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    Restaurant in Nice, France

    Les Agitateurs

    450Pearl Points

    Nice's most ambitious kitchen. Book it.

    Les Agitateurs, Restaurant in Nice

    About Les Agitateurs

    Les Agitateurs is the most technically ambitious restaurant in Nice right now, with Michelin stars in both 2024 and 2025 under chefs Ron Hsu and Aaron Phillips. At €€€€, it is a serious commitment, but a 4.8 Google rating across 1,100-plus reviews backs the spend. Book three to four weeks ahead minimum — this is not a walk-in venue.

    Verdict

    Book Les Agitateurs if you want the most technically ambitious cooking in Nice right now. Chefs Ron Hsu and Aaron Phillips have held a Michelin star consecutively in 2024 and 2025, which in a city better known for Niçoise tradition than creative fine dining is a meaningful signal. At €€€€ pricing, this is not a casual dinner, but among Nice's top-tier restaurants it makes a credible case for being the kitchen pushing hardest against convention. If creative cuisine from a duo with clear technical command is what you're after, this is your table.

    The Kitchen

    Ron Hsu and Aaron Phillips run a creative programme that sits outside the French classical tradition dominating much of the Côte d'Azur's fine dining. The Michelin recognition, sustained across two consecutive years, reflects consistency rather than a single strong season — that matters when you're spending at this price point. The cuisine type is listed simply as Creative, which in practice means a menu built around technique and invention rather than regional loyalty. For context, Mirazur in Menton — one of the most decorated restaurants in southern France , operates within a broadly similar Mediterranean-creative register but with three stars and correspondingly higher demand and price. Les Agitateurs sits below that tier in recognition but represents a genuine alternative for diners who want serious cooking without the full Mirazur booking gauntlet.

    The Creative designation also distinguishes this kitchen sharply from Nice's Provençal and Niçoise stalwarts. Where a restaurant like Flaveur works within a Modern French idiom rooted in regional produce, Les Agitateurs appears to use the Côte d'Azur as a backdrop rather than a rulebook. That's neither better nor worse, but it tells you something important about what to expect: don't come here for a definitive pissaladière or socca moment. Come for cooking that treats the Mediterranean as an ingredient list, not a mandate.

    For explorers who benchmark against France's broader creative fine dining tier, the closest reference points are kitchens like Arpège in Paris or the seasonal precision of Flocons de Sel in Megève, though Les Agitateurs operates at a different scale. Internationally, the creative rigour of Quique Dacosta in Dénia or Cocina Hermanos Torres in Barcelona offers a useful framing: these are kitchens where technique is the story, and where the dining experience is structured around a sequence of courses that build on each other. If that format appeals to you, Les Agitateurs belongs in the same conversation.

    Practical Context

    The address is 24 Rue Bonaparte, 06300 Nice , in the city proper rather than the port or beachfront tourist corridor. That positioning matters: this is not a restaurant serving summer walk-in traffic. It is a destination booking, and you should treat it as one.

    Booking difficulty is rated Hard. With a Michelin star, sustained Google ratings of 4.8 across 1,119 reviews, and a format that almost certainly runs on a set tasting menu with limited covers, lead time matters. Plan for a minimum of three to four weeks out; during summer on the Côte d'Azur, longer is safer. There is no booking link or phone number available in our current data, so check the restaurant's own website directly for reservations.

    Know Before You Go

    • Address: 24 Rue Bonaparte, 06300 Nice, France
    • Price range: €€€€
    • Awards: Michelin 1 Star (2024, 2025)
    • Google rating: 4.8 from 1,119 reviews
    • Cuisine: Creative
    • Chefs: Ron Hsu and Aaron Phillips
    • Booking difficulty: Hard , reserve at least 3–4 weeks ahead, longer in summer
    • Dress code: Not confirmed; given the price tier and Michelin standing, smart casual is the floor
    • Dietary restrictions: Contact the restaurant directly before booking

    How It Compares

    See the full comparison section below for how Les Agitateurs positions against Flaveur, L'Aromate, JAN, and others in Nice's top tier.

    Pearl Picks: More to Explore in Nice

    FAQ

    What should I order at Les Agitateurs?

    • The kitchen runs a creative format, which almost certainly means a set tasting menu rather than à la carte choice. Specific dishes are not confirmed in our current data , contact the restaurant directly or check their website for the current menu before you book.

    What should a first-timer know about Les Agitateurs?

    • This is a Michelin-starred creative restaurant in Nice, not a Niçoise or Provençal experience. Expect a structured multi-course format, €€€€ pricing, and a room that takes cooking seriously. Book well in advance , this is not a walk-in venue. If you're new to this price tier in Nice, read our full Nice restaurants guide first to calibrate expectations across the city's leading table options.

    Does Les Agitateurs handle dietary restrictions?

    • No confirmed dietary policy is available in our current data. Given the tasting menu format typical of kitchens at this level, restrictions almost always need to be flagged at booking, not on the night. Contact the restaurant directly before reserving , don't leave this to chance at €€€€ pricing.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Les Agitateurs?

