Restaurant in Kyoto, Japan
Les champs d'or
170ptsKyoto French with a Tabelog stamp of approval.

About Les champs d'or
Les champs d'or brings French technique to Kyoto's ingredient tradition, earning a Tabelog Bronze Award 2025 (score 3.83) and a 4.7 Google rating. Open Tuesday through Saturday for lunch and dinner, it's one of the more accessible bookings in Kyoto's serious dining tier. A practical choice for French tasting menus without the weeks-ahead lead time of the top kaiseki rooms.
Should You Go Back? Yes — and Here's What to Focus On
If you've already visited Les champs d'or once, the question isn't whether it's worth returning to — it is. The question is whether the kitchen has evolved enough to justify a second booking. Based on its Tabelog Bronze Award 2025 with a score of 3.83, the answer leans yes: that rating places it solidly above the Kyoto French dining average, and it's the kind of score that tends to reflect consistency rather than a single strong showing. For a repeat visitor, the focus should shift from novelty to understanding exactly what this kitchen does leading and how to order around its strengths.
French Technique, Kyoto Ingredients
Les champs d'or sits in Nakagyo Ward, in the quiet Izutsuyacho neighbourhood of central Kyoto, and it runs a French kitchen with what Kyoto does better than almost anywhere: hyper-local, seasonally driven ingredient sourcing. The cuisine designation , French / Kyoto , is not marketing shorthand. Kyoto's culinary tradition is built on kyo-yasai (Kyoto vegetables), pristine river fish, and suppliers who have been in relationship with serious restaurants for generations. When a French kitchen in this city earns a Tabelog score above 3.8, it's typically because the sourcing underpins the technique rather than decorating it. The price range is not published in available data, but the Tabelog Bronze classification and the 4.7 Google rating across 63 reviews suggest a restaurant that positions itself at the serious end of mid-to-upper dining without necessarily chasing the full kaiseki price tier.
For a second visit, the practical logic is to arrive with a clearer intent: book the dinner service if you want the full expression of the menu. Lunch runs from 12:00 to 15:00 (last order 13:30), dinner from 18:00 to 22:30 (last order 19:30), Tuesday through Saturday. The dinner window gives the kitchen more room, and French tasting menus tend to expand meaningfully in the evening compared to a lunch set. If your first visit was lunch, dinner is the logical next step to see what the kitchen is actually capable of.
Booking and Practical Details
Les champs d'or is currently rated as easy to book by Pearl's reservation difficulty index , which is worth noting given Kyoto's reputation for hard-to-access serious dining. The phone number on record is 075-255-2277. Reservations: Call directly on 075-255-2277; English speakers should be prepared for a Japanese-language call or ask a hotel concierge to assist. Hours: Tue–Sat, lunch 12:00–15:00 (L.O. 13:30), dinner 18:00–22:30 (L.O. 19:30); closed Sunday and Monday. Dress: No published code, but French fine dining in Kyoto conventionally calls for smart casual at minimum. Budget: Price range not publicly listed; budget accordingly for a French tasting menu format , confirmation of costs should be sought at the time of reservation. Location: 419 Izutsuyacho, Nakagyo Ward, Kyoto, accessible from central Kyoto within a short taxi or walk from the Karasuma Oike area.
How It Compares
Les champs d'or occupies a specific niche in Kyoto's dining map: French technique applied to Kyoto's sourcing tradition, at a price point that sits below the top-tier kaiseki room. If your priority is Kyoto's deepest culinary tradition, Gion Sasaki remains the kaiseki reference point in the city, and venues like Hyotei, Kikunoi Honten, and Mizai represent the classic Japanese multi-course format. None of those are direct competitors to Les champs d'or , they're a different format and a different commitment.
Within Kyoto's French and French-adjacent category, the closest comparison is SEN (French/Japanese, ¥¥¥¥), which pitches itself at a higher price tier. If you want French in Kyoto at a more manageable spend, Les champs d'or is the more accessible entry point. cenci (Italian, ¥¥¥) is a more affordable alternative for a European kitchen using Kyoto produce, though the cuisine format is different. For kaiseki at the leading of the market, Ifuki and Kyokaiseki Kichisen are the names to consider, but both represent a significantly different price point and format commitment. Les champs d'or is the right call if you want French, you want Kyoto ingredients, and you want a room that doesn't require weeks of advance planning.
