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    Restaurant in Paris, France

    Blanc

    750pts

    Two Michelin stars, one clear booking case.

    Blanc, Restaurant in Paris

    About Blanc

    Blanc earned its second Michelin star in 2025 — one of Paris's fastest-rising creative tables and already near-impossible to book. Chef Jean Claude Roge's kitchen in the 16th arrondissement is the right call for serious diners who want to catch a two-star in its upward arc. Book 6–8 weeks out minimum and treat it as your anchor reservation for any Paris trip.

    Blanc, Paris: Should You Book?

    Yes — book Blanc if you are serious about creative fine dining in Paris and can secure a table. Earning two Michelin stars in 2025 (up from one in 2024) and 86 points in the La Liste Leading Restaurants 2026 ranking, Blanc under chef Jean Claude Roge has moved fast and earned the attention. At the €€€€ price tier, you are paying for a kitchen that Michelin has twice validated in consecutive years — a trajectory that puts it in active conversation with Paris's most demanding creative tables. The question is not whether it is worth it in the abstract; it is whether it fits your specific occasion and appetite for the format.

    The Case for Blanc

    Blanc sits on Rue de Longchamp in the 16th arrondissement, a neighbourhood that rewards intention: you do not end up here by accident, and the restaurants that thrive here tend to serve diners who have made a deliberate choice rather than a convenient one. That context matters for how you should think about booking. This is not a walk-in-and-see-what-happens address. With a Google rating of 4.7 from 38 reviews, the early signal from diners is positive, though the sample size remains modest relative to long-established two-star peers. What that ratio suggests is a room still finding its full public profile , which, for the food-focused traveller, is often exactly the right moment to visit.

    Chef Jean Claude Roge's creative approach positions Blanc outside the classical French canon. Where L'Ambroisie deals in the authority of the French tradition and Arpège has built decades of reputation around a singular vegetable-led philosophy, Blanc is building its identity around a more contemporary creative language. That is a different value proposition: you are not buying heritage, you are buying a kitchen at pace.

    Timing and the Weekend Question

    Given the editorial angle here, it is worth addressing directly: Blanc is not a brunch destination in the conventional sense, and no verified data confirms a dedicated weekend brunch or morning service. At the two-star level in Paris, the format is almost always lunch and dinner. Lunch service at a restaurant of this standing is the practical equivalent of what a brunch visit delivers in terms of occasion and pacing , a daytime meal without the evening formality , and the Saturday or Sunday lunch sitting is the most relaxed entry point into a kitchen like this. If you are planning a Paris weekend and want to build a meal around it, weekend lunch is your leading window: the pace is typically less pressured than a Friday evening, the light in the 16th at midday is working in your favour, and you will have the rest of the afternoon free rather than losing an evening to it.

    For context on how Paris's leading creative tables handle the weekend format, the pattern is consistent: tables like Le Gabriel at La Réserve Paris and Le Meurice Alain Ducasse both treat lunch as a first-class service, not a secondary one. The same logic applies at Blanc.

    How Blanc Fits the Broader Paris Creative Scene

    If you are building a Paris dining itinerary with serious intent, Blanc belongs on the shortlist alongside Alan Geaam for a different take on creative cooking, or as a deliberate contrast to the classical weight of Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen. Outside Paris, the creative fine dining reference points shift significantly: Mirazur in Menton, Flocons de Sel in Megève, and Troisgros in Ouches each represent a different register of French creative cooking, and Blanc positions itself as the Paris version of that ambition , city-paced, two-star-credentialed, and with a kitchen that is still in its upward arc. Across Europe, the comparison extends to kitchens like Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona and Enrico Bartolini in Milan , both creative, both decorated, both serving a diner who has made a specific choice to engage with the kitchen's vision rather than a cuisine category. Blanc belongs in that peer group.

    For deeper context on what else Paris's fine dining scene offers right now, see our full Paris restaurants guide. If you are building a full trip, our Paris hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide are worth consulting alongside. And if the French regional picture interests you, Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern, Bras in Laguiole, and Paul Bocuse in Collonges-au-Mont-d'Or give the clearest picture of how Blanc's Paris ambition sits within a longer French tradition.

