Restaurant in London, United Kingdom
The Connaught
170Pearl PointsClassic British grill-room. Book early or miss out.

About The Connaught
The Connaught is London's definitive grill-room institution — serious meat sourcing, rosewood-panelled atmosphere, and a formal register that has held since 1955. Book if classic British fine dining is your goal; look elsewhere if you want tasting-menu innovation. Booking difficulty is Near Impossible, so plan well ahead.
Is The Connaught worth booking for your first visit?
Yes — but with a clear-eyed understanding of what you are booking. The Connaught is a grill-room institution in London's Modern British dining scene, operating since 1955 and trading on a combination of old-school atmosphere and serious sourcing. If you want formal dining in a room that feels like it has earned its gravity rather than designed it, this is the right call. If you want a more progressive, technically ambitious tasting-menu experience, CORE by Clare Smyth or The Ledbury will suit you better.
What to expect when you arrive
The atmosphere sets expectations immediately. The entrance corridor — glass-fronted wine cabinets, rosewood panelling , tells you this is a room that takes itself seriously. It is not loud or buzzy. The energy is low and deliberate, the kind of room where conversation carries without effort and staff move without hurrying. First-timers often note the furniture: pieces by Mira Nakashima, which give the dining room a crafted, considered quality that distinguishes it from generic hotel dining. The mood is formal without being cold. Expect a dress standard to match , this is not a room that forgives casual attire, and arriving appropriately dressed will improve your experience.
What The Connaught actually does well
The kitchen is built around grill-room classics anchored by high-quality cuts of meat. Aberdeen Angus and Kobe beef are both on the menu, which signals where the kitchen's confidence lies. This is not a venue for elaborate vegetable-forward cooking or avant-garde technique. What you are paying for is top-tier sourcing, classical execution, and a wine list described in the venue's own documentation as a treasure trove of serious bottles. For a first-timer, the practical advice is to lean into the format: order the leading cut on the menu, let the sommelier guide the wine, and treat the experience as an exercise in classic British grill-room dining rather than a tasting-menu event. If you want the latter, consider Restaurant Gordon Ramsay or Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library instead.
Brunch and weekend service
Weekend and morning service at The Connaught carries the same formal register as dinner , this is not a relaxed brunch destination in the way that, say, The Garden Room at the Chelsea Townhouse operates. If you are visiting for a weekend meal expecting a lighter, more informal experience, recalibrate. The room and the format are consistent across services. The upside is that weekend lunch can be a more accessible entry point than dinner in terms of booking availability, and the dining room feels less pressured mid-afternoon. It is also a more practical choice for groups who want the Connaught experience without committing to a full evening.
Booking and timing
Booking difficulty is rated Near Impossible. This is not an exaggeration , demand consistently outpaces availability, and the venue's status as a London institution with a World's 50 Best entry (ranked 27th in 2005) means it draws both domestic and international diners year-round. Book as far in advance as the booking window allows. If you cannot secure a table for dinner, ask specifically about weekend lunch availability, which tends to have slightly more movement. There is no walk-in culture here. Arriving without a reservation is not a realistic strategy.
Know Before You Go
- Established: 1955
- Cuisine: Modern British, grill-room format with an emphasis on premium meat cuts
- Awards: World's 50 Best Restaurants #27 (2005)
- Google Rating: 4.5 from 1,072 reviews
- Dress code: Formal , dress accordingly; the room expects it
- Booking difficulty: Near Impossible , book as far ahead as possible
- Leading entry point: Weekend lunch if dinner is unavailable
- Wine list: Extensive, high-end , use the sommelier
- Not ideal for: Casual meals, avant-garde tasting menus, walk-in dining
How it fits into a London trip
If you are building a London dining itinerary, The Connaught occupies a specific slot: classic British grill-room at the formal end, not the experimental end. For broader coverage of London's dining options across formats and price points, see our full London restaurants guide. For accommodation context, our London hotels guide covers where to stay nearby. If your interest extends to bars, our London bars guide is a useful companion, and for broader London experiences, our London experiences guide covers the wider picture.
Beyond London, if you are considering classic British fine dining in other regions, Waterside Inn in Bray and L'Enclume in Cartmel represent comparable levels of seriousness in different formats. Moor Hall in Aughton, Gidleigh Park in Chagford, and Hand and Flowers in Marlow are also worth considering if you are travelling outside the capital. For Modern British dining at a different register, hide and fox in Saltwood, The Old Stamp House in Ambleside, and Tower in Thornbury round out the national picture.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can The Connaught accommodate groups?
