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    Restaurant in London, United Kingdom

    City Social

    410pts

    Serious City dining with a view that delivers.

    City Social, Restaurant in London

    About City Social

    Jason Atherton's 24th-floor City room delivers modern European cooking anchored by Josper-grilled Cumbrian beef, a wine list with genuine range across price points, and a skyline view that earns its keep. Holding a Michelin Plate and ranked in the Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Europe, it is one of the more defensible £££ choices in EC2N for a business dinner or special occasion.

    A 24th-floor room that earns its place in the City

    4.4 stars across nearly 1,900 Google reviews is a meaningful signal for a restaurant at this price point — and at City Social, that rating reflects something real. Jason Atherton's room on the 24th floor of Tower 42 has been holding its position in the Opinionated About Dining Leading Restaurants in Europe rankings since at least 2023, reaching #507 in 2024 before settling at #648 in 2025. That modest slip is worth noting, but it does not change the fundamental case for booking here: for a £££ modern European dinner with a skyline view and a wine list worth paying attention to, City Social remains one of the more defensible choices in the Square Mile.

    The visual argument starts the moment you step out of the lift. The room is dark and considered, with art deco details threading through the design without overwhelming it. City workers fill the bar early; the dining room beyond settles into something quieter. The City skyline through the floor-to-ceiling windows is the kind of view that actually affects how a meal feels — not just a backdrop, but a genuine part of the experience. If you are bringing someone who has not been before, the room alone does a lot of the work.

    What to eat and drink

    Chef Paul Walsh runs a menu anchored in generous portions and quality sourcing. The Josper grill is central to the kitchen's output: Cumbrian beef, available in multiple cuts including rib-eye and sirloin, is the clearest expression of what the kitchen does well. This is not a menu built around minimalist technique or elaborate tasting-menu theatre. It is confident, well-executed modern European cooking with the kind of portion generosity that suits the City clientele and the £££ price tier.

    The wine list is where City Social separates itself from comparable rooms at this altitude. The Michelin Plate recognition the restaurant holds for 2025 acknowledges the overall quality of the kitchen, but the wine list , described as offering an appealing mix of prices and styles , is where a wine-focused diner will find genuine depth. At a room where a business dinner or a significant occasion is the typical driver, having a list that moves across price points without feeling either thin at the affordable end or perfunctory at the leading matters. If you are choosing between City Social and a comparable City restaurant primarily on the basis of wine, the list here earns the visit. The cocktail programme at the bar is also worth arriving early for , the bar buzz is part of what makes the room work before dinner, and it is one of the better pre-dinner options in EC2N.

    For explorers looking to benchmark City Social against broader UK fine dining, the kitchen sits in a different register from destination restaurants like The Fat Duck in Bray, L'Enclume in Cartmel, or Moor Hall in Aughton. City Social is not trying to be that kind of restaurant. It is a high-performing City room with a serious wine list and a skyline that those destination restaurants cannot match. The comparison that actually helps you decide is within London itself , see the section below.

    Booking and logistics

    City Social sits at a moderate booking difficulty , you do not need to plan months ahead, but leaving it to the week before for a Friday or Saturday evening will narrow your options. The 24th floor of Tower 42 at 25 Old Broad Street is accessible by lift from the ground floor lobby; the building entrance is standard City office-tower security, so factor a few extra minutes if it is your first visit. The restaurant draws heavily from the City professional crowd, which means weekday evenings can be busier than weekends , a useful detail if flexibility allows. There is no confirmed dress code in the venue data, but the room and price point signal smart-casual at minimum; arriving in business attire on a weekday evening is entirely unremarkable here.

    For broader London context, our full London restaurants guide covers the city's range across price tiers and neighbourhoods. If you are planning a wider trip and want to map out hotels, bars, experiences, or even wineries alongside your dining, those guides sit alongside this one. Within the City and its immediate surroundings, restaurants like Story and Dysart Petersham offer different but legitimate alternatives depending on what you are after. If the Josper-grill-and-skyline formula appeals but you want to explore what else is available at a similar price point, Row on 5 and Cafe Cecilia are worth putting on your shortlist, as is 104. For those willing to travel beyond London, Gidleigh Park in Chagford, Hand and Flowers in Marlow, and hide and fox in Saltwood each represent strong regional alternatives at a comparable or lower spend. For international context on what Atherton-adjacent modern European cooking looks like at the highest level, Frantzén in Stockholm and FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai set a useful benchmark.

    The verdict

    Book City Social if: you want a City dinner that earns its price through a combination of serious cooking, a wine list with genuine range, and a room that makes an impression. It is not the destination-dining pilgrimage that a two- or three-star London restaurant represents, but it is a more interesting and better-executed meal than most rooms at this altitude in London. For business entertaining, a skyline anniversary dinner, or a wine-forward evening in EC2N, the case for City Social is clear.

