Restaurant in Osaka, Japan
Varier
370Pearl PointsMonthly menus, Michelin recognition, easy to book.

About Varier
Varier is a Michelin Plate French restaurant in Osaka's Nakanoshima district running monthly-rotating prix fixe menus built around Japanese regional produce from Wakayama, Kagoshima, and beyond. At ¥¥¥, it sits a full price tier below Osaka's starred French options and delivers consistent quality across 304 Google reviews at 4.5. Book it for a food-focused dinner where seasonal cooking is the draw.
Varier, Osaka: The Verdict
Varier earns a confident recommendation for food and wine enthusiasts who want French technique grounded in Japanese regional produce — and who understand that a monthly-changing prix fixe format means your window to experience any given menu is exactly four weeks. At ¥¥¥, it sits a full price tier below Osaka's Michelin-starred French heavy-hitters, which makes it one of the more accessible entry points into serious French dining in the city. Book it for a special dinner where the food itself is the point, not the status of the address.
What Varier Is
Varier occupies the second floor of a building in Nakanoshima, Osaka's island district between the Dojima and Tosabori rivers, and it runs a monthly prix fixe format built around the seasonality of Japanese regional ingredients. The name is taken from the French verb varier — to change, and that principle governs everything here. Menus rotate in full every month, drawing on produce from specific Japanese prefectures: chicken and ume from Wakayama, pork and sweet potatoes from Kagoshima. The French kitchen framework is the constant; the Japanese larder is the variable.
The restaurant holds a Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025, which signals a kitchen operating at a recognised standard without yet climbing to starred territory. For explorers who track the Kansai French dining circuit alongside destinations like La Cime, Différence, and La Bécasse, Varier fits as the thoughtful mid-tier option that rewards repeat visits because no two months are the same.
The Menu Logic and What It Means for Your Visit
The scarcity here is temporal rather than physical. Because menus change monthly, booking a table in late autumn gives you a completely different experience from booking in early spring. If you have a specific seasonal ingredient in mind, Kagoshima sweet potato at harvest, or Wakayama ume at peak, that timing consideration should drive when you book, not just whether you book. This is not a menu you can research thoroughly in advance from online reviews; by the time most write-ups circulate, the menu has already moved on.
Recipes at Varier are developed as a team, which the kitchen frames as a training philosophy for younger chefs. For guests who value the exploratory dimension of dining, this team-conceived approach produces menus where the logic of ingredient pairings tends to feel considered rather than arbitrary.
Wine at Varier
No wine list data is available in our records for Varier, so specific bottle recommendations or pricing cannot be confirmed here. What is worth noting for planning purposes: a French kitchen at the ¥¥¥ tier in Osaka, running prix fixe menus with a strong regional ingredient focus, is a format that typically pairs well with structured French regional wines, Burgundy and the Loire in particular complement the kind of umami-inflected ingredient profiles that emerge when French technique meets Japanese produce like ume and Kagoshima pork. Guests arriving with an exploratory wine agenda should contact the restaurant directly to ask about their current list and whether pairing options are offered alongside the prix fixe. For wine-led dining at a higher budget in Osaka, LE PONT DE CIEL and nent are worth comparing. For those looking at the broader Kansai wine and dining picture, our full Osaka wineries guide and our full Osaka bars guide offer further context.
Booking and Practical Details
Varier's booking difficulty is rated Easy, which at a Michelin Plate restaurant in Nakanoshima is worth taking at face value but not for granted. The combination of a monthly-rotating menu and a format that attracts repeat visitors means that specific weekends, particularly the final days of a month when a menu is about to turn over, may attract more demand. If your trip dates are fixed, book as soon as your itinerary is confirmed rather than waiting for a few weeks out. Phone and website data are not available in our current records; the most reliable current booking channel is to check via restaurant discovery platforms or contact the venue directly.
Varier sits in the Nakanoshima area of Kita Ward. For travellers building a wider Osaka itinerary, our full Osaka restaurants guide and our full Osaka hotels guide are useful companions. Guests travelling the Kansai circuit more broadly will find strong comparisons at Gion Sasaki in Kyoto and akordu in Nara. For a wider Japan reference set in French and innovative dining, Harutaka in Tokyo, Goh in Fukuoka, 1000 in Yokohama, and 6 in Okinawa each represent the category at different price points and formats. Internationally, the commitment to seasonal French prix fixe that drives Varier's format has strong parallels at Les Amis in Singapore and Hotel de Ville Crissier in Crissier.