Groups can be accommodated, but the intimate, discreet layout described since the 1955 founding means large parties will feel the room's constraints. For parties of six or more, check the venue's official channels to confirm private dining options — this format suits smaller groups who can command a quiet corner far better than it suits celebratory tables that need space to breathe.
What should I wear to The Connaught?
Treat this as a formal occasion. The room features Mira Nakashima furniture and rosewood panelling, and the clientele matches that register — jackets for men are a safe assumption, and anything below business casual risks standing out for the wrong reasons. This is not a venue where you show up in trainers and test the policy.
What are alternatives to The Connaught in London?
If you want a different angle on formal Modern British cooking, CORE by Clare Smyth is the more technically progressive option. For theatrical ambition with historical framing, Dinner by Heston Blumenthal competes at a similar prestige level. The Ledbury offers ingredient-led precision that trades The Connaught's grill-room classicism for something more contemporary in approach.
What should I order at The Connaught?
The menu is built around grill-room classics with high-quality meat cuts at the centre — Aberdeen Angus and Kobe beef are the anchors worth ordering around. The wine list is documented as a serious collection, so treat it as part of the meal rather than an afterthought. Specific dish details beyond the meat programme are not documented here, so ask the front-of-house on the night.
Can I eat at the bar at The Connaught?
Bar dining is not confirmed in available documentation for this venue. Given the formal, intimate character of the dining room and its near-impossible booking difficulty, a bar or counter walk-in option would be worth confirming directly before treating it as a fallback plan.
Is The Connaught good for solo dining?
Solo dining at The Connaught is possible but not the natural fit — the room's intimate, formal character is designed around table-based dining rather than counter or bar formats, and the experience leans into occasion rather than quiet solo meals. If solo dining is the specific goal, a venue with counter seating would give you more comfortable integration into the room.
What should a first-timer know about The Connaught?
Book well in advance — the venue's booking difficulty is rated near impossible, and its status since 1955 as a London institution means demand is consistent year-round. Arrive ready for a formal, grill-room register: the entrance corridor with rosewood panelling and glass-fronted wine cabinets signals immediately what kind of evening this is. First-timers should orient the meal around the meat programme, and note that the wine list is documented as one of the more serious in the city.
Location
1 Connaught Rd, Ilford IG1 1RL, United Kingdom
London, United Kingdom
Compare The Connaught
| Venue | Price |
|---|---|
| The Connaught | |
| Restaurant Gordon Ramsay | ££££ |
| CORE by Clare Smyth | ££££ |
| The Ledbury | ££££ |
| Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library | ££££ |
| Dinner by Heston Blumenthal | ££££ |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Also Consider
- Restaurant Gordon Ramsay, Contemporary European, French, ££££
- CORE by Clare Smyth, Modern British, ££££
- The Ledbury, Modern European, Modern Cuisine, ££££
- Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library, Modern French, ££££
- Dinner by Heston Blumenthal, Modern British, Traditional British, ££££
The Connaught occupies a different lane from most of its ££££ London peers. Where CORE by Clare Smyth and The Ledbury compete on progressive technique and tasting-menu precision, The Connaught is a grill-room at heart, the comparison is less about culinary innovation and more about the experience of dining in a room with genuine institutional weight. If technique and creativity are your priorities, CORE is the clearer choice. If atmosphere and sourcing matter more, The Connaught has a case that neither CORE nor The Ledbury can fully replicate.
Restaurant Gordon Ramsay is a more direct structural comparison, both are formal, both operate at the top of London's prestige bracket, and both carry meaningful awards history. Gordon Ramsay edges ahead on technical consistency and contemporary French execution; The Connaught holds the advantage on atmosphere and old-school British register. For a first-time visitor to London fine dining, Gordon Ramsay is the safer, more legible recommendation. Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library offers a similar prestige level but in an overtly theatrical room, the right call if spectacle is part of the brief, less so if you want something restrained.
Dinner by Heston Blumenthal is the most direct alternative for diners who want Modern British cooking with a sense of history, it references British culinary heritage explicitly and delivers a more accessible tasting experience than The Connaught's grill format. Dinner is also generally easier to book. If your priority is a single great evening of Modern British cooking and you cannot secure a Connaught table, Dinner by Heston is the practical fallback. For the full picture on where each of these venues sits relative to each other, see our full London restaurants guide.
Recognized By
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