Skip to main content

    Restaurant in Helsinki, Finland

    Gaijin

    410Pearl Points

    Michelin-recognised, €€€ pricing, easy to book.

    Gaijin, Restaurant in Helsinki

    About Gaijin

    A Michelin Plate holder for 2024 and 2025, Gaijin brings Middle Eastern and Asian cooking to Bulevardi at €€€ pricing, with the Star Wine List #1 award (2023) signalling a drinks program that punches above the city norm. Booking is easy relative to Helsinki's Nordic fine-dining competition. The Saturday 3:00 pm opening is the optimal slot for a relaxed, wine-focused meal.

    A Michelin Plate with a 4.2 from over 1,100 Google reviewers: Gaijin earns its reputation on Bulevardi

    Start with the number that matters most: 1,109 Google reviews averaging 4.2 stars, plus a Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025 and the Star Wine List #1 spot in 2023. For a Middle Eastern and Asian kitchen operating in Helsinki at €€€ pricing, that combination of public approval and critical recognition tells you this is a serious restaurant worth planning around, not a casual drop-in. If you are exploring Helsinki's dining scene and want something that diverges sharply from the New Nordic tasting-menu circuit, Gaijin is the most credible alternative in its price tier.

    What Gaijin is and who it is for

    Gaijin sits at Bulevardi 6, a central Helsinki address that puts it within easy reach of the city's design district. The kitchen is led by Zachary Engel, an American-born chef whose career has taken him through serious kitchens before landing in Helsinki. The cuisine sits at the intersection of Middle Eastern and Asian influences, which is a combination that rewards an explorer-type diner rather than someone looking for a predictable set menu format. If your reference points for this kind of cooking are places like Atomix in New York City or Le Bernardin in New York City, expect something more informal and regionally idiosyncratic rather than hyper-refined. The Star Wine List #1 recognition from 2023 signals that the beverage program is a genuine strength here, not an afterthought. For wine-focused diners, that award alone makes Gaijin worth prioritising over comparable Helsinki addresses.

    Lunch versus dinner at Gaijin

    Gaijin does not open for lunch on weekdays. Monday through Friday, doors open at 4:30 pm, which means weekday dining is an evening-only proposition. Saturday and Sunday shift earlier, with service beginning at 3:00 pm, giving you the closest thing to a lunch or late-afternoon slot this kitchen offers. Weekend afternoon arrival at 3:00 pm is the optimal timing if you want a quieter, less rushed experience: the room will be less full than a Friday or Saturday evening peak, you get the full menu without the noise ceiling of a packed Friday night, and you can take your time with a wine list that earned the leading Star Wine List ranking in Finland. For the wine-focused diner in particular, arriving at 3:00 pm on a Saturday and treating it as a long afternoon rather than a dinner sprint is a smarter use of Gaijin's format. Evening service runs until midnight Thursday through Saturday, which makes it a viable late option in a city where late-night quality kitchens are limited. If you are choosing between a Friday dinner and a Sunday evening, Sunday is the lower-pressure night: service ends at 11:00 pm rather than midnight, the crowd skews slightly calmer, and booking is likely to be easier. For groups wanting a more festive atmosphere, Thursday through Saturday evenings deliver that energy, but plan for a louder room as the night progresses.

    How to book and what to expect on arrival

    Booking difficulty at Gaijin is rated Easy, which is a genuine advantage over Helsinki's more tightly held tables at Grön or Olo. You do not need weeks of advance planning, though weekend evenings will fill faster than weekday slots. The address on Bulevardi is walkable from the central city and well-served by public transport. No dress code is listed in the available data, and the Middle Eastern and Asian format suggests a relaxed rather than formal atmosphere. The price point of €€€ positions Gaijin below Helsinki's €€€€ fine-dining tier, which is relevant context: you are paying less than you would at Palace or Finnjävel Salonki, and getting a critically recognised kitchen and an award-winning wine list in return. That value equation is one of the more compelling in Helsinki's current dining market.

    Trust signals and how to read them

    Two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) indicate consistent kitchen quality that has passed independent inspection across two separate years. This is not a fluke year or a one-time nod. The Star Wine List #1 ranking from 2023 is a separate credential that speaks specifically to the drinks program, meaning Gaijin performs at the leading of its category on both food and wine by two independent measurement systems. A Google rating of 4.2 across more than a thousand reviews carries weight precisely because of the volume: a small number of reviews can be gamed or skewed, but 1,109 responses producing a 4.2 average reflects a consistent guest experience rather than an outlier event. For a food-and-travel explorer building a Helsinki itinerary, these three signals in combination make Gaijin one of the more evidence-backed choices in the city.

