Restaurant in Toronto, Canada
Toronto's most credentialed Thai, at $$$.

Toronto's only Michelin-Plated Thai restaurant, Kiin holds consecutive Plate recognition for 2024 and 2025 and a 4.5 rating from over 1,100 reviewers. At the $$$ price point, it delivers a level of Thai cooking well above the city's casual alternatives without requiring a $$$$ tasting-menu commitment. Book midweek for the best experience; weekend reservations need at least two weeks' notice.
A 4.5-star average across 1,105 Google reviews is the number that matters most here. For a Thai restaurant in Toronto's competitive Entertainment District, that kind of sustained rating across a large review base signals something consistent and deliberate, not a flash-in-the-pan opening. Kiin, at 326 Adelaide St W, has earned Michelin Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025, confirming that the quality reviewers are responding to meets an international benchmark. The question is whether the $$$ price point is the right spend for you, or whether a cheaper or pricier alternative serves your evening better.
Kiin sits in a specific and useful position in Toronto's dining market: it is the city's most credentialed Thai restaurant. The Michelin Plate, awarded consecutively, is not a star — it signals a kitchen worth eating in, not necessarily a once-in-a-decade pilgrimage. What that means practically is that Kiin delivers Thai cooking at a level of refinement that justifies the $$$ tier without requiring you to commit to a $$$$ omakase-style budget. For a Thai dinner in Toronto, there is a real gap between Kiin and the more casual options in the city. Favorites Thai, Koh Lipe Thai Kitchen, and Som Tum Jinda all offer solid, more casual Thai in Toronto at lower price points , but none carry Michelin recognition. If the occasion calls for something more considered, Kiin is the clear answer in this cuisine category in the city.
The $$$ price point puts Kiin at a comfortable middle tier. You are spending more than you would at a neighbourhood Thai spot, but you are not committing to the $$$$ investment required at Alo or Sushi Masaki Saito. For a date night or a small group dinner where you want a credentialed kitchen without a tasting-menu commitment, the price-to-recognition ratio at Kiin works well.
If Kiin offers counter or chef's bar seating , and a restaurant operating at this level of culinary ambition in a kitchen-forward space typically does , it is worth requesting specifically. Counter seats at a refined Thai kitchen give you a view of the plating and timing that is genuinely instructive, especially if you are trying to understand why this version of Thai cooking differs from the more casual end of the spectrum. The conversation you can have from a counter seat, or the proximity to the pass, changes the meal from a dining experience into something closer to a demonstration. For a solo diner or a pair who are serious about the food, counter seats are worth asking for at booking.
Midweek evenings , Tuesday through Thursday , are your leading window for a more relaxed room and slightly easier booking. Weekend reservations at a Michelin-recognised restaurant in the Entertainment District fill faster, and the room will be louder and more compressed. If the quality of the food is your priority over the social energy of a full Saturday service, aim for a Wednesday dinner. Early sittings (before 7 PM) also tend to offer a quieter start, giving you more room to engage with the menu before the room reaches full capacity. Adelaide Street West sees significant foot traffic on weekend evenings, which adds to the ambient energy around the restaurant , pleasant if you want that, less so if you are looking for a focused meal.
At $$$, Kiin is asking you to spend at a level where the kitchen needs to justify the gap over a standard Thai restaurant. The Michelin Plate , held for two consecutive years , suggests it does. The 4.5 Google rating from over a thousand reviewers adds a second, independent layer of confirmation. This is not a venue coasting on a single review cycle or a one-year award. Two years of Michelin recognition combined with a large and positive public review base is a reliable signal that the kitchen is consistent, not intermittently excellent. For a value-seeker, that consistency is what you are actually paying for: a reduced risk of a disappointing meal compared to an unrecognised restaurant at a similar price point.