    FAQ

    • What should I wear to City Social? Smart-casual is the practical minimum, and business attire fits without question. The room is dark and designed with care , showing up underdressed will feel out of place. If you are coming straight from a City office, you will fit in without changing.
    • What should I order at City Social? The Josper-grilled Cumbrian beef is the clearest reason to be here , multiple cuts available, including rib-eye and sirloin. Chef Paul Walsh's menu is built around this kind of confident, generous cooking rather than elaborate tasting-menu sequences. Arrive early and spend time at the bar: the cocktail programme is worth it.
    • Can I eat at the bar at City Social? The bar is a genuine pre-dinner destination in its own right, and the buzz at the bar is one of the first things you notice on arrival. Whether bar dining is offered as a formal option is not confirmed in the venue data, but arriving early and drinking at the bar before moving to the dining room is a well-established pattern here.
    • Is City Social worth the price? At £££, yes , particularly if you are factoring in the view, the wine list depth, and the quality of the Josper grill sourcing. It is not priced like the ££££ London rooms (CORE, The Ledbury, Restaurant Gordon Ramsay), which means you get a serious modern European dinner with a better-than-average wine list at a price point that does not require the same level of commitment. For a City dinner, that is a fair deal.
    • Is the tasting menu worth it at City Social? The venue data does not confirm a tasting menu format, and the menu description suggests the kitchen skews toward à la carte with multiple cuts and generous dishes rather than a fixed progression. If a tasting menu is your preferred format, confirm availability when booking , do not assume it exists. For tasting-menu format at this tier in London, Story is a strong alternative to consider.
    • What are alternatives to City Social in London? At £££: Dysart Petersham for a quieter, more neighbourhood-focused experience; Cafe Cecilia for a different style of modern European cooking. At ££££: The Ledbury if you want the most technically ambitious modern European cooking in London; Dinner by Heston Blumenthal if a big-room, view-plus-serious-cooking combination appeals but you want a different format. City Social's combination of £££ pricing, skyline, and wine list depth is not easily replicated elsewhere in the City specifically.
    • Is City Social good for a special occasion? Yes, particularly for anniversaries or business milestones where the room needs to do some of the heavy lifting. The view, the art deco design, and the wine list range make it easier to build a memorable evening than at a comparable-priced restaurant in a ground-floor room. For a more intimate special occasion dinner, Dysart Petersham is worth considering if you want a quieter setting.

    Compare City Social

    City Social Side-by-Side
    VenueCuisineAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    City SocialModern CuisineThe buzz from the bar is the first thing you notice at Jason Atherton’s handsome restaurant on the 24th floor of Tower 42. Dark and moody, with a subtle art deco twist, it boasts impressive views of the City skyline. The menu of generous modern European dishes includes multiple cuts of Cumbrian beef cooked on the Josper grill, from rib-eye to sirloin. The wine list offers an appealing mixture of prices and styles, and there are noteworthy cocktails too.; Michelin Plate (2025); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Europe Ranked #648 (2025); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Europe Ranked #507 (2024); Opinionated About Dining Casual in Europe Recommended (2023)Moderate
    CORE by Clare SmythModern BritishMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Restaurant Gordon RamsayContemporary European, FrenchMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Sketch, The Lecture Room and LibraryModern FrenchMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    The LedburyModern European, Modern CuisineMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Dinner by Heston BlumenthalModern British, Traditional BritishMichelin 2 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown

    A quick look at how City Social measures up.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I wear to City Social?

    The room is dark, moody, and art deco-inflected — it reads as a dressed-up City crowd. A jacket for men fits the tone; overly casual dress will feel out of place given the £££ price point and 24th-floor setting. Think business-dinner smart rather than formal black tie.

    What should I order at City Social?

    The Josper grill is the kitchen's centrepiece, and the Cumbrian beef cuts — rib-eye through sirloin — are the most documented standout on the menu. Chef Paul Walsh's menu runs to generous modern European portions, so lean into the grill section. The cocktail bar is also a genuine draw, not an afterthought.

    Can I eat at the bar at City Social?

    The bar at City Social has a reputation in its own right — the buzz there is noted as the first thing you notice on arrival. Bar seating is an option if you want a more casual visit at this price point, and the cocktail list is considered noteworthy. If you want the full skyline view with dinner, book the restaurant proper.

    Is City Social worth the price?

    At £££, City Social holds up: a Michelin Plate (2025), an Opinionated About Dining ranking of #507 in Europe for 2024 (rising to #648 in 2025 across a wider pool), and 4.4 stars across nearly 1,900 Google reviews all point to consistent delivery. For a City business dinner or a room that earns its view, the value case is solid. If you want pure tasting-menu precision at a similar spend, The Ledbury sets a higher bar.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at City Social?

    City Social's format leans toward generous à la carte rather than a destination tasting menu — the Josper grill and multiple beef cuts signal a room built around confident individual dishes. If a structured multi-course tasting experience is your priority at this price tier, CORE by Clare Smyth or The Ledbury are better fits. City Social is the stronger call when you want a proper dinner with flexibility over what you order.

    What are alternatives to City Social in London?

    For a similar City-adjacent modern European dinner at £££, Dinner by Heston Blumenthal offers more destination-menu credentials. If the view is part of the appeal but you want to step up the formality, Restaurant Gordon Ramsay is the logical escalation at higher spend. For something closer in tone and price but with more tasting-menu focus, CORE by Clare Smyth is worth the comparison. City Social sits ahead of most casual City dining options on cooking quality.

    Is City Social good for a special occasion?

    Yes — the 24th-floor City skyline view, the art deco room, and a Michelin Plate-recognised kitchen make this a reliable special-occasion booking that does not require six-month advance planning. It works well for anniversaries or milestone dinners where the setting matters as much as the food. For a birthday where the tasting menu IS the occasion, The Ledbury or CORE by Clare Smyth carry more weight.

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