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    Restaurant in Lyon, France

    Brasserie Georges

    100pts

    Lyon's grande brasserie: groups, scale, delivered.

    Brasserie Georges, Restaurant in Lyon

    About Brasserie Georges

    Brasserie Georges is the go-to for classic Lyonnaise cooking at scale — a cavernous Art Deco brasserie with 23,000-plus Google reviews averaging 4.4 stars and an OAD Casual Europe ranking. Book it for groups, late arrivals off the Perrache trains, or anyone who wants the full bouchon tradition without the intimacy constraints of smaller rivals. Easy to book, open daily until at least 11 pm.

    With 23,422 Google reviews averaging 4.4 stars, Brasserie Georges is the most battle-tested Lyonnaise dining room in the city — and for a group dinner, it is hard to beat.

    Scale is the first thing you register here. Brasserie Georges occupies a cavernous Art Deco hall on the Cours de Verdun Perrache, with soaring ceilings, long banquettes, and a floor plan that seats hundreds without collapsing into chaos. For the food-focused traveler coming to Lyon to eat the canon — quenelles, andouillette, tête de veau, tablier de sapeur , this is one of the few rooms in the city where you can bring a table of eight, eat classically, and not feel like you are inconveniencing anyone. Private and semi-private group arrangements are possible in a space this size, making it a practical anchor for a longer Lyon itinerary built around the bouchon tradition.

    Chef Gérard Valette oversees a kitchen that leans hard into the Lyonnaise repertoire. There is nothing modish here: this is the food that made Lyon's reputation as France's gastronomic capital before the tasting-menu format absorbed all the critical oxygen. For context, you can trace that broader tradition through institutions like Paul Bocuse , L'Auberge du Pont de Collonges in Collonges-au-Mont-d'Or or the three-star precision of Troisgros , Le Bois sans Feuilles in Ouches, but Brasserie Georges is operating in a different register entirely: affordable, abundant, and built for pleasure rather than ceremony.

    The Opinionated About Dining ranking , Casual in Europe #502 (2024), Recommended (2023) , confirms what the review count already suggests: this is a venue with real staying power, not a tourist trap inflated by foot traffic. A 4.4 average across more than 23,000 reviews is a meaningful signal. For the explorer who wants to understand Lyon's dining culture rather than merely sample it, Brasserie Georges offers something the smaller bouchons cannot: the experience of a full, working Lyonnaise brasserie at scale, open every day from 11:30 am through to 11 pm (midnight-plus on Fridays and Saturdays), which makes it genuinely useful for late arrivals or post-event dinners.

    For a group-dining visit, the spatial logic matters. The main room is large enough that a party of six or more will have room to breathe and talk, and the service model is designed for volume without sacrificing pace. Smaller Lyon bouchons like Cafe Comptoir Abel or the three Daniel et Denise addresses (Créqui, Saint-Jean) have more intimate character but real constraints on party size; Le Garet similarly skews toward pairs and small tables. If your group is larger than four, Brasserie Georges becomes the default recommendation for classic Lyonnaise cooking without logistical strain.

    Booking is direct. This is not a hard reservation to secure , come with a day or two of notice and you will almost certainly find a table. The long daily hours mean timing is flexible, which is genuinely useful if your trip involves trains through Perrache. The address at 30 Cours de Verdun Perrache puts it directly in the station quarter, making it a natural first or last meal in the city. For the traveler building a wider French fine-dining itinerary , perhaps including Mirazur in Menton, Flocons de Sel in Megève, or Arpège in Paris , Brasserie Georges functions as the grounding note: this is what French regional cooking looks like when it is not performing for the guides.

    If you want to compare the Lyonnaise tradition from a London or Paris base before your trip, Josephine Bouchon in London and Aux Lyonnais in Paris offer useful reference points , but neither matches the spatial drama or the sheer operational confidence of the original in Lyon. Explore the full picture with our Lyon restaurants guide, and round out your trip planning with our guides to Lyon hotels, Lyon bars, Lyon wineries, and Lyon experiences.

    How to Book

    Booking is easy. Brasserie Georges takes reservations and, given its scale, walk-ins are often viable , but for groups of five or more, call ahead or book online to confirm seating. It opens at 11:30 am daily and runs through to at least 11 pm every night of the week, so scheduling around a Perrache train connection is entirely feasible.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I order at Brasserie Georges?

    • Order from the Lyonnaise classics: quenelles de brochet (pike dumplings in cream sauce), andouillette, and salade lyonnaise are the reference points for this kitchen and this cuisine.
    • The charcuterie and offal dishes are the reason to come here rather than a more generic French brasserie , this is cooking built around Lyon's market and butchery traditions.
    • Avoid the menu if you want to eat lightly; portions here follow brasserie logic, not tasting-menu restraint.

    Does Brasserie Georges handle dietary restrictions?

    • The kitchen is heavily meat- and offal-focused by design. Vegetarian and fish options exist in a brasserie of this scale, but if plant-based eating is a priority, this is not the most accommodating choice in Lyon.
    • For specific allergen or dietary queries, contact the restaurant directly , no booking or phone details are available in our current data, so check their website or arrival inquiry.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Brasserie Georges?

