Restaurant in Tours, France
Two Michelin Plates. Serious Japanese in Tours.

Nobuki is the only Michelin Plate-recognised Japanese restaurant in Tours, operating at a €€ price point that makes the decision straightforward for food-focused travellers. With a 4.9 Google rating from nearly 600 reviews and back-to-back Michelin Plates in 2024 and 2025, this is a serious kitchen at a fair price. If you're touring the Loire and want something outside the French-classical repertoire, book here.
The most common assumption about Nobuki is that it's a curiosity — a Japanese restaurant in Tours that exists more as a novelty than as a serious dining destination. That assumption is wrong. Two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) and a Google rating of 4.9 across 586 reviews put Nobuki in a category that most Loire Valley restaurants, French or otherwise, never reach. If you're building a dining itinerary around Tours and you're serious about food, Nobuki belongs on the shortlist.
The price point makes the decision easier: at the €€ tier, this is not a splurge. You're getting Michelin-recognised Japanese cooking at a price that sits level with neighbourhood bistros. For a food-focused traveller who has already done the Loire's classic French tables, Nobuki offers genuine contrast , a different technical vocabulary, a different approach to progression and restraint , without asking you to rearrange your budget.
A Michelin Plate means inspectors found cooking worth singling out: food of good quality, consistently executed. It is a meaningful signal without the prestige pressure of a Star , which, for a €€ Japanese restaurant in a mid-sized French city, is exactly the right register. Nobuki has held the Plate in back-to-back years, which rules out a one-off performance and points toward a kitchen operating with real consistency. For context, the Michelin Plate puts Nobuki in the same recognition tier as a large number of respected French regional tables , but very few Japanese restaurants outside Paris achieve it. Among French Japanese restaurants with comparable recognition, you'd be looking toward the capital or Lyon to find direct peers; Nobuki is doing something genuinely uncommon in the Loire.
Because Nobuki's specific menu format and current dishes are not confirmed in our data, we won't speculate on individual plates. What the Michelin recognition and the strength of the review base do suggest is a kitchen that understands the logic of a meal as a sequence: restraint in early courses, building intensity, precision in technique. Japanese tasting formats, at their leading, prioritise negative space as much as what's on the plate , the pause between courses, the calibration of temperature and texture across a progression. Whether Nobuki runs a strict omakase format, a set menu, or a more flexible structure, the explorer who comes expecting that kind of deliberate architecture will be in the right frame of mind. Contact the venue directly at 3 Rue Buffon, 37000 Tours, to confirm current menu options and any tasting menu details before booking.
For reference, restaurants like Myojaku in Tokyo and Azabu Kadowaki in Tokyo represent the benchmark for Japanese tasting architecture at the leading end of the format. Nobuki is not operating at that price level or in that competitive environment , but for a traveller whose reference points include serious Japanese dining, it will read as a kitchen that respects the tradition rather than approximating it.
Tours is a city that rewards slow evenings. The rue Buffon address places Nobuki in a walkable central district, and the city's pace generally means dining rooms are quieter and less pressured than their Paris equivalents. For a restaurant working in a Japanese register , where the atmosphere should support concentration on the food rather than compete with it , that urban tempo is an asset. The experience is better suited to two or a small group with a shared interest in the food than to a large celebratory table. If you want a louder, livelier room, Tours has French options for that; Nobuki's strengths are better served when the pace allows you to pay attention.
The Loire Valley's dining calendar skews toward late spring through early autumn, when tourism is at its height and restaurant rooms are consistently full. Booking Nobuki during this window, particularly if you're travelling mid-week, should still be manageable given the €€ positioning and the city's size , but confirm availability directly rather than assuming a walk-in will work. Outside peak season, the city quiets considerably, and a dinner at Nobuki in autumn or early spring, paired with a day visiting the Loire's wine producers and châteaux, makes for a coherent trip rather than a detour.
If you're building a multi-day stay around food and wine, Tours has enough to warrant the time. Our full Tours restaurants guide covers the range of options, from French bistros to the city's modern cuisine tables. The Tours wineries guide is worth cross-referencing if you're planning days in the Vouvray or Chinon appellations. For bars and evening options beyond dinner, the Tours bars guide and experiences guide round out the picture. Hotels in the city are well-documented in our Tours hotels guide.