    Helsinki context: where Gaijin sits in the broader scene

    Helsinki's restaurant scene has a strong New Nordic and Scandinavian centre of gravity, with multiple €€€€ tasting-menu venues competing for the same fine-dining audience. Gaijin operates in a different register, offering Middle Eastern and Asian cooking at a price point one tier below the leading of the market. That positioning is genuinely useful if you are spending several days in Helsinki and want range across your meals rather than a repetition of the same format. Pair Gaijin with one of the Nordic-focused €€€€ addresses and you cover both ends of the city's serious dining offer without doubling up on style. For a deeper look at what else Helsinki offers, the full Helsinki restaurants guide covers the wider field, and if you are planning a broader trip, the Helsinki hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide give you the surrounding context. Beyond Helsinki, serious diners working through Finland's dining scene should also consider Kaskis in Turku and VÅR in Porvoo for regional alternatives, while Kajo in Tampere and Pöllöwaari in Jyväskylä extend the map further inland. The The ROOM by Kozeen Shiwan in Helsinki is another address worth knowing for creative cooking that sits outside the Nordic mainstream, and Lucy in the sky in Espoo and Musta lammas in Kuopio round out the regional picture. The Helsinki wineries guide is worth a look given how seriously Gaijin takes its wine program.

    The verdict

    Book Gaijin if you want a Michelin-recognised kitchen at €€€ pricing with an award-winning wine list, and you value a Middle Eastern and Asian format over Helsinki's default Nordic tasting-menu offer. Arrive on Saturday at 3:00 pm for the leading combination of atmosphere, menu access, and wine focus without peak-hour noise. Booking is easy relative to the city's harder-to-access fine-dining addresses, which removes the usual friction. If Nordic fine dining is your priority, redirect to Grön or Olo. If value at a lower price tier matters more, Nolla operates at €€. But for the specific combination of critical recognition, wine depth, and cuisine that differs from the Helsinki norm, Gaijin is the call.

    FAQs

    Is lunch or dinner better at Gaijin?

    • Gaijin does not serve weekday lunch — the kitchen opens at 4:30 pm Monday through Friday. On weekends, doors open at 3:00 pm, making Saturday afternoon the closest equivalent to a lunch slot and the recommended time for a more relaxed, lower-pressure meal. Evening service Thursday to Saturday runs to midnight and suits a more festive visit, but the room will be louder and bookings fill faster.

    What are alternatives to Gaijin in Helsinki?

    • For Nordic-focused fine dining at a higher price point, Grön and Olo are the benchmark €€€€ addresses. Palace covers Finnish modern cuisine at the leading of the market. For something more affordable, Nolla operates at €€ with a fusion approach. If creative cooking outside the Nordic mainstream interests you, The ROOM by Kozeen Shiwan is worth checking. Gaijin's specific Middle Eastern and Asian combination has no direct equivalent in Helsinki at the same price tier.

    Does Gaijin handle dietary restrictions?

    • No dietary restriction information is available in the current data. Contact the restaurant directly before booking if this is a priority. The Middle Eastern and Asian format typically includes options that accommodate a range of requirements, but confirm specifics with the kitchen ahead of your visit.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Gaijin?

    • No tasting menu format is confirmed in the available data. What is confirmed: Gaijin holds a Michelin Plate for 2024 and 2025 and earned the Star Wine List #1 ranking in 2023, at €€€ pricing. That credential set at this price point represents strong value relative to Helsinki's €€€€ tasting-menu competitors. If a tasting menu format exists, the kitchen's recognition suggests it would be worth the spend. Check directly with the restaurant for current format options.

    Can I eat at the bar at Gaijin?

    • No specific bar-seating information is available in the current data. Given the strong wine program and the Star Wine List #1 recognition, a bar or counter option would make sense as a format, but this cannot be confirmed from available sources. Contact the restaurant or check their booking platform for seating options before arriving expecting bar service.

    What should a first-timer know about Gaijin?

    • Gaijin is not a Nordic tasting-menu restaurant — expect Middle Eastern and Asian cooking, which is a deliberate departure from Helsinki's dominant fine-dining style. It holds a Michelin Plate and an outstanding wine program credential, at €€€ pricing that is one tier below the city's leading fine-dining addresses. Booking is direct relative to Helsinki's harder-to-access venues. Arrive on a Saturday at 3:00 pm for the most relaxed experience, or on a weekday evening if you prefer a quieter room over a weekend atmosphere. No dress code restrictions are confirmed.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is lunch or dinner better at Gaijin?

    Dinner is your only option on weekdays — Gaijin opens at 4:30 pm Monday through Friday, so there is no weekday lunch service. On Saturday and Sunday, doors open at 3 pm, giving you an earlier sitting if you prefer. For a first visit, a weekend evening is the most relaxed entry point given the extra time before closing.

    What are alternatives to Gaijin in Helsinki?

    If you want a tasting-menu format at a higher price point, Grön and Olo are the closest comparisons, though both are harder to book and lean into New Nordic rather than Middle Eastern and Asian cooking. Nolla is worth considering if sustainability credentials matter as much as the food. Palace suits expense-account dining with a more formal register. Gaijin's advantage over all of them is booking ease at €€€ pricing with a wine list that won Star Wine List's top spot in 2023.

