Restaurant in Monte Carlo, Monaco
L'Abysse Monte-Carlo
675ptsTwo Michelin stars. Book lunch first.

About L'Abysse Monte-Carlo
L'Abysse Monte-Carlo holds 2 Michelin stars and an 85-point La Liste Prestige ranking, making it the most credentialled Japanese dining option in Monaco. Book lunch first — it is the more accessible entry point into a kitchen operating at verified two-star level, with dinner requiring 4–6 weeks advance planning at minimum. At €€€€ inside the Hôtel Hermitage, expect formal ambiance and a high per-head spend.
Book L'Abysse at Lunch First
If you are trying to get a table at L'Abysse Monte-Carlo, lunch is your most realistic entry point. The dinner service at this 2-Michelin-starred Japanese restaurant inside the Hôtel Hermitage runs at near-impossible booking difficulty — Monaco's concentration of high-net-worth diners and hotel guests competing for the same seats makes evening reservations a sustained effort. Lunch at a Michelin 2-star venue of this calibre offers the same kitchen, the same technical execution, and in many comparable fine-dining formats, a shorter or slightly more accessible tasting menu at a lower price point. Start there, and if the experience delivers, you will know whether to fight for a dinner seat.
What L'Abysse Actually Is
L'Abysse is the Japanese fine-dining expression within Yannick Alléno's broader presence in Monaco. Alléno, whose name is attached to multiple restaurants across the principality including Pavyllon, un restaurant de Yannick Alléno, is one of France's most decorated chefs — a figure with a documented history of multi-starred kitchens across Paris and beyond. At L'Abysse, the format is Japanese rather than French: this is a venue built around precision Japanese technique, set within the grand interior architecture of the Hermitage, one of Monaco's most formally appointed historic hotels.
The visual experience begins with the room itself. The Hôtel Hermitage carries a Belle Époque grandeur that frames the dining experience before the first course arrives , high ceilings, formal service geometry, the kind of setting where the table itself signals that something deliberate is about to happen. For a food and travel enthusiast who wants context alongside the meal, that framing matters. You are not eating in a minimalist Japanese box; you are eating Japanese fine dining translated through Monaco's particular register of luxury.
On the awards record, the venue holds 2 Michelin stars as of 2025 and an 85-point La Liste Leading Restaurants placement in the 2026 ranking under the Prestige category. La Liste's Prestige tier positions L'Abysse within a global reference set, not just a local one. The Google rating sits at 4.5 from 37 reviews , a small sample by volume, but consistent with a venue where most guests are unlikely to post publicly. These credentials are not decorative: they tell you that the kitchen is operating at a level where the technical standard has been externally verified and held across multiple assessment cycles.
Lunch vs Dinner: The Decision That Matters
The editorial angle here is practical. At the €€€€ price tier in Monaco, both lunch and dinner will be significant expenditure. The question is what each service delivers relative to its difficulty and cost. Dinner at L'Abysse carries the full weight of the venue's ambition , the service rhythm, the pacing, the complete kitchen expression. Lunch, in comparable 2-star Japanese formats, often runs a condensed version that still demonstrates the kitchen's core capabilities. For first-time visitors, lunch is the smarter bet: lower booking friction, likely lower spend, and a genuine read on whether the kitchen justifies a return dinner investment.
If you have already experienced the lunch format and want the full dinner arc, book dinner. The gap in experience quality between the two services at a venue operating at this award level tends to be one of depth and pacing rather than technique , the fundamentals will hold across both. For an explorer visiting Monaco on a wider dining itinerary that might also include Alain Ducasse at Louis XV or Blue Bay Marcel Ravin, building L'Abysse into the lunch slot and reserving dinner for one of those alternatives is a sensible structure.
How L'Abysse Fits Monaco's Japanese Dining Tier
Monaco is not Tokyo. If your reference point for Japanese fine dining is venues like Myojaku, Azabu Kadowaki, or Kagurazaka Ishikawa in Tokyo, or Isshisoden Nakamura in Kyoto, you are comparing against a different category of Japanese institutional depth. L'Abysse is Japanese fine dining built for a European luxury context, with all that implies: ingredient sourcing adjusted for geography, a clientele that is international rather than rooted in Japanese dining culture, and a hotel backdrop that shapes service expectations. That is not a weakness , it is a different proposition. For a Monaco visitor, L'Abysse is the most serious Japanese dining option in the principality. For someone whose primary goal is Japanese cuisine at its source, Kashiwaya in Osaka or Ginza Fukuju in Tokyo would be the more pointed choice. The Monaco-based comparator for Japanese fine dining is Yoshi, also within the principality's hotel dining circuit.
