Restaurant in Paris, France
Virtus
1,030Pearl PointsOne star, real value, book early.

About Virtus
Virtus holds a 2025 Michelin star and an Opinionated About Dining European ranking of #376, run by the Japanese-Argentine duo Chiho Kanzaki and Marcelo Di Giacomo. In Paris's dense one-star field, it delivers stronger value than most equivalents at the €€€€ tier, particularly for diners who want cross-cultural creative cooking over classical French formality. Book at least three to four weeks out.
A Michelin-starred address in the 12th — and one of Paris's better-value decisions at €€€€
Virtus holds a Michelin star and a 2025 Opinionated About Dining ranking of #376 in Europe (up from #359 in 2024), with a Google rating of 4.8 across more than 1,200 reviews. Those numbers, taken together, make a clear case: this is not a restaurant you book on a whim, but it rewards the effort. If you've already visited once, the question is whether the kitchen has given you reason to return. The short answer is yes, and the seasonal menu structure is the main reason why.
Virtus sits at 29 Rue de Cotte in the 12th arrondissement, a neighbourhood that runs cooler than the more tourist-heavy arrondissements of central Paris. That location matters: you're not paying a premium for a famous postcode, which is part of why the value calculation here is stronger than at comparable one-star addresses closer to the Seine. If you've eaten here before and are deciding whether a second visit is justified, the dual-chef model gives the kitchen a wider creative range than most single-chef tables at this price point.
The kitchen is led by Chiho Kanzaki and Marcelo Di Giacomo, one Japanese and one Argentinian, both of whom travel extensively to source ingredients directly from producers. That sourcing philosophy shapes what arrives at the table: dishes are built around ingredient combinations that don't follow a conventional French logic — green asparagus with burrata and gariguette strawberry, Saint-Jacques with kohlrabi, Challans duck with roasted apple. The dessert section carries Di Giacomo's influence and leans into French-Japanese hybrids: gariguette strawberries with Marc de saké cream and Genmaicha ice cream is the kind of combination that makes more sense in the eating than in the description. For a returning guest, these desserts are worth planning your appetite around.
The current season is the right moment to be thinking about Virtus. Spring produces in Paris are at their peak from April through June, and a kitchen that centres its menus on producer relationships and seasonal sourcing tends to deliver its sharpest work during this window. Gariguette strawberries, the early asparagus, the shift from root vegetables to the first bright herbs , this is when the menu's cross-cultural logic is most legible. If you're timing a visit, booking now rather than in midsummer or autumn gives you the leading read on what the kitchen does when its ingredients are at their most expressive.
Wine program
Wine program at Virtus is where the dual-chef philosophy extends beyond the kitchen. A table built around Japanese-Argentine creative instincts and French produce doesn't fit neatly into the conventional Burgundy-and-Bordeaux frame that defines many Paris fine-dining lists. Virtus's list reflects that: expect a selection that leans toward natural and low-intervention producers, with French regional wines that can hold their own against the acidic, saline, and umami-forward flavour profiles the kitchen regularly deploys. For a returning guest, the wine pairing is worth considering over a self-selected bottle , the pairings tend to be more instructive about what the kitchen is doing than a safe Burgundy selection would be. The combination of kohlrabi, scallop, and sake-inflected desserts creates a pairing challenge that a well-calibrated list answers directly. If you're the kind of diner who treats the wine program as a separate course of information about the meal, Virtus delivers on that.
Booking and logistics
Getting a table here is hard. Virtus operates a limited service schedule: dinner Tuesday through Saturday (19:30 last seating at 21:00), with lunch only on Friday (12:00, last seating 13:00). Sunday and Monday are closed. That adds up to roughly six services per week, which, for a Michelin-starred address with this kind of OAD ranking and review volume, means competition for seats is real. Plan for a minimum of three to four weeks' lead time; during peak Paris seasons (spring, Fashion Week in October, the holiday period) book further out. Lunch on Friday is the easiest entry point if your schedule is flexible , it's a single service and generally quieter than weekend dinner.
The 12th arrondissement address is a practical advantage for anyone staying on the eastern side of Paris. For hotel guests based near the Marais or Bastille, Virtus is a short trip. For those staying in the 8th or 16th, factor in travel time: the 12th is not a quick walk from the traditional luxury hotel cluster. See our full Paris hotels guide for accommodation options closer to the restaurant.
How Virtus fits the Paris one-star field
Paris has a dense one-star tier, and Virtus occupies a specific position within it. Compared to addresses like Alliance or Tomy & Co, Virtus offers more conceptual ambition , the cross-cultural sourcing approach produces dishes that feel genuinely distinct rather than competently modern. Against Pages, which also draws on Japanese technique, the difference is register: Virtus leans warmer and more accessible in its combinations, Pages tighter and more austere. For a second visit, the question is whether you want to go deeper into the Kanzaki-Di Giacomo worldview or explore laterally. Marsan par Hélène Darroze and Table - Bruno Verjus are the two strongest Paris alternatives if product sourcing and producer relationships are what drew you to Virtus in the first place.
For those interested in the broader French fine-dining context, Virtus sits in the same creative current as destinations like Mirazur in Menton and Flocons de Sel in Megève , kitchens where international influence and hyper-local sourcing coexist. The difference is scale and ambition: Virtus is operating at the one-star tier, not the three-star level of Troisgros or Bras, but the cooking philosophy shares a lineage. For Paris-based diners interested in where the city's creative fine dining is heading, Virtus is a more useful data point than many of its peers at the same price tier.