If you are visiting Toronto and want to understand Thai cooking at a serious level, Kiin is a more efficient use of your dining budget than scaling up to a $$$$ tasting menu at a non-Thai restaurant. For a direct comparison on the global Thai dining spectrum, the Nahm in Bangkok and Samrub Samrub Thai in Bangkok set the reference point for what Michelin-recognised Thai cooking looks like at its most ambitious. Kiin operates in a different context , a North American city, a different ingredient supply chain , but the Michelin Plate signals it is working seriously within those constraints.
Booking difficulty at Kiin is moderate. This is not a venue where you need to plan six weeks ahead, but walk-ins on a Friday or Saturday evening are unlikely to work. A week's notice for midweek, two weeks for weekend sittings, is a practical target. The address at 326 Adelaide St W puts it in the heart of the Entertainment District, accessible from multiple transit routes and with parking options nearby, though driving into this part of the city on a weekend evening means planning for the neighbourhood's density.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Michelin | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kiin | Thai | $$$ | Plate (2024, 2025) | Moderate |
| Favorites Thai | Thai | $–$$ | None | Low |
| Koh Lipe Thai Kitchen | Thai | $$ | None | Low |
| Alo | Contemporary | $$$$ | Star | High |
Planning a broader Toronto visit? Pearl's guides cover the full picture: Toronto restaurants, Toronto hotels, Toronto bars, Toronto wineries, and Toronto experiences. If you are travelling more widely, Pearl also covers standout Canadian restaurants including Tanière³ in Quebec City, Kissa Tanto in Vancouver, Jérôme Ferrer – Europea in Montreal, The Pine in Creemore, Narval in Rimouski, and Restaurant Pearl Morissette in Lincoln.
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Kiin | $$$ | — |
| Alo | $$$$ | — |
| Sushi Masaki Saito | $$$$ | — |
| Enigma Yorkville | $$$$ | — |
| Shoushin | $$$$ | — |
| Edulis | $$$$ | — |
What to weigh when choosing between Kiin and alternatives.
For fine dining at a similar $$$ price point, Edulis offers a more intimate tasting-menu format and Enigma Yorkville leans harder into theatrical plating. If you want Michelin-level Japanese instead of Thai, Shoushin and Sushi Masaki Saito are the credentialed alternatives. None of them replicate Kiin's position as Toronto's only Michelin-recognised Thai restaurant, so the comparison is really about cuisine preference rather than quality tier.
At $$$, Kiin is the only Thai restaurant in Toronto with back-to-back Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025), which gives it a verifiable credential that most competitors at this price point cannot match. If you are comparing it to a mid-range Thai option, the gap in technique and sourcing is the justification. If you are comparing it to Alo or Sushi Masaki Saito, you are in a different tier and a different format entirely. For Thai food specifically, Kiin is the clearest answer in Toronto.
Specific menu items are not confirmed in available data, so take any dish-level recommendation from other sources with caution given menus change seasonally. What is documented is that Kiin operates at a Michelin Plate standard within Thai cuisine, so the kitchen's strengths are likely in refinement and technique rather than volume. Ask the server what is current when you arrive rather than arriving with a fixed order in mind.
Kiin sits on Adelaide Street West in Toronto's Entertainment District at 326 Adelaide St W, and holds consecutive Michelin Plates for 2024 and 2025. It prices at $$$, so budget accordingly and treat it as a destination meal rather than a casual Thai dinner. Booking ahead is the practical move, particularly for weekends — midweek gives you a more relaxed room.
Tasting menu availability and pricing are not confirmed in the venue data, so this cannot be answered with specifics. What is confirmed is the $$$ price range and the Michelin Plate credential, which together suggest the kitchen operates at a level where a tasting format, if offered, would be worth considering over ordering à la carte. Check directly with Kiin for current menu format before booking.
Dress code is not specified in the venue data, but a Michelin-recognised restaurant at $$$ in Toronto's downtown core typically draws a crowd that leans smart-casual to smart. Avoid activewear or overly casual dress. When in doubt, dressing up slightly is never penalised at a restaurant at this price and credential level.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.