    Know Before You Go

    • Address: 52 Rue de Longchamp, 75116 Paris, France
    • Cuisine: Creative
    • Price tier: €€€€
    • Chef: Jean Claude Roge
    • Awards: Michelin 2 Stars (2025); Michelin 1 Star (2024); La Liste Leading Restaurants 2026 , 86 points
    • Google rating: 4.7 / 5 (38 reviews)
    • Booking difficulty: Near impossible , plan well in advance
    • Leading time to visit: Weekend lunch for the most relaxed pacing
    • Neighbourhood: 16th arrondissement (Trocadéro area)
    • Phone / website: Not publicly listed , book via dedicated reservation platforms

    How It Compares

    At the €€€€ tier in Paris, Blanc's two-star status earned in 2025 puts it in direct competition with tables that have held that rating for years. Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen operates at a higher awards ceiling with a longer track record in the creative category, and for diners who want maximum credentialing alongside the splurge, Alléno is the more established bet. But Blanc's accelerating trajectory , one star to two stars in a single year , is the kind of signal that matters to food-focused travellers who want to eat at a kitchen mid-rise rather than mid-plateau.

    Kei and Le Cinq at the Four Seasons George V serve different needs: Kei is the better choice if you want a French-Japanese creative hybrid at a slightly more accessible entry point, while Le Cinq delivers a grand hotel dining experience with full institutional polish , more suited to a special occasion where the room and service theatre are part of the point. Pierre Gagnaire and L'Ambroisie both carry the weight of long reputations: L'Ambroisie is for diners who want the definitive classical French experience in Paris; Gagnaire is for those who want creative cooking with decades of earned authority behind it.

    The honest comparison: if you want a creative two-star table in Paris that feels like it is still building toward something rather than defending an established position, Blanc is the one to book. If booking difficulty is a constraint, Le Cinq is the most accessible of these options by reservation standards. Blanc, given its rapid rise, is already harder to book than its age might suggest , treat it like a three-star in terms of forward planning.

    Compare Blanc

    Award Winners Like Blanc
    VenueAwardsPriceValue
    BlancLa Liste Top Restaurants (2026): 86pts; Michelin 2 Stars (2025); Michelin 1 Star (2024)€€€€
    Alléno Paris au Pavillon LedoyenMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best€€€€
    KeiMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best€€€€
    L'AmbroisieMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best€€€€
    Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George VMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best€€€€
    Pierre GagnaireMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best€€€€

    A quick look at how Blanc measures up.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Blanc worth the price?

    At €€€€ pricing with two Michelin stars earned in 2025 and 86 points on La Liste 2026, Blanc sits at the serious end of Paris fine dining — and delivers credentials to match. If you are comparing spend, Pierre Gagnaire operates at a similar price point with longer institutional history, but Blanc's rapid Michelin progression signals a kitchen firing at a high level right now. Worth it for committed fine dining guests; harder to justify as a casual splurge.

    What should I wear to Blanc?

    Blanc is a two-Michelin-star restaurant on Rue de Longchamp in the 16th arrondissement — one of Paris's most formal dining neighbourhoods. Dress accordingly: jackets for men are the safe call, and anything you would wear to a business dinner is appropriate. No verified dress code policy is on record, but the award profile and price range make it clear this is not a casual setting.

    Is Blanc good for solo dining?

    Creative fine dining restaurants at this level often accommodate solo guests at a counter or bar if available, though no specific solo seating configuration is confirmed for Blanc. At €€€€ per head, solo dining here is a considered commitment — check the venue's official channels to ask about counter availability before booking. For solo value in Paris at this tier, the experience tends to be more rewarding when you engage with the kitchen format rather than a table-for-one setup.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Blanc?

    Blanc holds two Michelin stars and earned La Liste recognition at 86 points in 2026, both indicators that the kitchen's output justifies a structured tasting format. No menu specifics are published in verified sources, but at a two-star creative restaurant in Paris, a tasting menu is typically the intended format and the best way to experience Chef Jean Claude Roge's range. If you prefer à la carte flexibility, Kei or Alléno Paris offer different structural options at comparable award levels.

    Can Blanc accommodate groups?

    No private dining or group capacity details are confirmed for Blanc. At a two-Michelin-star restaurant in this category, groups larger than four should check the venue's official channels before attempting to book — tables at this level are typically sized for two to four guests, and larger parties may require advance arrangement or a private room if one exists.

    How far ahead should I book Blanc?

    Book at least four to six weeks out, and further if you are targeting a Friday or Saturday dinner. Blanc moved from one to two Michelin stars between 2024 and 2025, which typically produces a sharp increase in demand. Paris's most-decorated two-star tables fill well in advance, and Blanc's 16th arrondissement location means it draws a local clientele as well as destination diners — last-minute availability at this level is unlikely.

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