See our full Paris restaurants guide, our full Paris bars guide, our full Paris wineries guide, and our full Paris experiences guide for more on what to do around your visit.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the tasting menu worth it at Virtus?
Yes, for the right diner. Virtus holds a Michelin star and ranked #376 in Europe on Opinionated About Dining 2025, and the Japanese-Argentine creative axis from Kanzaki and Di Giacomo produces combinations you won't find at comparable Paris one-stars. At €€€€, it sits at the upper end of the Paris one-star tier, but the cross-cultural cooking makes it a stronger choice than more conventional addresses at the same price point. If you want classical French precision above all, look elsewhere — this kitchen takes creative risks.
What should I wear to Virtus?
Smart casual reads correctly here. Virtus has a contemporary interior with a nostalgic ambience rather than the formal grandeur of a multi-star palace restaurant, so a jacket is not required for men, though turning up in athleisure would feel out of place. Think dinner-out rather than black tie. The 12th arrondissement address signals a relaxed register compared to addresses near the 8th.
Is Virtus worth the price?
At €€€€, Virtus is one of the more defensible spends in the Paris one-star tier. A Michelin star plus an independent OAD top-400 Europe ranking suggests consistency that justifies the price, and the Kanzaki-Di Giacomo partnership produces a creative output that punches above its category. If €€€€ for a one-star feels steep, consider that Alliance or Tomy & Co operate in a similar bracket with more classical profiles — Virtus gives you more creative range for comparable spend.
Does Virtus handle dietary restrictions?
The venue data does not detail a specific dietary restriction policy. Given the tasting menu format and very limited nightly seatings, check the venue's official channels when booking to flag any requirements — the kitchen's produce-focused sourcing philosophy suggests flexibility is possible, but confirmation is essential before arrival.
Can I eat at the bar at Virtus?
No bar dining is documented for Virtus. The restaurant operates a tasting menu format with a constrained service window — dinner seatings from 19:30 with last entry at 21:00 Tuesday through Saturday, plus Friday lunch. The format is sit-down and structured, not drop-in. Book a table or expect to wait for availability.
Is Virtus good for a special occasion?
Yes, and it's a stronger choice than many one-star Paris options for occasions where the meal itself is the point. The Michelin star and OAD recognition give it external credibility, the nostalgic-contemporary interior creates atmosphere without formality, and the creative Japanese-Argentine cooking gives guests something to talk about. For a milestone dinner, it competes well against addresses like Kei at a similar price tier.
Is lunch or dinner better at Virtus?
Lunch runs Friday only (12:00 to 13:00 last seating), which makes it a scarce slot — if you can get it, Friday lunch is often the value entry point at Michelin-starred Paris restaurants and worth targeting. Dinner runs Tuesday through Saturday. Neither format is documented as a shorter or cheaper menu in the available data, so book whichever slot you can secure and confirm the menu format directly.
Location
29 Rue de Cotte, 75012 Paris, France
Compare Virtus
| Venue | Awards | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Virtus | €€€€ | |
| Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | €€€€ |
| Kei | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | €€€€ |
| L'Ambroisie | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | €€€€ |
| Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George V | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | €€€€ |
| Pierre Gagnaire | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | €€€€ |
Comparing your options in Paris for this tier.
Also Consider
- Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen, Creative, €€€€
- Kei, Contemporary French, Modern Cuisine, €€€€
- L'Ambroisie, French, Classic Cuisine, €€€€
- Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George V, French, Modern Cuisine, €€€€
- Pierre Gagnaire, French, Creative, €€€€
How Virtus Compares
At the €€€€ tier in Paris, Virtus sits in a different register from the grand-room addresses at the top of the price band. Le Cinq at the Four Seasons George V and L'Ambroisie offer more service ceremony and more classical environments, but at a higher total cost and with a more conservative cooking style. If what you want is a Michelin-starred room where the food has genuine creative ambition and the price doesn't include a palatial address surcharge, Virtus is the stronger spend. Pierre Gagnaire is the closest peer in terms of creative reach, but the scale, price, and room feel entirely different, Gagnaire is a grander, more theatrical commitment; Virtus is tighter and more intimate.
Kei is the most direct comparison for diners drawn to Virtus's Japanese-French axis. Both kitchens operate in the space between French technique and Japanese sensibility, and both hold a Michelin star. The difference is register: Kei presents as more polished and formally French in its execution, while Virtus is more ingredient-driven and less adherent to classical plating conventions. For a first-time visitor choosing between the two, Kei is the safer bet for a familiar luxury experience; Virtus is the better choice if you want to see where that cross-cultural logic leads when the chefs are given real creative latitude. Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen operates several tiers above Virtus in ambition and price, it's a different category of commitment, not a true alternative.
For the returning Virtus diner deciding where to go next, the most useful lateral moves are within the creative one-star tier: Alliance for comparable product focus with a more conventionally French framework, or Table - Bruno Verjus if you want the producer-sourcing philosophy pushed even further. Virtus is the right booking if you want creative cooking at a price that doesn't require a special-occasion justification every time.
Hours
- Monday
- Closed
- Tuesday
- 19:30-21:00
- Wednesday
- 19:30-21:00
- Thursday
- 19:30-21:00
- Friday
- 12:00-13:00 19:30-21:00
- Saturday
- 19:30-21:00
- Sunday
- Closed
Recognized By
Explore Paris
Save or rate Virtus on Pearl
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.
