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    Restaurant in Dubai, United Arab Emirates

    Zuma

    820pts

    High-volume Japanese spectacle that delivers.

    Zuma, Restaurant in Dubai

    About Zuma

    Zuma in Dubai's DIFC is a high-energy, sharing-format contemporary Japanese restaurant with a Michelin Plate, a MENA 50 Best ranking of #19, and a booking difficulty that demands three to four weeks' lead time for weekend dinners. Best suited to groups of three or more who want robata grill, sashimi, and a room that runs late — not for intimate or solo dining.

    The Verdict

    At the $$$ price point, Zuma Dubai delivers a volume of food, spectacle, and technical consistency that is hard to match in DIFC. This is contemporary Japanese dining built for groups and occasions rather than quiet introspection: shared plates from the robata grill, a room that gets louder as the night progresses, and a terrace that positions you squarely in one of Dubai's most polished financial districts. If you want restrained, meditative Japanese dining, book Trèsind Studio or Row on 45 instead. If you want a high-energy, sharing-format meal with serious technical grounding and a crowd that is there to be seen, Zuma is one of the stronger arguments in Dubai.

    Portrait

    Zuma occupies the Podium Level of Gate Village Building 3 in DIFC, and the room makes its intentions clear immediately: an on-view kitchen, an island bar, and a terrace that fills fast on weekends. This is not a venue designed for intimacy. The visual register is polished without being precious — the kind of space where a large group can order aggressively and the energy of the room absorbs it. Chef Toby Burrowes leads a kitchen that has earned a Michelin Plate (2025) and a rank of #19 in the World's 50 Best Restaurants MENA 2024 list, credentials that matter here because they signal consistent execution at scale rather than occasional brilliance in a small room.

    The menu is structured around sharing, with contemporary Japanese dishes spanning sashimi, the robata grill, and hot kitchen preparations. Documented items from the robata include marinated lamb chops and salmon teriyaki — the grill is where Zuma's sourcing choices become most visible. Robata cooking is unforgiving: the technique is simple enough that ingredient quality reads directly on the plate. At the $$$ tier, you are paying for produce that can hold up under that scrutiny, and the consistency noted across the awards record suggests the kitchen is not cutting corners to manage Dubai's import costs. For a comparable sense of sourcing discipline applied to a different format, FZN by Björn Frantzén is worth comparing, though it sits at a higher price ceiling and a more formal register.

    The Opinionated About Dining ranking history tells a useful story: Recommended in 2023, #287 in Asia in 2024, and #324 in 2025. The slight year-on-year movement in OAD rankings is not a red flag at this tier , rankings at this level shift on voter participation as much as on kitchen performance , but it does confirm that the venue is being actively tracked by the kind of diner who eats comparatively and records their impressions. A 4.4 across more than 4,000 Google reviews adds a wider base of evidence: the experience lands consistently for a broad audience, not just for specialist diners.

    Weekend DJ and large terrace mean the atmosphere shifts substantially after 9 PM on Thursdays and Fridays, when hours extend to 1 AM. If you are coming for the food rather than the scene, the lunch service (12–3:30 PM weekdays, 1:30–4 PM Saturday, 12–4 PM Sunday) is the more focused option. The Winter Wonderland theme park opposite the venue draws families at certain times of year, which affects the crowd composition and the terrace dynamic , worth knowing if you are booking between November and January. For a quieter DIFC experience with a different cuisine profile, moonrise or 11 Woodfire offer lower-decibel alternatives at similar or higher price points.

    Booking is classified as Near Impossible, which in practice means you should not attempt a same-week reservation for weekend dinner and should expect limited availability even with several weeks' lead time. Zuma's global brand recognition , the group operates across London, Hong Kong, Miami, and other major cities , means it attracts both local regulars and international visitors who have already eaten at other branches and are treating the Dubai location as a continuation of a known quantity. That familiarity drives demand and complicates last-minute access. If the booking window has closed and you need a comparable group-dining format with Japanese influence, consider whether Atomix in New York City or Lazy Bear in San Francisco are relevant reference points for understanding what the category can deliver at its outer edge , though neither is a direct substitute for Zuma's specific format.

    For Dubai dining in a broader regional context, Zuma sits comfortably above the middle of the market but below the ceiling set by venues like Erth in Abu Dhabi for cultural distinctiveness or Alain Ducasse Louis XV for formal European comparison. Within Dubai itself, the MENA 50 Best ranking places it ahead of most of the city's Japanese options in terms of external validation. The question for the value-conscious diner is whether the $$$ spend returns more here than at, say, Trèsind Studio, which operates in a different cuisine category but competes for the same occasion spend. The answer depends on format preference: Trèsind rewards curiosity and solo or small-group dining; Zuma rewards appetite, groups, and an evening that continues past the meal.

    Ratings & Recognition

    • Michelin Plate , 2025
    • World's 50 Best Restaurants MENA , #19 (2024)
    • Opinionated About Dining, Leading Restaurants in Asia , #324 (2025); #287 (2024); Recommended (2023)
    • Google Rating , 4.4 (4,068 reviews)

    Booking

    Booking difficulty is Near Impossible for weekend dinners. Plan a minimum of three to four weeks ahead for Thursday or Friday evening sittings. Lunch slots on weekdays are more accessible and worth considering if your schedule allows. The extended terrace and island bar mean walk-in drinking is a realistic alternative if you miss the dining window, but the kitchen will be harder to access without a reservation.

