Restaurant in Taipei, Taiwan
ZEA
550Pearl PointsBook this if you want one meal that travels.

About ZEA
ZEA holds a 2024 Michelin star for Chef Joaquin Elizondo's Latin American tasting menu built around Taiwanese local produce — a combination that has no direct competition in Taipei. Open Wednesday through Sunday for dinner only; book three to four weeks ahead. At $$$$, it is the right choice if the Latin American–Taiwanese crossover is what you are after, not just a fine dining night out.
Verdict: One of Taipei's hardest tables to justify skipping
ZEA earns its 2024 Michelin star by doing something genuinely rare in Taipei: running a Latin American tasting menu that draws as much from Taiwan's produce as it does from Argentina. Chef Joaquin Elizondo's cooking sits at a crossroads that few restaurants in the world occupy, and for first-timers deciding whether to commit to a $$$$ dinner in Da'an District, the short answer is yes — book it, book it early, and treat it as the main event of your Taipei trip rather than a side option.
Booking Reality
ZEA is open five nights a week, Wednesday through Sunday, with seatings from 6:30 PM. Monday and Tuesday are dark. There is no lunch service, which collapses the question of lunch versus dinner entirely: this is a dinner-only destination, and the editorial angle of comparing daytime and evening value simply doesn't apply here the way it does at, say, Le Palais, where a weekday dim sum lunch offers a meaningful price-entry alternative to evening banquets. At ZEA, you're choosing between dinner and not going.
Booking difficulty is rated Hard. The restaurant is tucked into Alley 20 off Lane 300, Section 4 of Ren'ai Road — a residential address that rewards those who have done their homework and punishes walk-in optimism. Plan to book at least three to four weeks ahead for a weekend table; weeknight availability in the Wednesday–Thursday window can open up closer to your travel dates, but do not count on it during peak periods. There is no website listed, and no phone number in our database, which means securing a reservation likely runs through a third-party booking platform or direct social media inquiry. Confirm your method before you travel.
The Room and the Plate
The address in Da'an District places ZEA in one of Taipei's most polished residential neighbourhoods, a quieter setting than the Xinyi high-rise dining corridor. For a first-timer, the visual experience begins before you sit down: a lane-side address means arrival itself is intentional, not accidental. Inside, the tasting menu format sets a clear visual rhythm , each course is composed and deliberate, reflecting the dual culinary heritage Elizondo brings to the table. Dishes documented in the awards record include short-neck clams in a sauce built from chilli, parsley, coriander and pepper; salad greens dressed in wasabi leaf oil; and guava dusted with plum powder. These combinations are not decorative fusion , they reflect a specific logic of contrast, using Taiwanese local sourcing as both ingredient strategy and cultural statement.
The Michelin citation frames this as haute cuisine finesse applied to Latin American memory, filtered through Taiwanese terroir. That framing is accurate enough to be useful: if you are coming from a background in European fine dining or Japanese omakase, the technical register here will feel familiar even as the flavour references are distinctly different.
Who Should Book ZEA
Book ZEA if you are a first-timer to Taipei's fine dining scene who wants one meal that is genuinely hard to replicate elsewhere in the world. The Latin American and Taiwanese crossover is not a marketing angle , it is the actual content of the cooking, and it is specific enough that no other $$$$ tasting menu in Taipei occupies the same territory. If you are primarily interested in Chinese fine dining, Le Palais (three Michelin stars) is the stronger choice. If French-Taiwanese fusion is your frame, Taïrroir competes directly on creative ambition and is easier to book. But if the specific combination of Latin American culinary tradition and Taiwanese ingredients is what interests you, ZEA has no direct competition in the city.
For travellers already holding a reservation at logy , another Michelin-starred tasting menu with a strong local-ingredient philosophy , consider whether your itinerary supports two tasting-menu dinners. The experiences are complementary in format but distinct in flavour direction: logy runs modern European–Asian contemporary; ZEA runs Latin American–Taiwanese. If you can do both, do both. If you have to choose, your preference in cuisine tradition is the deciding factor, not quality.
Practical Details
| Detail | ZEA | logy | Taïrroir |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cuisine | Latin American / Taiwanese | Modern European / Asian Contemporary | Taiwanese / French |
| Price Range | $$$$ | $$$$ | $$$$ |
| Michelin Stars | 1 (2024) | 1 | 1 |
| Lunch Available | No | Check directly | Check directly |
| Dinner Hours | 6:30 PM–10:30 PM | Check directly | Check directly |
| Days Open | Wed–Sun | Check directly | Check directly |
| Booking Difficulty | Hard | Hard | Moderate–Hard |
| Google Rating | 4.7 (212 reviews) | , | , |
ZEA in the Wider Taiwan Context
ZEA is one of a small number of restaurants in Taiwan where a chef's non-Taiwanese background is the creative engine rather than the backdrop. Comparable ambition in a different format appears at JL Studio in Taichung, where Southeast Asian heritage meets fine dining structure. For a broader read on where ZEA sits in Taipei's dining picture, our full Taipei restaurants guide covers the full range of price points and cuisine types. If you are building a multi-city Taiwan itinerary that includes Kaohsiung or Tainan, see GEN in Kaohsiung and A Cun Beef Soup in Tainan for strong regional options at very different price points.
