Paris Restaurants

A new wave of culinary confidence has been running through one of the world's great food cities and spilling over both banks of the Seine. Whether cooking up grand-mère's roast chicken and riz au lait or placing a whimsical hat of cotton candy atop wild-strawberry-and-rose ice cream, Paris chefs—established and up-and-coming, native and foreign—have been breaking free from the tyranny of tradition and following their passion.

Emblematic of the "bistronomy" movement is the proliferation of "gastrobistros"—often in far-flung or newly chic neighborhoods—helmed by established chefs fleeing the constraints of the star system or passionate young chefs unfettered by overblown expectations. Among the seasoned stars and exciting newcomers to the scene are Yannick Alléno, who left behind two Michelin stars at Le Meurice to open his locavore bistro Terroir Parisien at the Palais Brogniart and earned three stars at the storied Pavillon Ledoyen within his first year at the helm; David Toutain at the exceptional Restaurant David Toutain; Sylvestre Wahid at Brasserie Thoumieux; and Katsuaki Okiyama's Abri.

But self-expression is not the only driving force behind the current trend. A traditional high-end restaurant can be prohibitively expensive to operate. As a result, more casual bistros and cafés, which reflect the growing allure of less formal dining and often have lower operating costs and higher profit margins, have become attractive opportunities for even top chefs.

For tourists, this development can only be good news, because it makes the cooking of geniuses such as Joël Robuchon, Guy Savoy, Eric Frechon, and Pierre Gagnaire a bit more accessible (even if these star chefs rarely cook in their lower-price restaurants) and opens up a vast range of new possibilities for exciting dining.

Like the chefs themselves, Paris diners are breaking away from tradition with renewed enthusiasm. New restaurants, wine bars, and rapidly multiplying épicieries (gourmet grocers) and sandwich shops recognize that not everyone wants a three-course blowout every time they dine out. And because Parisians are more widely traveled than in the past, many ethnic restaurants—notably the best North African, Vietnamese–Laotian, Chinese, Spanish, and Japanese spots—are making fewer concessions to French tastes, resulting in far better food.

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  • 1. Aux Cerises

    $ | Eiffel Tower

    Don't expect to be mobbed by tourists at this bright café two minutes from the Champs de Mars. Locals love it for the sidewalk terrace and garden seating in the back—not to mention the good coffee, tea, and stellar brunch. Even if you don't snag a seat outside, the charming interior is a cheerful spot to tuck into a heaping plate of eggs Benedict, smoked salmon tartine, or avocado toast. There are also fresh fruit smoothies and home-baked pastries. Its all-day hours (seven days a week) makes it the perfect place for a well-priced lunch or teatime. Reservations are always a good idea, especially on weekends.

    47 av. de Suffren, Paris, Île-de-France, France
    01–42–73–92–97

    Known For

    • Superb brunch or lunch served seven days a week
    • Reservations a good idea on weekends
    • Minutes from the Eiffel Tower
  • 2. Café de Mars

    $$ | Eiffel Tower

    California-born chef Gina McLintock's elegant-cozy interiors perfectly echo her scrumptious gourmet bistro fare with an Asian twist. Crowd-pleasers include dishes like delicate pumpkin beignets, rib-eye steak, and a juicy bacon burger. Live jazz on Saturday draws a fun Parisian crowd, and the small terrace is lovely in summer.

    11 rue Augereau, Paris, Île-de-France, 75007, France
    01–45–50–10–90

    Known For

    • Great value
    • Located near Eiffel Tower
    • Live jazz on Saturday

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon.
  • 3. Café des Ministères

    $$$ | Eiffel Tower

    Don't let its veneer of a mere neighborhood café mislead you—this is one of the most sought-after tables in the 7e arrondissement and a great option after a visit to the Musée d'Orsay just a few steps away. Jean and Roxane Sévégnès have transformed it into a restaurant Parisians adore, focused on seasonal dishes with a southwest flair that mix traditional recipes, like tripe, tête de veau (veal brains), or that hard-to-find favorite vol au vent (truffled sweetbreads with chicken and spinach in puff pastry) with a contemporary touch. A list of well-chosen wines, including natural and organic choices, and gentle prices for the quality make this a good choice, whether you happen to be in the neighborhood or not. Be sure to reserve, especially at dinner.