For France's broader Michelin table landscape, Nobuki sits in a country that also houses Arpège in Paris, Mirazur in Menton, Troisgros in Ouches, Flocons de Sel in Megève, Bras in Laguiole, and Paul Bocuse in Collonges-au-Mont-d'Or. Those are different categories, different price points, different ambitions. But for a traveller working through the Loire and looking for a serious meal that isn't a repeat of the region's French-classical repertoire, Nobuki is the right call at the right price.
If you want French modern cuisine at the same price tier, Casse-Cailloux, La Deuvalière, and Case. are the comparisons to run. For something with more ambition on the plate and a higher spend, La Rissole and La Roche Le Roy are worth reading before you decide. Nobuki is the only Japanese option in this comparison set with Michelin recognition, which makes the decision fairly clean if Japanese cuisine is what you're looking for.
Come with a clear appetite and realistic expectations about format. Nobuki is a Michelin Plate-recognised Japanese restaurant at a €€ price point in a mid-sized French city , not a Paris omakase counter, but a serious kitchen running at a level well above what the address might suggest. Confirm the current menu format before you go, arrive without rushing, and treat it as a full evening rather than a quick meal. For broader context, check our Tours restaurants guide.
At the €€ price tier with two consecutive Michelin Plates and a 4.9 Google rating from nearly 600 reviews, the value case is strong. Michelin recognition at this price point is uncommon for Japanese restaurants outside Paris, and the review volume rules out a fluky run of good meals. Whether the current format includes a set tasting menu or a more à la carte structure, contact the venue to confirm , but the quality signal is reliable enough to book with confidence.
Bar seating details are not confirmed in our current data. Contact Nobuki directly at 3 Rue Buffon, 37000 Tours, to ask about seating options. In Japanese restaurant formats, counter seating is often the preferred position for solo diners or pairs who want to watch the kitchen at work , worth asking about specifically if that's your preference.
Group suitability details are not in our current data. Given Nobuki's €€ positioning and the scale typical of Japanese restaurants in this tier, larger groups , six or more , should contact the venue well in advance to discuss options. For groups where a shared French modern cuisine format might work better, La Deuvalière and Casse-Cailloux are worth considering alongside Nobuki.
For French modern cuisine at the same €€ price tier, Casse-Cailloux, Case., and La Deuvalière are the direct comparisons. If you want to spend more for a more ambitious plate, La Roche Le Roy steps up in price and ambition. None of the alternatives replicate what Nobuki does , if Japanese cuisine with Michelin backing is your target, there's no direct substitute in Tours.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nobuki | Japanese | €€ | Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024) | Easy | — |
| Casse-Cailloux | Modern Cuisine | €€ | Unknown | — | |
| Les Bartavelles | Modern Cuisine | €€€ | Unknown | — | |
| La Deuvalière | Modern Cuisine | €€ | Unknown | — | |
| Case. | Modern Cuisine | €€ | Unknown | — | |
| O&A | Modern Cuisine | €€ | Unknown | — |
How Nobuki stacks up against the competition.
Bar seating specifics are not confirmed in our data for Nobuki. Given the €€ price range and the focused nature of most Michelin Plate Japanese restaurants of this size, counter seating is possible but unverified. Contact Nobuki directly at 3 Rue Buffon before arriving with that expectation.
At the €€ price tier with consecutive Michelin Plate recognition, Nobuki is likely a compact, intimate space — which typically means groups of six or more can strain logistics. Smaller parties of two to four are the format this type of restaurant is built for. Call ahead if you're planning anything larger than four covers.
Two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) signal consistent quality from inspectors — that is not a trivial signal at the €€ price point. If you want Japanese cuisine held to a formal standard in the Loire Valley, Nobuki is the obvious call. For a la carte flexibility or French regional cooking at a similar price, Casse-Cailloux or La Deuvalière are the alternatives to weigh.
Nobuki is a Michelin Plate Japanese restaurant at the €€ price tier on Rue Buffon in central Tours — walkable, not a destination drive. The Michelin recognition means inspectors found the cooking consistently good, not merely adequate. Book in advance rather than counting on walk-in availability, and arrive without assuming an extensive English-language menu is guaranteed.
For French modern cooking at a comparable price tier, Casse-Cailloux and La Deuvalière are the direct comparisons. Case. is worth considering if you want something more contemporary. Les Bartavelles and O&A; round out the local field depending on format and cuisine preference. None of these replicate the Japanese focus that earns Nobuki its Michelin Plates, so the choice depends on whether cuisine type or price tier is your primary filter.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.