    Practical Details

    DetailZuma Dubai11 WoodfireAl Mahara
    Price Range$$$$$$$$$$
    CuisineJapanese ContemporaryModern CuisineSeafood
    Booking DifficultyNear ImpossibleModerateModerate
    Leading ForGroups, occasions, high-energy diningSmaller groups, creative platesSpecial occasions, formal setting
    LocationDIFC, Gate VillageDubaiBurj Al Arab
    Weekend HoursTo 1 AM (Thu–Sat)VariesVaries

    For more options across the city, see our full Dubai restaurants guide, our Dubai hotels guide, our Dubai bars guide, our Dubai wineries guide, and our Dubai experiences guide.

    FAQ

    • Is the tasting menu worth it at Zuma? Zuma does not operate a conventional tasting menu format , the menu is designed around shared plates rather than a set progression. At the $$$ tier, the value case depends on how many dishes your table orders and whether your group is willing to span the robata grill, the sashimi section, and the hot kitchen. A table of four ordering across all three sections will spend substantially but get a range of technique that is hard to replicate elsewhere at this price in DIFC. The Michelin Plate and MENA #19 ranking confirm the kitchen is executing at a standard that justifies the spend, but if you want a structured tasting format, FZN by Björn Frantzén or Trèsind Studio are better fits.
    • Is Zuma good for solo dining? Solo dining here is possible but not the format's strength. The sharing-plate structure means ordering for one produces either too little variety or too much food. The island bar is a realistic solo option for drinks and a few counter dishes, but if you are eating alone and want a focused Japanese meal, a smaller, counter-format venue would serve you better. Zuma rewards groups of three or more where the sharing format can open up the full menu range.
    • Does Zuma handle dietary restrictions? The database does not include specific dietary policy details for this venue. Given the size of the operation and its international profile, it is reasonable to expect kitchen flexibility for common restrictions, but contact the venue directly before booking if dietary needs are a firm requirement. Do not rely on assumptions for Japanese cuisine , soy, sesame, and seafood derivatives appear across a wide range of dishes.
    • Is Zuma good for a special occasion? Yes, with the right expectations. The combination of MENA 50 Best recognition, the DIFC setting, and the high-energy room makes it a credible choice for a birthday, client dinner, or anniversary where atmosphere is part of the brief. It is not an intimate celebration venue , the room is large and the decibel level rises through the evening. If you want a quieter, more formal occasion setting, Al Mahara at the Burj Al Arab or At.Mosphere Burj Khalifa provide a more contained experience, though at a higher price tier.
    • What should I wear to Zuma? Smart casual is the working standard for DIFC dining at the $$$ tier and above. Zuma's room and crowd lean toward the dressed-up end of that range, particularly on Thursday and Friday evenings. The database does not specify a formal dress code, but arriving in beachwear or overly casual clothing would be out of step with the room. For Dubai dining at this level generally, treating it as you would a mid-to-upscale European city restaurant is a reliable guide.

    Compare Zuma

    Price vs. Value: Zuma
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    Zuma$$$Near Impossible
    11 Woodfire$$$Unknown
    Avatara Restaurant$$$$Unknown
    Al Mahara$$$$Unknown
    At.Mosphere Burj Khalifa$$$$Unknown
    City Social$$$$Unknown

    A quick look at how Zuma measures up.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Zuma?

    Zuma Dubai operates on a sharing-plate format rather than a traditional tasting menu, so the value question is really about how much you order across the table. At $$$, the contemporary Japanese spread from the robata grill and kitchen is generous enough to justify the spend for groups of three or more who graze widely. For a structured omakase experience, Zuma is not the right format — look elsewhere in Dubai. The value here is in volume and variety, not curation.

    Is Zuma good for solo dining?

    Zuma's sharing format means solo dining is functional but not ideal — you will pay $$$ for dishes sized for two or more, and the spectacle of the room is built around group energy. The island bar is a better anchor for a solo visit, letting you order selectively without committing to a full shared spread. If solo dining is the priority, a lunch sitting on a weekday (Monday to Friday, 12–3:30 pm) gives you the same kitchen at lower crowd intensity.

    Does Zuma handle dietary restrictions?

    The menu is described as offering an extensive selection of contemporary Japanese dishes across multiple formats — robata grill, sushi, hot kitchen — which gives reasonable flexibility for pescatarians and those avoiding red meat. Specific dietary accommodation details are not documented in available venue data, so contact Zuma DIFC directly through Gate Village Building 3 before booking if you have strict requirements. The shared-plate format makes it easier to mix and match than a set-menu restaurant.

    Is Zuma good for a special occasion?

    Yes, with a clear-eyed read on the format: Zuma Dubai ranks #19 in the World's 50 Best MENA 2024 and holds a Michelin Plate (2025), so the credibility is there for a celebratory booking. Thursday and Friday evenings bring a DJ and the full energy of the room, which suits groups celebrating loudly. For an intimate occasion where conversation matters, book a weeknight dinner (Monday to Wednesday, 7 pm–12 am) or weekend lunch (Saturday 1:30–4 pm, Sunday 12–4 pm) when the room is calmer.

    What should I wear to Zuma?

    DIFC venue with a weekend DJ, large terrace, and a clientele that skews dressed-up — treat this as a polished night-out setting rather than a casual dinner. The venue data does not specify a dress code, but the room's positioning in Gate Village and its group-dining, high-energy format make over-dressing a safer error than under-dressing. Thursday and Friday evenings in particular draw a crowd that is noticeably turned out.

    Hours

    Monday
    12–3:30 pm, 7 pm–12 am
    Tuesday
    12–3:30 pm, 7 pm–12 am
    Wednesday
    12–3:30 pm, 7 pm–12 am
    Thursday
    12–3:30 pm, 7 pm–1 am
    Friday
    12–3:30 pm, 7 pm–1 am
    Saturday
    1:30–4 pm, 7 pm–1 am
    Sunday
    12–4 pm, 7 pm–12 am

    Recognized By

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