    83 rue de l'Université, Paris, Île-de-France, 75007, France
    01–45–33–73–34

    Known For

    • Quality ingredients
    • Gracious service
    • Pleasant atmosphere

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed weekends. No lunch Mon.
  • 4. David Toutain

    $$$$ | Eiffel Tower

    Although two-Michelin-star chef David Toutain's approach may be exasperatingly conceptual for some, others find his earthy, surprising, and inspired concoctions utterly thrilling. Each dish is a lesson in contrasts—of temperature, texture, and flavor—as well as a feat of composition: briny oysters, brussels sprouts, and foie gras in a warm potato consommé; creamy raw oysters with tart kiwi and yuzu; crispy pork chips alongside velvety smoked potato puree. Toutain has a particular soft spot for root vegetables and truffles, which he sprinkles liberally throughout dishes like salsify broth with lardo and black truffle. 

    29 rue Surcouf, Paris, Île-de-France, 75007, France
    01–45–50–11–10

    Known For

    • Equally wonderful choices for vegetarians and carnivores
    • Epitome of "seasonal" cuisine
    • Plenty of avant-garde thrills

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed weekends. No lunch Wed., Reservations essential
  • 5. L'Astrance

    $$$$ | Eiffel Tower

    Pascal Barbot rose to fame thanks to his restaurant's reasonable prices and casual atmosphere, but after the passage of several years, L'Astrance has become resolutely haute. His dishes often draw on Asian ingredients, as in grilled lamb with miso-lacquered eggplant and a palate-cleansing white sorbet spiked with chili pepper and lemongrass. They offer à la carte, as well as a lunch menu for €125 and the full tasting menu for €285 (this is what most people come for). Each menu also comes at a (significantly) higher price with wines to match each course. Barbot's cooking has such an ethereal quality that it's worth the considerable effort of booking a table—you should start trying at least two months in advance.

    4 rue Beethoven, Paris, Île-de-France, 75016, France
    01–40–50–84–40

    Known For

    • Set menus that change daily
    • Space that seats only 25 lucky diners a night
    • Extraordinary wine list

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed weekends and Aug., Reservations essential
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  • 6. Le Jules Verne

    $$$$ | Eiffel Tower

    In a highly publicized battle, the prestigious helm of Paris's most haute (literally) restaurant was wrested from Alain Ducasse by three-star chef Fréderic Anton of the prestigious Le Pré Catelan in the Bois de Boulogne, with Anton's "zero waste" approach and his idea to serve less complicated fare, focusing on French meats and vegetables produced by smaller French artisanal farms and regional delicacies, winning out. Though not cheap (tasting menus are more than €200), winning a Michelin star in 2020 clinched the restaurant's standing as one of Paris's top splurge-worthy dining rooms.

    Av. Gustave Eiffel, Paris, Île-de-France, 75007, France
    01–45–55–61–44

    Known For

    • Famous Eiffel Tower dining (with accompanying views)
    • Lavishly priced dishes
    • Advance reservations a must

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Reservations essential, Jacket and tie
  • 7. Le Violon d'Ingres

    $$$$ | Eiffel Tower

    With chef Alain Solivérès (formerly of Taillevent) now at the helm, this much-beloved outpost has taken on a new shine—and a Michelin star. The food is sophisticated and the atmosphere is lively and chic. Pastry chef Kimiko Kinoshita's gorgeous creations top off a ravishing, well-priced meal. With wines starting at around €40 (and €58–€65 lunch menus on weekdays), this is a wonderful place for a classic yet informal French meal.

    135 rue St-Dominique, Paris, Île-de-France, 75007, France
    01–45–55–15–05

    Known For

    • Few minutes' walk to the Eiffel Tower
    • Famous chef that actually cooks here
    • Open seven days a week, a rarity in this quartier

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Reservations essential
  • 8. Shang Palace

    $$$$ | Eiffel Tower

    The premiere restaurant at the beautiful Shangri-La Hotel is Paris's only Michelin-starred Chinese restaurant. Set in a jewel-box of a dining room, featuring giant Chinese porcelains and inlaid jade paneling, you'll dine on lacquered Peking duck, sliced at your table and delivered with a flourish, and all manner of delicacies from one of the world's great cuisines.

