La Liste score provide external validation, but the practical case is simpler: there is no other restaurant in Los Angeles running this level of modernist technique at this scale. If that format appeals, the price is justified. If you want la carte flexibility or a shorter spend, look at Camphor or Gwen instead.
Can Somni accommodate groups?
Somni's 14-seat communal counter is the only format available — there is no private dining room. Small groups of 2 to 4 can book individual seats or adjacent spots at the counter, but larger parties face a real constraint: 14 total seats means a group of 8 would occupy more than half the room. check the venue's official channels about large-group availability, and expect limited flexibility given the format.
Recognized By
More restaurants in Los Angeles
- ProvidenceProvidence is LA's most decorated fine dining restaurant — three Michelin stars, a Green Star for sustainability, and a $325 tasting menu that changes nightly based on the day's catch. Book four to six weeks out minimum. At this price and format, it is the seafood tasting menu benchmark for the city, with service depth and sourcing discipline that justifies the spend for special occasions and returning guests alike.
- KatoKato is the No. 1 restaurant in Los Angeles by two consecutive LA Times rankings, a Michelin-starred Taiwanese-American tasting menu with a 2025 James Beard Award for Best Chef: California. The 10-course menu from Jon Yao is matched by one of the city's deepest wine programs. Book six to eight weeks out minimum — this is among the hardest reservations in the country to secure.
- HayatoHayato is the most coveted reservation in Los Angeles: a seven-seat kaiseki counter in Row DTLA where chef Brandon Hayato Go cooks directly in front of guests and narrates every course. Two Michelin stars, ranked #2 by the LA Times and #10 in North America by OAD. Near-impossible to book, but worth pursuing for a serious special occasion.
- MélisseMélisse is a two Michelin-starred, 14-seat tasting-menu counter in Santa Monica — one of Los Angeles's most technically ambitious dinners. Book if French classical technique applied to California produce is your preferred register. With only 14 seats and consistent international recognition, reservations require six to eight weeks of lead time minimum.
- VespertineVespertine is Jordan Kahn's two-Michelin-starred tasting menu in Culver City, priced at $395 per person for a four-hour, multi-sensory evening. Pearl Recommended for 2025 and ranked top 26 in North America by Opinionated About Dining, it is the only restaurant in Los Angeles combining this level of technical cooking with full theatrical production. Book it if you want an event, not just dinner.
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