    • If creative, technically driven cooking is what you want from a Nice dinner, yes. Two consecutive Michelin stars and a 4.8 Google rating across more than 1,100 reviews suggests the kitchen is delivering at a consistent level. For context, Flaveur offers a broadly comparable price tier with a more regionally rooted French approach , choose based on whether you want innovation or tradition at the leading end.

    What should I wear to Les Agitateurs?

    • No formal dress code is confirmed, but at €€€€ and with a Michelin star, smart casual is the practical minimum. Nice skews less formal than Paris at equivalent price points, but turning up in beachwear would be out of place. When in doubt, dress as you would for a serious city restaurant rather than a coastal bistro.

    Can I eat at the bar at Les Agitateurs?

    • No seating configuration is confirmed in our current data. Creative tasting menu restaurants at this level rarely offer bar seating as a separate format. Check directly with the restaurant , but plan on booking a full table experience.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I order at Les Agitateurs?

    The tasting menu is the format this kitchen is built around — Ron Hsu and Aaron Phillips run a creative programme, so ordering à la carte, if available, would work against what makes the restaurant worth the €€€€ price point. Go with the full menu and let the chefs set the pace. Specific dishes are not published in advance, which is part of the point.

    What should a first-timer know about Les Agitateurs?

    This is not a classical French restaurant. Hsu and Phillips cook outside the Provençal and French fine dining tradition that dominates the Côte d'Azur, so arrive expecting something more experimental than the region's typical luxury offering. The address — 24 Rue Bonaparte, in the city proper — puts you away from the tourist beachfront, which is a signal about what the restaurant is going for. Michelin has given it a star in both 2024 and 2025, so the ambition is substantiated.

    Does Les Agitateurs handle dietary restrictions?

    check the venue's official channels before booking if you have dietary requirements — this is standard practice for any Michelin-starred tasting menu format, where the kitchen constructs a fixed progression in advance. Creative tasting menus at this price point (€€€€) typically accommodate restrictions with advance notice, but no specific policy is publicly documented for Les Agitateurs.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Les Agitateurs?

    At €€€€ pricing, Les Agitateurs is one of the more expensive meals you will have in Nice — but it is also the most technically ambitious, backed by consecutive Michelin stars in 2024 and 2025. Compared to Flaveur or JAN, which offer strong value at lower price points, Les Agitateurs asks you to pay for a genuinely distinct creative vision. Worth it if that format is what you are after; less so if you want something more relaxed or regional.

    What should I wear to Les Agitateurs?

    A Michelin-starred creative restaurant at €€€€ in Nice warrants smart, considered dress — think contemporary and neat rather than formal black-tie. The kitchen's non-classical ethos suggests the room is unlikely to be stiff, but underdressing would be out of place. No dress code is formally published, so when in doubt, treat it as you would any serious one-star dinner.

    Can I eat at the bar at Les Agitateurs?

    No bar seating or walk-in counter option is documented for Les Agitateurs. At this format and price level, the expectation is a reserved table for the full tasting menu experience. If bar dining or drop-in flexibility matters to you, La Merenda or a more casual Nice option would be a better fit.

    Location

    24 Rue Bonaparte, 06300 Nice, France

    Compare Les Agitateurs

    Les Agitateurs vs. Similar Venues
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    Les AgitateursCreative€€€€Michelin 1 Star (2025); Michelin 1 Star (2024)Hard
    FlaveurModern French, Creative€€€€Michelin 2 StarUnknown
    L'AromateModern Cuisine€€€€Michelin 1 StarUnknown
    Pure & VNeobistro - Nordic, Modern Cuisine€€€€Unknown
    JANModern French, Modern European, Creative€€€€Unknown
    La MerendaNiçoise, Provençal€€Unknown

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

    Also Consider

    • Flaveur — Modern French, Creative, €€€€
    • L'Aromate — Modern Cuisine, €€€€
    • Pure & V — Neobistro - Nordic, Modern Cuisine, €€€€
    • JAN — Modern French, Modern European, Creative, €€€€
    • La Merenda — Niçoise, Provençal, €€

    Among Nice's €€€€ restaurants, Les Agitateurs is the clearest choice if creative cooking and technical ambition are your priorities. Flaveur and L'Aromate operate at the same price tier but within a more classically French idiom — both are strong options if you want regional produce and familiar fine dining structure. Les Agitateurs is the more adventurous booking, and the Michelin recognition suggests the kitchen earns that positioning.

    JAN brings a South African perspective to Modern European and Creative cooking and is worth comparing directly: both restaurants push against local tradition, but JAN has built a stronger international profile among visitors seeking something outside the French canon. Pure & V occupies a more niche position with its Nordic-influenced neobistro format — it is a different experience at the same price, better suited to diners who want a lighter, vegetable-forward approach rather than the full creative tasting menu format.

    If budget is a factor, La Merenda at €€ is the sharpest contrast: it is the go-to for authentic Niçoise cooking at a fraction of the price and with no reservations taken at all. For an evening split between tradition and ambition, La Merenda for lunch and Les Agitateurs for dinner is a practical itinerary that covers both ends of what Nice's restaurant scene does well.

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