Restaurant in Paris, France
Ilô
210ptsSerious Paris cooking at an accessible price.

About Ilô
Ilô holds back-to-back Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) and a 4.9 Google rating at the €€€ price tier in the Marais. It is one of the more accessible serious modern cuisine bookings in Paris right now, with easy availability that the recognition level does not typically allow. Book it if you want precision cooking in the 4th without a €€€€ commitment.
Ilô, Paris — Pearl Verdict
At the €€€ price point, Ilô at 6 Rue Castex in the 4th arrondissement is one of the more accessible serious restaurants in Paris right now. Two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) signal that the inspectors are paying attention, and a Google rating of 4.9 across 192 reviews is unusually consistent for a restaurant at this level. If you want modern cuisine in the Marais without committing to a €€€€ blow-out, this is the booking to make.
Portrait
Rue Castex sits just off the Place de la Bastille, which puts Ilô in the quieter residential fringe of the 4th rather than the tourist-heavy core of the Marais. That address matters: the neighbourhood draws a Parisian crowd rather than a hotel-concierge crowd, and the atmosphere at a restaurant like this tends to reflect that. For the food-focused traveller who wants to eat where locals with good taste actually eat, that distinction is worth registering.
Ilô holds a Michelin Plate for 2024 and again for 2025. The Plate designation is not a star, but it is the Michelin Guide's formal signal that a kitchen is producing cooking of consistent quality and care. Two consecutive years of recognition at a €€€ price tier in Paris is the relevant data point here: the inspectors have looked twice and kept it on the list. That's a meaningful credential in a city where the competition for Michelin attention is as dense as anywhere in the world.
The cuisine type is listed as Modern Cuisine, which in Paris typically means a kitchen working with classical French technique but composing plates without the constraints of a single regional tradition. Expect precision on the plate, considered sourcing, and a menu that changes with the market rather than staying fixed year-round. Modern Cuisine at this price point in the 4th tends to mean shorter menus with higher execution per dish, rather than the sprawling carte you'd find at a brasserie.
On the drinks side, the editorial angle worth holding onto here is whether the beverage program at Ilô holds up as a standalone reason to visit, not just as support for the food. Paris has raised its bar for wine lists at the €€€ tier considerably over the past several years, and a restaurant with this level of Google consensus and Michelin attention would be expected to carry a list with genuine depth in natural and low-intervention wines, given the profile of the neighbourhood and the style of the cooking. For the explorer who treats the wine list as part of the experience rather than an afterthought, Ilô's Marais address and modern kitchen orientation are indicators worth noting. The 4th is not short of wine-forward modern restaurants, and the drinks program is one of the dimensions where Ilô either distinguishes itself or falls into the pack. Without verified specifics on the list, the honest read is: ask about the wine pairing option when you book, and judge from there. For the depth you'd want from a dedicated wine pairing format, venues like Accents Table Bourse have built their reputation specifically around that pillar. Ilô's case rests more squarely on the full experience of food and room.
The Marais location also places Ilô within easy reach of some of the more interesting dining and drinking in central Paris. For explorers building a Paris itinerary around serious eating, the 4th connects naturally to the 3rd and 11th, where much of the city's most forward-thinking cooking is concentrated. See our full Paris restaurants guide for context on how to sequence a multi-night stay, and our full Paris bars guide if you want to plan the evening around Ilô rather than just the dinner itself.
For those comparing Ilô to other serious modern kitchens in France, the benchmark restaurants operating at higher price tiers include Mirazur in Menton, Flocons de Sel in Megève, and Bras in Laguiole. Ilô is not competing directly with those rooms in terms of price or ambition, but knowing where a €€€ Michelin Plate restaurant sits relative to the country's leading tables helps calibrate expectations: you are getting quality cooking without the formality or the invoice that comes with a three-star experience.
Within Paris itself, comparable modern cuisine restaurants in the €€€ tier worth considering alongside Ilô include Anona and Amâlia. If you want to see how a larger operation handles modern French cooking at a higher price point, 114, Faubourg offers a useful contrast. Ilô's advantage over the bigger rooms is intimacy and focus; the trade-off is that the experience is harder to predict from the outside given the data available.
Booking is listed as easy, which is a meaningful differentiator in a city where the restaurants getting this kind of Michelin and review attention often require planning weeks or months out. If you are assembling a Paris trip on a shorter timeline, Ilô is more accessible than its peer-set credential would suggest.
For broader Paris planning: our full Paris hotels guide, full Paris wineries guide, and full Paris experiences guide cover the rest of the trip. Other serious French addresses worth knowing if you are extending beyond the capital: Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern, Maison Lameloise in Chagny, and Troisgros - Le Bois sans Feuilles in Ouches. For a non-French modern cuisine reference at a similar level of seriousness, Frantzén in Stockholm is the obvious European comparison point, though at a significantly higher price tier.
Quick reference: Ilô, 6 Rue Castex, 75004 Paris. Modern Cuisine, €€€. Michelin Plate 2024 and 2025. Google 4.9/5 (192 reviews). Booking difficulty: easy.
