Restaurant in Taipei, Taiwan
Serious European fine dining. Book ahead.

LA Vie by Thomas Bühner is Taipei's strongest case for European contemporary fine dining with a serious wine program: 470 selections, a dedicated sommelier, and a Michelin Plate backed by a rising La Liste score. Book three to four weeks out for weekends. Best suited to special occasions and business dinners where wine and service formality matter as much as the food.
If you are comparing European fine dining options in Taipei at the $$$$ price tier, LA Vie by Thomas Bühner sits in a different register than its closest local competitor, logy (Modern European, Asian Contemporary). Logy integrates Asian ingredients into its European framework as a defining identity; LA Vie operates from a more classically European foundation, with farm-to-table sourcing shaping the menu. For a special occasion dinner where the room, the wine list, and the service formality matter as much as the food, LA Vie makes a stronger case. Book it for celebrations, business meals, or anniversary dinners where you want ceremony alongside the cooking.
LA Vie by Thomas Bühner is a European contemporary restaurant in Zhongshan District, Taipei, currently led in the kitchen by Chef Xavier Yeung and guided by Wine Director Max Huang alongside Sommelier Una Qiu. The restaurant earned a Michelin Plate in 2024 and has risen in the La Liste rankings from 75 points in 2025 to 81 points in 2026, a trajectory that signals genuine upward momentum rather than a static reputation. For diners evaluating where to spend at the leading of Taipei's dining tier, that scoring direction matters.
The wine program is one of the most substantive reasons to choose LA Vie over alternatives in this price bracket. With 470 selections and an inventory of 1,520 bottles, the list covers France, Italy, and Germany with particular depth. The pricing sits at the $$$ tier for wine, meaning you will find bottles above $100, but the range is broad enough that this is not a list built only for trophy collectors. Corkage is set at $46 if you prefer to bring your own. For a special occasion dinner, the combination of a serious cellar and dedicated sommelier support from Una Qiu gives the meal a hospitality infrastructure that lighter-footprint venues in Taipei cannot match. If wine is central to your celebration, this is the most practical argument for choosing LA Vie over de nuit or other French-leaning contemporaries in the city.
The culinary format is dinner only, which reinforces the restaurant's positioning as an occasion destination rather than an all-day venue. Cuisine is classified as farm-to-table European, and the price tier for food sits at $$$, meaning a two-course meal without beverages runs above $66 per person. At the $$$$ overall price point, you should expect a tasting menu format, though the specific structure and current menu should be confirmed at booking. General Manager Kevin Yang oversees operations, and the front-of-house team under that leadership carries the kind of professional weight that justifies the price for guests who are not simply paying for the plate.
For diners considering LA Vie as a late-evening option: the dinner-only format means the kitchen is operating during hours when many of Taipei's casual and mid-range venues have already wound down service. If your evening runs long after a show, a business meeting, or earlier drinks at one of Taipei's leading bar destinations, a late reservation at LA Vie is a more viable capstone than at many restaurants at this tier, which often cut reservations earlier. Confirm the last seating time directly when booking, but the format is built for evening dining rather than early-bird service.
The address is No. 200, Lequn 3rd Road, Zhongshan District. Zhongshan is one of Taipei's more accessible districts for visitors staying in the central hotel corridor. If you are planning accommodation alongside this dinner, our full Taipei hotels guide covers the options closest to the neighborhood. For context on how LA Vie compares to European contemporary cooking at similar price points in the region, Zén in Singapore and Schwarzer Adler in Hall in Tirol represent the European contemporary tier in different markets. Domestically, JL Studio in Taichung is worth a comparison if you are building a broader Taiwan dining itinerary.
Google Reviews sits at 4.6 across 112 ratings, a score that at this sample size reflects consistent execution rather than an outlier run of good nights. For comparison, venues at this tier in Taipei with fewer reviews can reflect a narrower diner base; 112 reviews at 4.6 indicates that the restaurant is reaching beyond a purely local regulars base and holding its score across a mixed audience.
Booking LA Vie at this price tier and with La Liste recognition should be treated as hard. Plan for a minimum of three to four weeks out for weekend dinners, and two weeks for mid-week availability, though high-demand periods around Lunar New Year and major Taipei events will compress that window significantly. There is no recorded booking method in our data, so contact the restaurant directly via their address or through concierge if you are staying at a Taipei property with in-house booking support. Walk-in availability at a restaurant of this formality and size should not be assumed. If your date is fixed, book before you finalise the rest of your Taipei itinerary, not after.