    10 av. d'Iéna, Paris, Île-de-France, 75116, France
    01–53–67–19–92

    Known For

    • Best Peking duck in Paris
    • Superb wine list
    • Gorgeous setting

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Tues. and Wed.
  • 9. Terres de Café

    $ | Eiffel Tower

    A five-minute walk from the Eiffel Tower, Terre de Café is a boon to coffee lovers. It also serves gluten-free pastries, healthy fruit smoothies, and gourmet brunch options.

    67 av. de la Bourdonnais, Paris, Île-de-France, 75007, France
    01–45–50–37–39

    Known For

    • Fresh and healthy salads and sandwiches
    • Delicious homemade pastries
    • Great coffee
  • 10. Tomy & Co.

    $$$$ | Eiffel Tower

    Chef Tomy Gousset, who learned his skills in some of the city's most prestigious kitchens, flies solo at this wildly popular bistro, which won its first Michelin star in 2019. The appealingly spare dining room is an excellent backdrop for some truly dazzling dishes that taste every bit as sublime as they look. Best of all, despite being one of the best tables in the neighborhood, it's not wildly expensive.

    22 rue Surcouf, Paris, Île-de-France, 75007, France
    01–45–51–46–93

    Known For

    • Gourmet bistro fare
    • Inventive dishes
    • Great wine pairings

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed weekends
  • 11. Afaria

    $$ | Eiffel Tower

    The otherwise unexciting 15e arrondissement is home to much-lauded chef Ludivine Merlin and her Basque-inspired recipes. Basque cooking is known for its bold flavors and generosity, and the choices at Afaria are no exception. Crisp-skinned duck breast with balsamic-fig vinegar (for two) is served dramatically, inside a ceramic roof tile, with the accompanying potato gratin perched on a bed of twigs. Big chunks of spoon-tender, slow-cooked pork from Gascony come in an earthenware dish with cubes of roasted celery root. Tapas are served at a high table near the entrance and there's a large-screen TV for rugby matches.

    15 rue Desnouettes, Paris, Île-de-France, 75015, France
    01–48–42–95–90

    Known For

    • Laid-back, classic bistro atmosphere
    • Artichoke terrine with smoked bacon and aged Comté cheese
    • Hazelnut soufflé with homemade dark-chocolate sorbet for dessert

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun., Mon., and 2 wks at Christmas.
  • 12. Arnaud Nicolas

    $$$ | Eiffel Tower

    This "best craftsman of France" revives the gastronomic art of French charcuterie in dishes like dreamy foie gras and succulent slabs of country terrine enrobed in a golden buttery crust. The small-but-choice menu also highlights specialties from the sea: shellfish soufflé or delicate fish quenelles (a specialty of Lyon, France's charcuterie capital).

    46 Av. de la Bourdonnais, Paris, Île-de-France, 75007, France
    01–45–55–59–59

    Known For

    • High-quality meats
    • Shop on premises
    • Smallish menu

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon.
  • 13. Au Bon Accueil

    $$$ | Eiffel Tower

    To see what well-heeled Parisians eat these days, book a table at this chic little bistro run by Jacques Lacipière as soon as you get to town. The contemporary dining room is unusually comfortable, and the sidewalk tables have an Eiffel Tower view, but it's the excellent, well-priced cuisine du marché that has made this spot a hit. The sophisticated fare sometimes features Salers beef and green asparagus, roasted lobster with mushroom risotto, and game in season. House-made desserts could include citrus terrine with passion-fruit sorbet or caramelized apple mille-feuille with hazelnut ice cream. The €39 prix-fixe menu for lunch or dinner, featuring dishes with distinct haute-cuisine touches, is one of the city's great bargains.

    14 rue de Monttessuy, Paris, Île-de-France, 75007, France
    01–47–05–46–11

    Known For

    • Good value three-course menus
    • Excellent price-to-quality ratio
    • Scintillating views of the Eiffel Tower from the charming sidewalk terrace

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed weekends and 3 wks in Aug., Reservations essential
  • 14. Auberge Bressane

    $$$ | Eiffel Tower

    Parisian gastronomic extravagance has largely disappeared in favor of leaner fare. But that is not so at this beloved stalwart, where you can revel in such Gallic classics as towering soufflés, buttery frogs' legs, or a hearty steak smothered in sauce béarnaise. A favorite among politicians and locals, who feel the fare is well worth the tweak to the pocketbook (and the waistline).