How It Compares
Compare Ilô
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ilô | Modern Cuisine | €€€ | Easy |
| Plénitude | Contemporary French | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Pierre Gagnaire | French, Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen | Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Kei | Contemporary French, Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George V | French, Modern Cuisine | €€€€ | Unknown |
A quick look at how Ilô measures up.
Frequently Asked Questions
How far ahead should I book Ilô?
Book at least two to three weeks out. Ilô holds a Michelin Plate for 2024 and 2025, which keeps demand steady, and the room in the 4th arrondissement is small. Weekends will fill faster than midweek lunches, so if your dates are flexible, a Tuesday or Wednesday dinner will give you better availability.
Is Ilô worth the price?
At the €€€ price point, yes — Ilô is one of the more competitively priced Michelin-recognised restaurants in Paris right now. Two consecutive Michelin Plates signal consistent kitchen performance. If you're weighing it against spending more at Plénitude or Alléno Paris, Ilô is the sensible move when you want the credentialled Paris dining experience without the four-figure bill.
What should a first-timer know about Ilô?
Ilô sits on Rue Castex, just off Place de la Bastille in the quieter residential edge of the 4th — not the tourist corridor. It's a Michelin Plate restaurant serving modern cuisine at the €€€ range. Come expecting a focused, serious room rather than a buzzy brasserie; the format rewards diners who are there to eat, not to be seen.
Can I eat at the bar at Ilô?
Bar seating availability at Ilô is not confirmed in the available data. Given the restaurant's size and format in the 4th arrondissement, counter or bar dining is not a reliable walk-in option — check the venue's official channels before assuming you can drop in casually.
Is Ilô good for a special occasion?
Yes, particularly if the occasion calls for serious food without the formality of a three-Michelin-star room. Two consecutive Michelin Plates at €€€ means you get a credentialled experience that feels considered without being intimidating. For a milestone that warrants more ceremony, Plénitude or Le Cinq would add more theatre, but at a significantly higher spend.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Ilô?
Ilô's menu specifics are not documented in the available data, so confirming format or pricing here would be speculation. What the Michelin Plate for both 2024 and 2025 does confirm is sustained kitchen quality at €€€ — that's a reasonable indicator of value in the tasting-menu tier. Check directly with the restaurant for current format options.
What are alternatives to Ilô in Paris?
For modern cuisine at a comparable or slightly higher price, Kei offers Franco-Japanese precision and is Michelin-starred. If budget is the priority, Ilô sits in better-value territory than Pierre Gagnaire, Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen, Plénitude, or Le Cinq, all of which operate at higher price bands and carry greater booking difficulty. Ilô is the right call when you want documented quality without committing to a blowout spend.
Recognized By
More restaurants in Paris
- ArpègeArpège is the strongest case in Paris for a milestone dinner built around vegetables. Alain Passard's three-Michelin-star kitchen sources daily from three biodynamic farms, and the menu shifts with the seasons — meaning no two visits are identical. At €€€€, it is worth booking if this specific philosophy excites you; if you need protein at the centre of the plate, look elsewhere.
- La GrenouillèreLa Grenouillère is a destination, not a Paris dinner option — two hours north in the Pas-de-Calais, Alexandre Gauthier runs a 2-Michelin-Star, Green Star kitchen ranked #77 on the World's 50 Best in 2024. Book well in advance, plan to stay overnight, and go if creative, place-rooted French cooking is your priority. If you need €€€€ ambition in the city, look elsewhere.
- Pierre GagnairePierre Gagnaire holds three Michelin stars and a La Liste score of 98 points (2026), making it one of Paris's most decorated creative French restaurants. At €€€€ and near-impossible to book, it is best reserved for milestone occasions or high-stakes business meals. Plan four to six weeks ahead minimum and contact the restaurant directly.
- Le TailleventLe Taillevent holds two Michelin stars, a La Liste score of 94 points, and one of Europe's deepest wine cellars — 3,800 selections across 40,000 bottles. Book 4–6 weeks out minimum; the restaurant closes weekends and availability is tight. The wine list is the deciding factor: engage with it fully and the $$$$-per-head spend is justified. Skip it and you're paying grande table prices for food alone.
- Guy SavoyGuy Savoy scores 99 points on La Liste 2026 and holds two Michelin stars, making it one of Paris's most decorated classical French kitchens. Dinner-only, Wednesday through Sunday, with a 34,000-bottle wine cellar and a Seine-side address on the Quai de Conti. Book six to eight weeks out at minimum — ideally three months for weekend dates.
- PlénitudePlénitude at Cheval Blanc Paris holds three Michelin stars, 99 points from La Liste, and the #1 ranking in Opinionated About Dining's Classical Europe list for 2025. Chef Arnaud Donckele's sauce-centred tasting menu, paired with Maxime Frédéric's award-winning pastry work and a dining room overlooking the Seine, makes it one of the strongest cases for a splurge meal in Paris — if you can secure the near-impossible reservation.
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