Internationally, the closest conceptual parallels to what ZEA is doing are restaurants like Mono in Hong Kong , Latin American fine dining outside Latin America , and Imperfecto: The Chef's Table in Washington, D.C., where Latin American identity shapes a tasting-menu format in a non-native context. ZEA's Taiwanese sourcing layer adds a dimension neither of those venues has.
For accommodation and evening planning around your ZEA reservation, our Taipei hotels guide and Taipei bars guide cover the Da'an and surrounding districts. If you want to extend your stay beyond the city, our Taipei experiences guide includes day-trip options.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should a first-timer know about ZEA?
ZEA is open only Wednesday through Sunday, dinner only from 6:30 PM, so plan accordingly. Chef Joaquin Elizondo runs a tasting menu format — there is no à la carte option — and the kitchen is built around a Latin American framework reinterpreted through locally sourced Taiwanese produce. It earned a Michelin star in 2024, which means demand is high and advance booking is likely necessary. If you want a single meal in Taipei that you cannot replicate in any other city, this is a strong candidate.
What are alternatives to ZEA in Taipei?
Taïrroir is the closest structural comparison: a tasting-menu restaurant where a non-standard culinary lens is applied to Taiwanese ingredients, and it holds Michelin recognition. Logy runs a refined tasting-menu format in Taipei with a different creative approach and is worth considering for a second fine-dining night. Le Palais is the reference for classical Cantonese fine dining in the city, a different register entirely but similarly decorated. If you want something shorter and less formal, de nuit and Mudan Tempura offer focused menus at a lower commitment level.
What should I order at ZEA?
ZEA operates a tasting menu, so there is no individual dish selection at the table — you eat what the kitchen sends. Based on documented menu examples, expect dishes that pair Latin American technique and flavour references with Taiwanese ingredients: short-neck clams, wasabi leaf oil, guava with plum powder. The menu changes with season and sourcing, so specific dishes can change in advance. Check the venue's official channels for the latest details.
Can I eat at the bar at ZEA?
Bar seating is not confirmed in the available venue data for ZEA. The restaurant is a tasting-menu format in a Da'an District address that skews toward a structured dining room experience rather than a casual counter setup. check the venue's official channels to confirm seating configurations before visiting, as no phone or website is currently listed in the public record.
Is the tasting menu worth it at ZEA?
At $$$$ pricing with a 2024 Michelin star, ZEA sits in the top tier of Taipei dining spend — but the format is specific. The value case is strongest if you are committed to a multi-course tasting menu and interested in Latin American cooking that actually integrates Taiwanese produce rather than simply transplanting a foreign cuisine. If you prefer à la carte flexibility or want a shorter meal, the price-to-format fit is weaker and Mudan Tempura or de nuit would be more practical alternatives.
Location
No. 5號, Alley 20, Lane 300, Section 4, Ren'ai Rd, Da’an District, Taipei City, Taiwan 106
Taipei, Taiwan
Compare ZEA
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ZEA | Latin American | $$$$ | Hard | |
| logy | Modern European, Asian Contemporary | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown |
| Le Palais | Cantonese | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star | Unknown |
| Taïrroir | Taiwanese/French, Taiwanese contemporary | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star | Unknown |
| Mudan Tempura | Tempura | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown |
| de nuit | French Contemporary | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown |
Comparing your options in Taipei for this tier.
Also Consider
- logy, Modern European, Asian Contemporary, $$$$
- Le Palais, Cantonese, $$$$
- Taïrroir, Taiwanese/French, Taiwanese contemporary, $$$$
- Mudan Tempura, Tempura, $$$$
- de nuit, French Contemporary, $$$$
How ZEA Compares to Other Top Taipei Restaurants
At the $$$$ tier, Taipei has a cluster of strong Michelin-starred tasting menus, but ZEA is the only one working in Latin American territory. Logy is the most natural peer, also a single Michelin star, also focused on local sourcing, also running a composed tasting menu format, but the flavour direction is modern European with Asian contemporary technique. If you are deciding between the two, cuisine preference is the deciding factor; quality is comparable. Taïrroir works the Taiwanese-French crossover and is arguably slightly easier to book than ZEA, making it a reasonable alternative if your reservation window is short. For three-star ambition and the deepest Cantonese fine dining in the city, Le Palais is in a different tier of recognition and offers a weekday dim sum entry point that ZEA and the other tasting-menu venues do not.
For diners primarily interested in a strong single-cuisine focus rather than fusion, Mudan Tempura delivers a disciplined tempura format at the same price tier, and de nuit runs French Contemporary in a more intimate room. Neither competes with ZEA on cuisine concept, but both are valid alternatives if the Latin American angle is not your priority. Spanish contemporary diners should also consider Molino de Urdániz, which brings Iberian fine dining to Taipei with serious European credentials.
The practical summary: if you want one tasting-menu dinner in Taipei and the cuisine tradition matters to you, ZEA is the only address for Latin American fine dining in the city. If cuisine tradition is secondary and you want the highest Michelin credential for your spend, book Le Palais instead. If you want comparable creative ambition with slightly more booking flexibility, Taïrroir is the call.
Hours
- Monday
- closed
- Tuesday
- closed
- Wednesday
- 6:30 PM-10:30 PM
- Thursday
- 6:30 PM-10:30 PM
- Friday
- 6:30 PM-10:30 PM
- Saturday
- 6:30 PM-10:30 PM
- Sunday
- 6:30 PM-10:30 PM
Recognized By
Explore Taipei
Save or rate ZEA on Pearl
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.
