Restaurant in Hamburg, Germany
100/200 Kitchen
1,335Pearl PointsTwo Michelin stars, hard to book, worth it.

About 100/200 Kitchen
Two Michelin stars, a La Liste score of 82 points, and an OAD Top 300 Europe ranking make 100/200 Kitchen Thomas Imbusch's strongest claim in Hamburg's fine dining tier. The Rothenburgsort location is deliberately off-centre, the booking window runs six to twelve weeks out minimum, and the €€€€ price tag is on par with The Table Kevin Fehling — but the creative kitchen here has a distinct voice worth the effort.
Verdict
If you're choosing between 100/200 Kitchen and The Table Kevin Fehling for a special-occasion dinner in Hamburg, the decision comes down to what you want from the room as much as the plate. The Table is glossier, easier to locate, and slightly more accessible to first-timers. 100/200 Kitchen asks more of you: it sits in Rothenburgsort, an industrial district near the Elbbrücken that gives no outward signal of what's inside, and it demands a reservation window that rivals the hardest tables in Germany. What you get in return is two Michelin stars, a La Liste score of 82 points (2026), and a creative kitchen under Thomas Imbusch that has ranked among Europe's top 235–274 restaurants on Opinionated About Dining in back-to-back years. Book it if you're returning to Hamburg's fine dining scene and want the room that pushes hardest technically. First-timers who want a guaranteed wow without the logistics friction should consider Restaurant Haerlin instead.
The Kitchen
100/200 Kitchen operates in the creative register, meaning the menu is not anchored to a single national tradition but built around technical ambition and the chef's own language. Thomas Imbusch's approach has drawn sustained recognition: two Michelin stars held through 2024 and 2025, and a La Liste score that climbed from 79.5 points in 2025 to 82 points in 2026, placing it in the company of restaurants like Aqua in Wolfsburg and JAN in Munich at the upper tier of Germany's fine dining set. The OAD ranking, which reflects the views of a peer network of serious diners rather than institutional inspectors, adds a second layer of credibility: climbing from #235 in 2024 to #274 in 2025 reflects broad recognition across a competitive European field that includes Schwarzwaldstube and Vendôme.
The address in Rothenburgsort is not incidental. The deliberate distance from Hamburg's established restaurant corridor is part of what defines the experience: you are not dropping into a convenient city-centre slot. The industrial setting near the Elbbrücken frames what happens inside as an intentional act, not a default. If you've been once and found the surroundings jarring, that's worth knowing before you return — the atmosphere doesn't soften over repeat visits. If you found it added to the sense of occasion, you already have your answer.
The Friday and Saturday lunch service (12:00–3:30 pm) is worth flagging for returning guests. Evening slots at this level of recognition fill first and fastest, but a lunch booking in the same price tier (€€€€) can offer a less pressured pacing and, at least in theory, a slightly less compressed reservation window. Saturday in particular, which extends into a late evening service ending at midnight, is the hardest slot to land.
For context on what creative fine dining at the two-star level looks like elsewhere in Europe, the comparison with Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen and Arpège is instructive: both operate in a similar register of technical ambition and both carry comparable booking difficulty. 100/200 Kitchen sits in that tier for Germany. It also sits in a different category from CODA Dessert Dining in Berlin or ES:SENZ in Grassau, which pursue narrower conceptual briefs. 100/200's brief is broader creative fine dining, and the two-star consistency over multiple years suggests the kitchen is not chasing novelty for its own sake.
Google reviews average 4.5 across 380 responses, which at this price point and booking difficulty is a reliable signal: guests who make the effort to get here are, in the main, satisfied the trip was worth it. The score is not as high as you might expect from a two-star, but the volume of reviews at this level of restaurant suggests a meaningfully broad sample rather than a handful of outliers.
If 100/200 Kitchen is full when you check (and it likely will be), Koer and Piment are Hamburg alternatives worth considering, and bianc covers the €€€€ bracket with a Mediterranean focus if you want something in the same spend tier. For a wider read on the city's dining options, see our full Hamburg restaurants guide. For hotels, bars, and experiences in the city, our Hamburg hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide cover the rest.