For diners building a full Taipei dining picture, our full Taipei restaurants guide covers the range from $$$$ tasting menus to the city's leading casual tables. Other Taipei venues worth considering alongside LA Vie include Ad Astra, The Tavernist, CEO 1950, and Xiang Se. If you are travelling beyond Taipei, GEN in Kaohsiung and A Cun Beef Soup in Tainan are among our picks for the wider Taiwan circuit. Taipei's bar scene and experiences beyond restaurants are covered in our bars guide and our experiences guide.
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| LA Vie by thomas bühner | La Liste Top Restaurants (2026): 81pts; La Liste Top Restaurants (2025): 75pts; WINE: Wine Strengths: France, Italy, Germany Pricing: $$$ i Wine pricing: Based on the list\'s general markup and high and low price points:$ has many bottles < $50;$$ has a range of pricing;$$$ has many $100+ bottles Corkage Fee: $46 Selections: 470 Inventory: 1,520 CUISINE: Cuisine Types: Farm to Table, European Pricing: $$$ i Cuisine pricing: The cost of a typical two-course meal, not including tip or beverages.$ is < $40;$$ is $40–$65;$$$ is $66+. Meals: Dinner STAFF: People Chia Wei Huang:Wine Director Wine Director: Max Huang Sommelier: Una Qiu Chef: Xavier Yeung General Manager: Kevin Yang; Michelin Plate (2024) | $$$$ | — |
| logy | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ | — |
| Le Palais | Michelin 3 Star | $$$$ | — |
| Taïrroir | Michelin 3 Star | $$$$ | — |
| Mudan Tempura | Michelin 2 Star | $$$$ | — |
| de nuit | Michelin 1 Star | $$$$ | — |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Solo diners are served at the $$$$ price tier, so the real question is whether a lone seat at a European contemporary tasting menu justifies the spend. LA Vie holds a Michelin Plate (2024) and scored 81 points on La Liste 2026, which gives solo diners a credentialed room to sit in without needing to share the occasion. If solo fine dining in Taipei is the goal, counter-style formats at Taïrroir may feel more intimate for one, but LA Vie works if the European format suits you.
The kitchen is currently led by Chef Xavier Yeung under the LA Vie banner, with Wine Director Max Huang overseeing a 470-label list weighted toward France, Italy, and Germany. Dinner is the only service offered, and the price tier sits at $$$$ for food with $$$ for wine. First-timers should come expecting a structured, multi-course European format rather than à la carte flexibility, and should factor corkage at $46 if bringing their own bottle.
At $$$$ pricing with a Michelin Plate and a La Liste ranking climbing from 75 points in 2025 to 81 in 2026, demand is real. Book at least three to four weeks out for weekend dinners; two weeks may work mid-week. No booking phone or website is listed in available records, so check reservation platforms directly or contact the Lequn 3rd Rd address in Zhongshan District.
Yes, with the caveat that the occasion needs to fit a formal European contemporary format. The Michelin Plate recognition, a 1,520-bottle inventory, and a dedicated sommelier (Una Qiu) and General Manager (Kevin Yang) suggest a room built around occasion dining. For a more theatrical or locally-rooted experience, Taïrroir competes at a similar tier; LA Vie is the stronger call if European structure and a serious wine program are priorities.
At $$$$ for food and $$$ for wine, you are paying for a credentialed European contemporary experience in Taipei: Michelin Plate 2024, 81 La Liste points in 2026, and a 470-label wine list with strong French and Italian depth. The value case holds if you want that format specifically. If you are price-sensitive at the top tier, Taïrroir delivers a similarly decorated experience with a more distinctly Taiwanese identity.
Taïrroir is the most direct comparison at a similar price tier with strong local and international recognition. Le Palais covers the formal special-occasion category from a Chinese fine dining angle. Logy offers a more intimate, chef-driven tasting format. De nuit and Mudan Tempura operate at lower price points with different cuisine focuses. LA Vie is the pick if European contemporary with a deep wine program is specifically what you want.
For the $$$$ spend, you get a Michelin Plate-recognized kitchen led by Chef Xavier Yeung, a 470-label wine list with 1,520 bottles in inventory, and a La Liste score that rose six points year-over-year to 81 in 2026. That trajectory matters: the kitchen is improving. Against peers like Taïrroir, LA Vie is stronger on the wine side; Taïrroir may edge it on culinary recognition at this moment. Worth it if wine pairings are central to how you dine.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.