Restaurant in Dubai, United Arab Emirates
TERO - The Experience by Reif Othman
410Pearl Points12 seats, monthly kaiseki, serious commitment.

About TERO - The Experience by Reif Othman
TERO delivers an 8 or 12 course modern Japanese kaiseki at a 12-seat counter in Dubai Hills, with a monthly-rotating theme and an open kitchen you face throughout the meal. It holds a Michelin Plate (2025) and ranked first on Star Wine List Dubai in 2025. Book well in advance — 12 seats per service and a dedicated following make this one of Dubai's harder reservations to secure.
Should You Book TERO on a Return Visit?
If you have already experienced TERO once, the answer to whether you should return hinges on one thing: the monthly theme has changed. The kaiseki menu rotates every month, which means a second visit is structurally a different meal from the first. For first-timers, that rotation is less relevant than what stays constant — a 12-seat, U-shaped counter, an open kitchen, and a format that demands your attention and rewards it. Book this if you want a tasting menu that functions as a conversation rather than a performance.
What TERO Does Technically
TERO sits inside Dubai Hills Business Park, accessed through the back entrance of Reif's Kushiyaki Japanese Restaurant. The format is kaiseki — either 8 or 12 courses , built on a modern Japanese foundation with international influences layered in according to that month's theme. The 12-seat counter is U-shaped and faces an open kitchen, which means the chef's technique is visible throughout the meal. This is not incidental to the experience; the venue is explicitly designed so that diners interact with the chef and service team. At a table of 12, that interaction is shared rather than private, which creates a communal atmosphere that is unusual at this price point in Dubai.
Kaiseki as a format requires precision at every course , balance of texture, temperature, and composition across a long sequence is the technical standard the kitchen is measured against. TERO holds a Michelin Plate (2025), which indicates the guide's inspectors found the cooking worth noting without awarding a star. It also earned the Star Wine List White Star in November 2024 and ranked first on Star Wine List for Dubai in 2025, signalling that the beverage program is taken seriously alongside the food. A Google rating of 4.8 from early reviewers suggests the experience is landing well with those who have been through it, though the review count (16) is still low enough that individual experiences carry more weight than at a venue with hundreds of data points.
First-Timer Briefing
Go in knowing that TERO is a commitment. An 8 or 12 course kaiseki at a $$$$-tier price range is not a casual dinner , it is a two-to-three hour structured experience where the pacing, sequence, and interaction with the kitchen are part of what you are paying for. If that format does not appeal to you, this is not the right venue. If it does, arrive with the expectation that the theme sets the creative direction for the entire meal, so checking what the current monthly theme is before booking is worth doing.
The space seats only 12 people, which means every service is intimate by design. You will be seated with other diners at a shared counter, and the experience is deliberately conversational. Solo diners and couples tend to find this format engaging rather than awkward because the open kitchen gives you something to watch and discuss. Groups larger than 12 cannot be accommodated in a single seating; the counter is the entire dining room.
Booking is hard. With only 12 seats per service and a format that draws a specific, returning audience, availability moves quickly. Plan ahead , do not expect to secure a table within a week of your intended date, particularly around weekends or when a new monthly theme launches.
When to Go
Dubai's dining calendar is at its most active between October and April, when the city's resident and visitor population peaks and tables at serious restaurants fill faster. If you are visiting during this window, book further in advance than you think you need to. The summer months (June through August) are quieter across Dubai's restaurant scene, which may translate to slightly more availability, though the format and experience at TERO does not change with the season. The monthly menu rotation means the optimal time to visit is when a theme interests you specifically , worth checking before you commit to a date.
How TERO Compares: Practical Details
| Venue | Price Range | Cuisine | Seats | Booking Difficulty | Awards |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TERO | $$$$ | Modern Japanese / Kaiseki | 12 | Hard | Michelin Plate (2025), Star Wine List #1 Dubai (2025) |
| Trèsind Studio | $$$$ | Indian Tasting Menu | Small counter | Hard | Michelin-starred |
| Ossiano | $$$$ | Seafood / Tasting Menu | Mid-size | Moderate-Hard | Michelin-recognised |
| moonrise | $$$ | Modern Asian | Mid-size | Moderate | , |
| Row on 45 | $$$$ | Modern / Tasting Menu | Small | Hard | , |
Where TERO Fits in the Creative Dining Category
TERO is one of the more focused tasting-menu propositions in Dubai: small counter, single format, monthly rotation. If you are comparing it against other $$$$-tier creative venues internationally, the kaiseki structure places it in a tradition that includes technically demanding kitchens like Jordnær in Gentofte and Noma in Copenhagen , both of which operate with similarly intimate, course-driven formats where the kitchen's technical precision is the main event. Within Dubai, it occupies a different register from Late Eatery or the more casual end of the city's Japanese dining options. For those who want modern Japanese technique in a more informal setting, moonrise is worth considering. For a Michelin-starred tasting menu experience in Dubai that operates at a similar exclusivity level, Trèsind Studio is the clearest peer , though the culinary traditions differ significantly.
For broader context on where to eat and stay in the UAE, see our full Dubai restaurants guide, our full Dubai hotels guide, our full Dubai bars guide, and our full Dubai experiences guide. If you are extending your trip, Erth in Abu Dhabi is worth the drive for a different take on ambitious regional cooking. For creative tasting-menu benchmarks elsewhere in the world, Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen, Arpège, Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona, Enrico Bartolini in Milan, and JAN in Munich offer useful reference points for the format and ambition level.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should a first-timer know about TERO - The Experience by Reif Othman?