    Does Gaijin handle dietary restrictions?

    Specific dietary accommodation policies are not documented in the available venue data. Given the Middle Eastern and Asian cuisine format, vegetable-forward dishes are a common feature of menus in this category, but check the venue's official channels at Bulevardi 6 to confirm what can be arranged for your party before booking.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Gaijin?

    At €€€ pricing with two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) and a Star Wine List No. 1 wine programme, Gaijin delivers credible value for Helsinki's fine-dining tier. Specific tasting menu pricing is not documented here, so confirm current pricing directly with the restaurant. If you are comparing formats, Gaijin's Middle Eastern and Asian approach is a meaningful alternative to the New Nordic tasting menus that dominate this price bracket in the city.

    Can I eat at the bar at Gaijin?

    Bar seating details are not confirmed in the available venue data. What is confirmed: booking difficulty is rated Easy, which means you are unlikely to need a bar seat as a fallback the way you might at tightly held tables like Grön. Contact Gaijin at Bulevardi 6 to ask about walk-in or bar options before you arrive.

    What should a first-timer know about Gaijin?

    Gaijin is a Michelin Plate restaurant (two consecutive years, 2024 and 2025) led by chef Zachary Engel, serving Middle Eastern and Asian food on Bulevardi 6 in central Helsinki. Booking is rated Easy, so you do not need to plan weeks ahead the way you would for Grön or Olo. The wine list earned Star Wine List's No. 1 ranking in 2023, so it is worth engaging with rather than treating as an afterthought. Weekday dining is evenings only from 4:30 pm.

    Location

    Bulevardi 6, 00120 Helsinki, Finland

    Compare Gaijin

    The Complete Picture: Gaijin and Peers
    VenueCuisineAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    GaijinMiddle Eastern, AsianGaijin Helsinki is a restaurant in Helsinki, Finland. It was published on Star Wine List on April 27, 2023 and is a White Star.; Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024); Star Wine List #1 (2023)Easy
    PalaceFinnish, Modern CuisineMichelin 2 StarUnknown
    GrönNew Nordic, CreativeMichelin 1 StarUnknown
    OloScandinavian, Modern CuisineMichelin 1 StarUnknown
    NollaFusion, Modern CuisineUnknown
    SavoyPizzeria, Contemporary European, Modern CuisineUnknown

    Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.

    Also Consider

    • Palace — Finnish, Modern Cuisine, €€€€
    • Grön — New Nordic, Creative, €€€€
    • Olo — Scandinavian, Modern Cuisine, €€€€
    • Nolla — Fusion, Modern Cuisine, €€
    • Savoy — Pizzeria, Contemporary European, Modern Cuisine, €€€€

    Gaijin is the most practical entry point into Helsinki's critically recognised dining scene for the diner who wants Michelin-level credibility without €€€€ pricing. Against Palace, Grön, Olo, and Savoy, all of which operate at €€€€, Gaijin's €€€ positioning delivers a meaningful cost saving while still carrying two consecutive Michelin Plates and the top Star Wine List ranking in Finland. If your priority is the full Nordic tasting-menu experience with the highest levels of kitchen precision, Grön and Olo are the correct choices. But you will pay more, booking is harder, and the format is more structured. Gaijin gives you a different kind of seriousness: a wine-forward room with a Middle Eastern and Asian kitchen that has earned independent critical recognition, at a price that makes a second visit feel financially reasonable.

    For budget-conscious diners, Nolla at €€ is the obvious alternative if price is the deciding factor, and it brings a creative fusion approach that overlaps partially with Gaijin's non-Nordic stance. But Nolla does not carry the same awards track record, and for a wine-focused visitor the Star Wine List credential at Gaijin is a specific draw that Nolla does not replicate. If you are spending multiple evenings in Helsinki and want to spread your budget across different price tiers, a pairing of Gaijin one night and a €€€€ address like Grön or Olo on another covers the city's range without redundancy.

    On booking difficulty, Gaijin is the easiest call among Helsinki's serious restaurants. Grön and Olo require more planning and earlier reservations. Gaijin's Easy booking rating means you can often secure a table within a reasonable window, which matters for travellers building itineraries on shorter notice. For a first-time Helsinki visitor who wants a meal that goes beyond the tourist tier without the complexity of chasing a hard-to-book table, Gaijin is the right starting point.

    Hours

    Monday
    4:30–11 pm
    Tuesday
    4:30–11 pm
    Wednesday
    4:30–11 pm
    Thursday
    4:30 pm–12 am
    Friday
    4:30 pm–12 am
    Saturday
    3 pm–12 am
    Sunday
    3–11 pm

    Recognized By

    Keep this place

    Save or rate Gaijin on Pearl

    Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.