Practical Details
Reservations: Book as far in advance as possible , minimum 4 to 6 weeks for dinner, with earlier attempts strongly advised given the venue's booking difficulty classification and small dining room within a hotel environment. Contact directly via the Hôtel Hermitage reservation channels. Dress: Smart formal is appropriate and expected; the Hermitage's setting and the price tier make this a non-negotiable call. Budget: €€€€ tier in Monaco; plan for a high per-head spend inclusive of the tasting menu format , this is not a venue where à la carte flexibility is likely the primary offering. Location: Hôtel Hermitage Monte-Carlo, 1 Square Beaumarchais, Monaco. For broader context on dining options across the principality, see our full Monte Carlo restaurants guide. For hotel options nearby, our Monte Carlo hotels guide covers the full range. Nearby alternatives worth considering for separate visits include Les Ambassadeurs by Christophe Cussac and Elsa for a lighter Mediterranean counterpoint. If you are extending the trip to the wider Riviera, Hostellerie Jerome in La Turbie and Beef Bar Monaco offer distinct formats for different moments. Explore Monaco bars, wineries, and experiences to complete the itinerary.
Compare L'Abysse Monte-Carlo
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| L'Abysse Monte-Carlo | La Liste Top Restaurants (2026): 85pts; Category: Prestige; Michelin 2 Stars (2025) | €€€€ | — |
| Pavyllon, un restaurant de Yannick Alléno, Monte-Carlo | Michelin 1 Star | €€€€ | — |
| Alain Ducasse- Louis XV | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | — | |
| Blue Bay Marcel Ravin | Michelin 2 Star | €€€€ | — |
| Elsa | Michelin 1 Star | €€€€ | — |
| La Table d'Antonio Salvatore au Rampoldi | Michelin 1 Star | €€€€ | — |
A quick look at how L'Abysse Monte-Carlo measures up.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the tasting menu worth it at L'Abysse Monte-Carlo?
Yes, if Japanese fine dining is your format and Monaco is already your context. Two Michelin stars (2025) and 85 points on La Liste 2026 place L'Abysse among the serious addresses in the principality, not just a hotel restaurant with a premium postcode. The tasting menu is the format here — if you want flexibility or à la carte, this is not the right room. At €€€€ pricing, the value case depends on how much you care about the Japanese fine-dining format specifically, since Alain Ducasse's Louis XV offers comparable prestige at a similar price point in a very different register.
What should I wear to L'Abysse Monte-Carlo?
Formal or near-formal is the safe call. L'Abysse sits inside the Hôtel Hermitage Monte-Carlo at 1 Square Beaumarchais, a heritage hotel in the principality where dress expectations across dining rooms run conservative. Monaco as a city skews formally dressed at dinner, and a 2-Michelin-star room in that setting will read jacket-expected for men, even if not stated explicitly. When in doubt, dress as you would for a starred Parisian room at dinner.
Does L'Abysse Monte-Carlo handle dietary restrictions?
At a 2-Michelin-star restaurant operating in the €€€€ tier, the expectation is that the kitchen will accommodate serious dietary requirements — allergies and medical restrictions — when flagged at the time of booking. Whether the kitchen adapts the full tasting menu format for plant-based or other preference-based diets is harder to confirm without current menu data; check the venue's official channels at booking to establish what is and is not possible before you commit.
Is L'Abysse Monte-Carlo worth the price?
Worth it for diners who specifically want Japanese fine dining in a Monaco context and are comfortable with €€€€ spending — the 2 Michelin stars (2025) and La Liste 2026 recognition at 85 points give it legitimate standing. For the same budget and a broader fine-dining remit, Alain Ducasse's Louis XV at the Hôtel de Paris is the more historically weighted comparison. L'Abysse is the right choice when the Japanese format, not just the prestige address, is the point.
How far ahead should I book L'Abysse Monte-Carlo?
Minimum 4 to 6 weeks for dinner, and that should be treated as a floor, not a target. The Hôtel Hermitage dining rooms fill early, Monaco's event calendar (Grand Prix, Formula E, major races) compresses availability hard across all of Q2, and 2-Michelin-star rooms in small markets have limited covers. Book 8 to 12 weeks out for any date near a Monaco event. Lunch is a more realistic short-notice option, though not reliably walk-in territory at this tier.
Is L'Abysse Monte-Carlo good for solo dining?
Technically possible, but L'Abysse is not structured as a solo-first experience in the way a counter-seat omakase would be. A high-spend tasting menu room inside a grand hotel is generally designed around table dining, and solo covers at €€€€ can feel transactionally awkward without a counter format to anchor the experience. If solo Japanese fine dining is the specific goal, a counter-format omakase in a city where that format is native gives a better solo experience for the money.
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