TERO is a commitment: an 8 or 12 course kaiseki at $$$$ pricing runs two to three hours, and you are seated at a 12-person U-shaped counter facing an open kitchen the entire time. The entrance is through the back door of Reif's Kushiyaki Japanese Restaurant in Dubai Hills Business Park, so allow time to locate it. Interaction with the chef and team is built into the format — this is not a passive dining experience. Check the current monthly theme before booking, since the menu rotates and your timing will affect what you eat.
What are alternatives to TERO - The Experience by Reif Othman in Dubai?
For counter-format creative dining, 11 Woodfire offers a similarly intimate setup with a fire-led tasting menu. Avatara Restaurant is the closer structural parallel if you want a vegetarian kaiseki-style progression. If you want the $$$$ price point with more flexibility in format, Zuma gives you a la carte Japanese at the same tier. Al Mahara and At.Mosphere are destination dining driven by setting rather than kitchen ambition, so they serve a different purpose entirely.
What should I wear to TERO - The Experience by Reif Othman?
The venue data does not specify a dress code, but the format — 12 seats, open kitchen, Michelin Plate recognition, $$$$ pricing — signals that guests dress accordingly. Business casual at minimum is appropriate; anything you would wear to a serious tasting menu in any major city will fit the room.
Can TERO - The Experience by Reif Othman accommodate groups?
The counter seats exactly 12, which means a group can in principle take the entire room. For parties of 6 or more, buying out the counter is the practical option and would create a genuinely private experience. Smaller groups of 2 to 4 should expect to share the counter with other diners. Groups looking for a private dining room with separate space should consider Al Mahara or At.Mosphere instead.
Is TERO - The Experience by Reif Othman worth the price?
At $$$$ for an 8 or 12 course kaiseki with a Michelin Plate (2025) and Star Wine List White Star, TERO is priced in line with Dubai's serious tasting-menu tier. The value case is strongest if you engage with the format — counter interaction, monthly themes, and the progression of courses are what justify the spend. If you want Japanese food at this price point without the commitment, Zuma gives you more autonomy. TERO is worth it specifically for the counter-kaiseki experience, not as a general $$$$ Japanese dinner.
Is TERO - The Experience by Reif Othman good for a special occasion?
Yes, with the right expectations. The 12-seat counter, open kitchen, and built-in interaction with the chef make it a more personal special occasion than a large restaurant can offer. The Michelin Plate (2025) gives it credibility as a serious dining event. It works best for two people or a small group who want the evening to feel structured and memorable rather than flexible. For a celebration where table size or menu choice matters, At.Mosphere or Al Mahara give you more conventional options.
Is the tasting menu worth it at TERO - The Experience by Reif Othman?
The tasting menu is the only format TERO offers — 8 or 12 courses depending on the current monthly theme — so the question is really whether the kaiseki format suits you. If you are comfortable committing two to three hours to a structured progression with no a la carte option, the Michelin Plate recognition and the monthly rotation give the menu genuine depth. Return visits are justified specifically because the theme changes each month, which is rare at this price point in Dubai.
Location
Dubai Hills Business Park Building 3 - Dubai - United Arab Emirates
Dubai, United Arab Emirates
Compare TERO - The Experience by Reif Othman
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| TERO - The Experience by Reif Othman | Creative | Hard | |
| 11 Woodfire | Modern Cuisine | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown |
| Avatara Restaurant | Indian | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown |
| Al Mahara | Seafood | World's 50 Best | Unknown |
| Zuma | Japanese - Asian, Japanese, Japanese Contemporary | World's 50 Best | Unknown |
| At.Mosphere Burj Khalifa | Modern European | Unknown |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Also Consider
- 11 Woodfire, Modern Cuisine, $$$
- Avatara Restaurant, Indian, $$$$
- Al Mahara, Seafood, $$$$
- Zuma, Japanese - Asian, Japanese, Japanese Contemporary, $$$
- At.Mosphere Burj Khalifa, Modern European, $$$$
At $$$$ and 12 seats, TERO operates in a different register from most of Dubai's comparable tasting-menu options. Trèsind Studio is the clearest peer in terms of exclusivity, price, and critical recognition, it holds a Michelin star and runs a similarly intimate, course-driven format. The difference is culinary tradition: Trèsind Studio works in Indian cuisine while TERO is grounded in modern Japanese kaiseki. If the specific format matters to you, they are not interchangeable, but if you are deciding where to spend a serious tasting-menu budget in Dubai, these two are the most direct competition for each other.
Al Mahara and At.Mosphere Burj Khalifa both sit at $$$$ and offer a very different proposition: larger rooms, more conventional service, and the kind of setting where the environment (an aquarium-surrounded dining room, or the 122nd floor of Burj Khalifa) is part of the draw. TERO does not compete on spectacle, it competes on culinary focus. If you want a meal where the room is the attraction, Al Mahara or At.Mosphere will serve you better. If you want a meal where the cooking is the attraction, TERO has the stronger case.
Zuma and Avatara round out the comparison set. Zuma at $$$ offers Japanese-influenced food in a high-energy, large-format setting, essentially the opposite of TERO in atmosphere and format, and easier to book. Avatara at $$$$ delivers a vegetarian Indian tasting menu with its own Michelin recognition. Neither is a substitute for what TERO does, but if the 12-seat, single-sitting commitment feels too structured, Zuma is the practical fallback for Japanese-leaning food in Dubai at a lower price point.
Recognized By
Explore Dubai
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