    • Lunch is the better call for atmosphere and pacing. The room is quieter, the light through the Art Deco windows is a genuine spatial bonus, and lunch menus at French brasseries of this type typically offer better value than the à la carte evening rate.
    • Dinner runs later (to midnight on weekends), which is useful for post-train arrivals or a long evening with a group, but the room is busier and noisier.

    What should I wear to Brasserie Georges?

    • Smart casual is the practical answer. No formal dress code is listed, and the brasserie format does not demand it , but this is a room with heritage and a certain grandeur, so visibly underdressing (trainers, sportswear) would feel off.
    • Think: what you would wear to a well-regarded Parisian brasserie. That calibration is about right.

    Can I eat at the bar at Brasserie Georges?

    • No confirmed bar-seating data is available for this venue. Given the scale and brasserie format, counter or bar seating is architecturally plausible, but verify on arrival or contact the restaurant ahead of time.

    How far ahead should I book Brasserie Georges?

    • Booking difficulty is rated Easy. One to two days' notice is generally sufficient for couples or small groups.
    • For parties of six or more, or if you have a fixed departure time tied to Perrache trains, book a week ahead to secure your preferred slot and confirm any group-seating arrangements.

    Is Brasserie Georges good for solo dining?

    • Yes , a brasserie of this size handles solo diners without awkwardness. The scale means no one is watching you eat alone, and the service model is transactional in the leading sense: efficient, not fussy.
    • For a more intimate solo experience with stronger culinary ambition, Cafe Comptoir Abel or one of the Daniel et Denise bouchons will feel more personal , but Brasserie Georges is the right call if you want the full room experience on your own terms.

    Compare Brasserie Georges

    Getting a Table: Brasserie Georges and Alternatives
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    Brasserie GeorgesLyonnaiseEasy
    Le Neuvième ArtContemporary French, Creative€€€€Unknown
    RustiqueCreative€€€€Unknown
    La Mere BrazierFrenchUnknown
    L'Atelier des AugustinsModern Cuisine€€€€Unknown
    MirafloresPeruvian€€€€Unknown

    A quick look at how Brasserie Georges measures up.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I order at Brasserie Georges?

    Go for the Lyonnaise classics — this is the format the kitchen has run for decades. Think charcuterie, quenelles, and slow-braised dishes that reflect the bouchon tradition at brasserie scale. The menu is broad, which means it accommodates the whole table without negotiation. Avoid over-ordering: portions at this scale tend to be generous.

    Does Brasserie Georges handle dietary restrictions?

    The kitchen works with traditional Lyonnaise cuisine, which is meat-forward by nature — quenelles, offal, and pork-based starters are staples. Vegetarian options exist on a menu this size, but this is not the venue to choose if plant-based eating is the priority. If restrictions are significant, flag them when booking: the scale of the operation means staff handle this regularly.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Brasserie Georges?

    Lunch is the practical call. The room opens at 11:30 am daily, walk-in availability is higher at midday, and the Art Deco hall reads well in daylight. Dinner runs later on Fridays and Saturdays (until 12:15 am), which suits groups wanting to stretch the evening. For solo diners or couples, lunch is quieter and easier to drop into without a reservation.

    What should I wear to Brasserie Georges?

    Come as you are, within reason. This is a high-volume Lyonnaise brasserie ranked by Opinionated About Dining in the casual category — the crowd skews local and unfussy. Jeans are fine; suits are not required. The room is grand enough that you will not feel overdressed if you make an effort, but nobody is checking.

    Can I eat at the bar at Brasserie Georges?

    Bar seating is part of the brasserie format, and a venue of this scale — one of the largest dining rooms in Lyon — typically maintains counter options. That said, specific bar configuration is not confirmed in available records, so call ahead (or check on arrival) if solo bar dining is the plan rather than a table.

    How far ahead should I book Brasserie Georges?

    For two, a few days is usually enough — walk-ins are often viable given the room's scale. For groups of five or more, book ahead by at least a week, and phone rather than relying on online forms. Friday and Saturday evenings fill faster; the 12:15 am close on weekends makes those nights a different crowd. OAD recognition in 2023 and 2024 has kept this room on visitors' radar, so don't leave it to the day-of if timing matters.

    Is Brasserie Georges good for solo dining?

    Yes, and it is one of the more comfortable solo options in Lyon. A large brasserie at this address — 30 Cours de Verdun Perrache — does not carry the awkward intimacy of a small bistro where a single cover feels conspicuous. Lunch on a weekday is the easiest entry point: lower pressure, easier seating, and the full menu available from 11:30 am.

    Hours

    Monday
    11:30 am–11 pm
    Tuesday
    11:30 am–11 pm
    Wednesday
    11:30 am–11 pm
    Thursday
    11:30 am–11 pm
    Friday
    11:30 am–12:15 am
    Saturday
    11:30 am–12:15 am
    Sunday
    11:30 am–11 pm

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