Booking
Treat this as near-impossible to book at short notice. At the two-star level in a city Hamburg's size, the standard advice of three to four weeks out does not apply here: expect to look six to twelve weeks ahead for a realistic shot at an evening slot, and further for Saturday. Set a calendar reminder to check at the exact moment a new month opens on the reservation system. Lunch on Friday or Saturday is your leading tactical option if evenings are sold out.
Practical Details
| Detail | 100/200 Kitchen | The Table Kevin Fehling | bianc |
|---|---|---|---|
| Price tier | €€€€ | €€€€ | €€€€ |
| Michelin stars | 2 | 3 | 1 |
| Cuisine | Creative | Creative | Modern Mediterranean |
| Booking difficulty | Near impossible | Near impossible | Moderate |
| Lunch service | Fri–Sat from 12:00 | Check direct | Check direct |
| Location type | Industrial / off-centre | HafenCity | City centre |
| Google rating | 4.5 (380 reviews) | Not specified | Not specified |
FAQs
How far ahead should I book 100/200 Kitchen?
Six to twelve weeks minimum for an evening slot; longer for Saturday. Friday or Saturday lunch is your leading fallback if evening availability is gone. At two Michelin stars with a La Liste ranking and OAD recognition, this table moves at the speed of Germany's most sought-after reservations. Check availability the moment a new booking month opens.
What should I wear to 100/200 Kitchen?
No dress code is specified in the venue data, but the €€€€ price point, two Michelin stars, and industrial-chic setting suggest smart casual at minimum. Treat it as you would any two-star reservation in Germany: a jacket for men is a safe default, though Hamburg's dining culture is less formal than Munich. Arriving underdressed at this level of restaurant carries more risk than overdressing.
Is the tasting menu worth it at 100/200 Kitchen?
Yes, if creative fine dining at the two-star level is what you're after. The La Liste score of 82 points (2026) and back-to-back OAD Europe rankings confirm this is not a restaurant coasting on its stars. Compared to three-star The Table Kevin Fehling, you're spending the same tier for one star fewer but a kitchen with its own distinct creative voice. The 4.5 Google average across 380 reviews suggests repeat guests and serious diners find the value holds.
Is 100/200 Kitchen good for a special occasion?
Yes, with the right expectations. The Rothenburgsort location near the Elbbrücken adds a sense of occasion by design: you're not stumbling into this restaurant, you're making the trip. Two Michelin stars, a creative menu format, and a late Saturday service until midnight give it more flexibility than a traditional fine dining room. If your group wants a landmark setting rather than an industrial one, Restaurant Haerlin may suit better.
Can 100/200 Kitchen accommodate groups?
Seat count is not published, and the venue has not disclosed group booking policies. For groups of four or more at a two-star restaurant in a space described as industrial and intimate, contact the restaurant directly well in advance — at least eight to twelve weeks out. Groups wanting more certainty around private dining should also consider The Table Kevin Fehling, which operates in a HafenCity location with clearer public-facing booking infrastructure.
What are alternatives to 100/200 Kitchen in Hamburg?
For the same price tier and creative ambition, The Table Kevin Fehling is the direct comparison , three Michelin stars, slightly easier to locate, and more familiar in format. bianc covers €€€€ with a Mediterranean focus and is meaningfully easier to book. For one step down in price, Heimatjuwel at €€€ offers German and creative cooking with less booking friction. Piment and Koer are also worth checking. See our full Hamburg restaurants guide for a broader view.
Frequently Asked Questions
How far ahead should I book 100/200 Kitchen?
Six to eight weeks minimum, and even that may not be enough for a prime Friday or Saturday slot. At the two-star level in Hamburg, 100/200 Kitchen operates in a category where demand reliably outpaces availability. Check for cancellations closer to your date, but do not rely on it as a strategy.
What should I wear to 100/200 Kitchen?
The venue is housed in an industrial building in Rothenburgsort, which sets a less formal physical tone than a traditional fine-dining address, but two Michelin stars signal a serious room. Dress well — the kind of effort you would make for a special-occasion dinner, not a business-casual lunch.
Is the tasting menu worth it at 100/200 Kitchen?
At €€€€ pricing with two Michelin stars and a consistent presence on both La Liste (82pts in 2026) and Opinionated About Dining's European rankings, the kitchen is delivering at a level that justifies the spend for serious diners. If tasting-menu formats are not your preference, the value case weakens considerably — but within the genre, the credentials are solid.
Is 100/200 Kitchen good for a special occasion?