Quick reference:
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I order at Varier?
There is no à la carte at Varier — the format is prix fixe only, and the menu changes monthly. Whatever is on the menu when you visit will reflect the current season and regional Japanese ingredients sourced from producers in places like Wakayama and Kagoshima. Booking in advance and checking in with the restaurant closer to your date is the most practical way to know what you'll be eating.
Is Varier good for a special occasion?
Yes, and it's a strong choice specifically because the monthly prix fixe format gives a special occasion dinner a sense of occasion built into the structure. A Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and 2025 confirms consistent kitchen standards. The Nakanoshima location, on Osaka's island district between the Dojima and Tosabori rivers, adds context without requiring you to navigate a tourist-heavy area.
Can Varier accommodate groups?
No specific group policy or private dining information is available in our records for Varier. Given the second-floor address and prix fixe format, larger groups are worth confirming directly with the restaurant before booking. For private dining with confirmed group capacity in Osaka, La Cime or Fujiya 1935 are better-documented options.
How far ahead should I book Varier?
Varier's booking difficulty is rated Easy, which means last-minute tables are more available here than at comparable Michelin-recognised restaurants in Osaka. That said, because menus change monthly and the restaurant draws food-focused diners, booking a week or two ahead is sensible if you have a specific date or seasonal menu in mind.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Varier?
At ¥¥¥ pricing with a Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025, Varier sits in a category where the price is justified if the prix fixe format suits you. The monthly rotation and team-developed recipes rooted in Japanese regional produce give the menu a point of view, which separates it from generic French fine dining. If you prefer à la carte flexibility, this is not the right format.
What are alternatives to Varier in Osaka?
La Cime is the most direct comparison for French technique in Osaka and carries higher Michelin recognition, making it a better fit if credentials are your priority. Fujiya 1935 offers a longer-established French-Japanese format with more documented press. Taian is the choice if you want to shift to Japanese kaiseki at a comparable price point. Varier's advantage over all three is its booking accessibility at the ¥¥¥ tier.
Location
Japan, 〒530-0005 Osaka, Kita Ward, Nakanoshima, 3 Chome−3−23 2F
Osaka, Japan
Compare Varier
| Venue | Awards | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Varier | ¥¥¥ | |
| HAJIME | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | ¥¥¥¥ |
| La Cime | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | ¥¥¥¥ |
| Kashiwaya Osaka Senriyama | Michelin 3 Star | ¥¥¥ |
| Taian | Michelin 3 Star | ¥¥¥ |
| Fujiya 1935 | Michelin 2 Star | ¥¥¥¥ |
A quick look at how Varier measures up.
Also Consider
- HAJIME, French, Innovative, ¥¥¥¥
- La Cime, French, ¥¥¥¥
- Kashiwaya Osaka Senriyama, Japanese, ¥¥¥
- Taian, Kaiseki, Japanese, ¥¥¥
- Fujiya 1935, Innovative, ¥¥¥¥
Varier's closest competition on price is Kashiwaya Osaka Senriyama and Taian, both Japanese ¥¥¥ options running seasonally driven menus. If you are undecided between French and kaiseki at this price point, the choice comes down to format preference: Varier gives you French technique with Japanese ingredients, while Kashiwaya and Taian give you the kaiseki tradition in full. For a first visit to Osaka's serious dining scene, kaiseki is the more regionally grounded experience; for those already familiar with kaiseki who want to see how a French kitchen handles the same Japanese larder, Varier makes the stronger case.
A step up in budget opens three ¥¥¥¥ options: La Cime, HAJIME, and Fujiya 1935. HAJIME holds higher Michelin recognition and is the choice if accolades and ambition are your primary criteria. La Cime is the natural next step for guests who enjoy Varier's French-with-Japanese-ingredients approach and want more formality and a deeper cellar. Fujiya 1935 operates in innovative territory and suits guests who want French foundations pushed into more experimental directions. All three require more planning and carry a noticeably higher spend per head.
If you can stretch to ¥¥¥¥ and want the fullest expression of Osaka's French dining, La Cime or HAJIME are the upgrade. Varier is the right call when you want serious cooking without committing to a three-hour tasting menu at top-tier prices.
Recognized By
Explore Osaka
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