    16 av. de la Motte-Picquet, Paris, Île-de-France, 75007, France
    01–47–05–98–37

    Known For

    • Classics done right
    • Traditional Parisian charm
    • Cozy spot

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No lunch Sat.
  • 15. Café Varenne

    $$ | Eiffel Tower

    Giant mirrors, red leatherette banquettes, vintage posters, and checker-tile floors add up to a '60s movie set of a Parisian bistro. But the menu of delicious comfort food—made with top-quality artisanal ingredients and the best produce from throughout France—is delightfully real. Wines and menus are exceedingly reasonable for this neighborhood, which is one reason it's filled with locals.

    36 rue de Varenne, Paris, Île-de-France, 75007, France
    01–45–48–62–72

    Known For

    • Reliably good
    • Open all afternoon and until late
    • Charm galore

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun.
  • 16. L'Os à Moelle

    $$ | Eiffel Tower

    Come for the early sitting at this little bistro specializing in classic French fare and you'll often discover the dining room filled with more than a few tourists (the waiters speak English perfectly). The reasonably priced (€60) five-course tasting menu may account for the restaurant's popularity—there are two seatings each night. The service can be brusque, with waiters plunking even the higher-priced bottles of wine on the table without waiting for the customer to swill and slurp. Still, these problems seem to be minor judging by the ever-crowded tables. The restaurant's popular wine bar (La Cave de l'Os à Moelle), just across the street, serves a popular, prix-fixe menu for €31.

    3 rue Vasco de Gama, Paris, Île-de-France, 75015, France
    01–45–57–27–27

    Known For

    • Large portions at good prices
    • Classic Parisian "blackboard" menu
    • Well-priced wines and Champagne by the glass

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon., Reservations essential
  • 17. La Laiterie Sainte Clotilde

    $$$ | Eiffel Tower

    It's not just this contemporary bistro's chic black storefront and floor-to-ceiling windows that stand out among the elegant neighborhood's pale sandstone buildings and pricey dining. A frisson of excitement in fresh, imaginative, and unfussy dishes paired with small-producer wines brings a breath of fresh air, and the €30 lunch menu is especially enticing.

    64 rue de Bellechasse, Paris, Île-de-France, 75007, France
    01–45–51–74–61

    Known For

    • Chic crowd
    • Lively atmosphere
    • Quality ingredients

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun.
  • 18. La Table d'Aki

    $$$$ | Eiffel Tower

    Set in a quiet, aristocratic quartier near the Musée Rodin, postage stamp–size La Table d'Aki features cuisine centered on the sea. Chef Akihiro Horikoshi works all alone in an open kitchen while 16 lucky diners await the next course: lush, simple dishes like plump langoustine shimmering in a silky shallot-fennel sauce or delicate medallions of sole in a mellow red-wine-and-leek reduction. Although perfect for a long, leisurely lunch, the glaring lighting isn't ideal for a romantic dinner.

    49 rue Vaneau, Paris, Île-de-France, 75007, France
    01–45–44–43–48

    Known For

    • Small, cozy space
    • Perfectly prepared fish
    • Open kitchen serving just 16 diners at a time

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun., Mon., 2 wks in Feb., and Aug., Reservations essential
  • 19. Le Grand Colbert

    $$$ | Louvre

    With its globe lamps and molded ceilings, this neighborhood institution feels elegant yet not overpolished, attracting a wonderfully Parisian mix of elderly lone diners, business lunchers, tourists, couples, and the post-theater crowd, all of whom come for the enormous seafood platters, duck foie gras with Sauternes jelly, steak tartare, and roasted chicken rendered famous by Diane Keaton in Something's Gotta Give. Open every day, Le Grand Colbert is also a pleasant destination for a quick bite between 3 pm and 6 pm, when most everything else is closed.

    2 rue Vivienne, Paris, Île-de-France, 75002, France
    01–42–86–87–88

    Known For

    • Towering seafood platters
    • Standout historic decor and ambience
    • Delightful roast chicken
  • 20. Le Petit Cler

    $ | Eiffel Tower

    From a wine-soaked boeuf Bourguignon and garlicky snails to tasty slabs of homemade country pâté served with cornichons and a hearty red, this Art Nouveau–era bistro offers all the classics of southwestern France. Check the blackboard menu for the daily specials, delivered in generous portions at breakfast, lunch, and dinner.

    29 rue Cler, Paris, Île-de-France, 75007, France
    01–45–50–17–50

    Known For

    • Generous portions of all the French classics
    • Open all day
    • Open Sunday

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