Yes, provided the person you are bringing appreciates creative, technically driven cooking rather than comfort-led cuisine. Two Michelin stars and a location that surprises — an industrial stretch near the Elbbrücken — make for a dinner that has a story attached. For a more conventional special-occasion feel, The Table Kevin Fehling is the closer Hamburg alternative.
Can 100/200 Kitchen accommodate groups?
No specific group policy is documented for 100/200 Kitchen, but tasting-menu restaurants at this level typically cap group bookings or require the full table to commit to the same menu. check the venue's official channels to confirm capacity and format before planning anything larger than four.
What are alternatives to 100/200 Kitchen in Hamburg?
The Table Kevin Fehling is the most direct comparison: also two Michelin stars, also a tasting-menu format, but located in the HafenCity and with a more theatrical presentation style. For something less formal at a lower price point, bianc offers a single-star creative menu that is meaningfully easier to book. Landhaus Scherrer suits diners who want regional cooking over technical ambition.
Location
Brandshofer Deich 68, 20539 Hamburg, Germany
Compare 100/200 Kitchen
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 100/200 Kitchen | Creative | The restaurant 100/200 is located in Hamburg Rothenburgsort at the Elbbrücken. An industrial area, where a restaurant like the 100/200 would never be expected. The owner and head chef is Thomas Imbusc...; La Liste Top Restaurants (2026): 82pts; Chef: Thomas Imbusch document.addEventListener("DOMContentLoaded", function() { var el = document.getElementById("Achievements_chefs"); if (el && el.parentNode) { el.parentNode.removeChild(el); } });; Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Europe Ranked #274 (2025); La Liste Top Restaurants (2025): 79.5pts; Michelin 2 Stars (2025); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Europe Ranked #235 (2024); Michelin 2 Stars (2024); Opinionated About Dining Top New Restaurants in Europe Recommended (2023) | Near Impossible | — |
| The Table Kevin Fehling | Creative | Michelin 3 Star | Unknown | — |
| bianc | Modern Mediterranean, Mediterranean Cuisine | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| Lakeside | German Lakeside | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| Heimatjuwel | German, Creative | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Landhaus Scherrer | Modern European, Classic Cuisine | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Also Consider
- The Table Kevin Fehling — Creative, €€€€
- bianc — Modern Mediterranean, Mediterranean Cuisine, €€€€
- Lakeside — German Lakeside, €€€€
- Heimatjuwel — German, Creative, €€€
- Landhaus Scherrer — Modern European, Classic Cuisine, €€€€
At the top of Hamburg's €€€€ tier, the choice is between 100/200 Kitchen and The Table Kevin Fehling. The Table holds three Michelin stars to 100/200's two, and its HafenCity address is easier to integrate into a city-centre evening. If your priority is the highest possible Michelin credential in Hamburg and a more conventional fine dining room, The Table is the safer call. 100/200 Kitchen asks more logistically — the Rothenburgsort location, the near-impossible booking window — but delivers a creative programme with its own distinct character and a La Liste score that has climbed year-on-year. For a returning diner who has already done The Table, 100/200 is the natural next booking.
bianc covers the same €€€€ bracket with a Modern Mediterranean focus and is meaningfully easier to book, making it the better option if you want a high-end dinner without a two-month lead time. Landhaus Scherrer operates in Modern European and Classic Cuisine territory at €€€€ and offers a more traditional room; it suits guests who want formality and heritage rather than industrial-creative energy. Both are solid alternatives if 100/200 is full when you check.
For guests willing to step down one price tier, Heimatjuwel at €€€ offers German and creative cooking with considerably less booking friction. Lakeside rounds out the €€€€ set with a German Lakeside format that suits a different kind of occasion entirely. The practical summary: book 100/200 Kitchen if you want Hamburg's most technically ambitious creative kitchen and can plan ahead; book The Table if you want three-star assurance in a more accessible location; book bianc if you need a table within the next two weeks.
Hours
- Monday
- Closed
- Tuesday
- 6:30–11 pm
- Wednesday
- 6:30–11 pm
- Thursday
- 6:30–11 pm
- Friday
- 12–3:30 pm, 6:30–11 pm
- Saturday
- 12–3:30 pm, 6:30 pm–12 am
- Sunday
- 12–6 am
Recognized By
Explore Hamburg
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