For context beyond Kyoto, the French fine dining conversation in Japan extends to HAJIME in Osaka, which operates at a higher register entirely, and regionally to akordu in Nara for European-influenced tasting menus in a Kansai setting. Neither replaces Les champs d'or for what it does , a grounded, ingredient-led French kitchen in one of the world's great produce cities.
Explore More in Kyoto and Beyond
If you're building a fuller Kyoto itinerary around this booking, our full Kyoto restaurants guide covers the range from kaiseki to contemporary European. For where to stay, the Kyoto hotels guide covers the key properties. For post-dinner drinking, see our Kyoto bars guide. Further afield, HAJIME in Osaka and akordu in Nara are worth building a Kansai trip around if French and European formats interest you. For reference points in the global French fine dining conversation, Le Bernardin in New York City and Lazy Bear in San Francisco represent what the format looks like at the leading of the market in a different context.
Compare Les champs d'or
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Les champs d'or | Easy | — | |
| Gion Sasaki | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown | — |
| cenci | ¥¥¥ | Unknown | — |
| Ifuki | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown | — |
| Kyokaiseki Kichisen | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown | — |
| SEN | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown | — |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can Les champs d'or accommodate groups?
Groups are possible given the venue's current easy-to-book status, but call ahead on 075-255-2277 to confirm table configuration — French restaurants in Kyoto at this level typically cap comfortable group seating at six to eight. For larger parties, kaiseki venues like Kyokaiseki Kichisen tend to have private room infrastructure better suited to the format.
Is lunch or dinner better at Les champs d'or?
Lunch is the sharper value case: service runs 12:00–15:00 with last orders at 13:30, giving you a defined window that suits a tighter Kyoto itinerary. Dinner (18:00–22:30, last orders 19:30) is the right call if you want a more unhurried pace. Both services share the same Tabelog Bronze 2025 kitchen, so the quality floor doesn't change — it comes down to your schedule.
What should I order at Les champs d'or?
The kitchen is classified as French using Kyoto ingredients, so expect the menu to lean on local seasonal produce interpreted through French technique. Beyond that, specific dishes aren't documented here — call 075-255-2277 before your visit to ask what's current, or let the kitchen guide you through whatever's on that day.
Does Les champs d'or handle dietary restrictions?
No dietary policy is on record for Les Champs d'Or. For a French kitchen working with Kyoto seasonal produce, advance notice is your best move — call 075-255-2277 and flag restrictions when you book, rather than on arrival.
What are alternatives to Les champs d'or in Kyoto?
For French-influenced cooking, cenci is the closest peer — it runs a more contemporary European format and carries stronger critical visibility. If you want to stay in the French-with-Kyoto-produce lane but at a more casual price point, SEN is worth considering. For full kaiseki, Gion Sasaki and Kyokaiseki Kichisen are in a different tier entirely and require significantly more lead time to book.
Is Les champs d'or good for a special occasion?
Yes, with reasonable expectations. The Tabelog Bronze 2025 rating (score 3.83) confirms consistent quality, and a French kitchen in central Kyoto is a natural fit for a celebratory dinner. It's not a maximalist occasion venue — if you need private rooms and ceremony, Kyokaiseki Kichisen is the better call. Les Champs d'Or works best for occasions where the meal itself is the event.
Can I eat at the bar at Les champs d'or?
Bar seating isn't documented for Les Champs d'Or. French restaurants in Kyoto at this scale occasionally have counter seats, but to confirm availability and whether solo diners are accommodated there, check the venue's official channels at 075-255-2277.
Hours
Tue, Wed, Thu, Fri, Sat 12:00 - 15:00 L.O. 13:30 18:00 - 22:30 L.O. 19:30
Recognized By
More restaurants in Kyoto
- OgataOgata is a 16-seat kaiseki counter in Shimogyo, Kyoto, holding two Michelin stars and ten years of Tabelog Gold recognition. Dinner runs JPY 60,000–79,999 before drinks and a 10% service charge. Booking is near impossible without months of advance planning, but for serious kaiseki at the counter, it earns its place on any shortlist.
- MizaiMizai holds three Michelin stars and a sustained Tabelog track record across nearly a decade, with dinner running to ¥80,000–¥99,999 per person all-in. Chef Hitoshi Ishihara structures the meal around the spirit of the tea ceremony in a 15-seat room inside Maruyama Park. Book for a serious special occasion; reservations are near-impossible to secure without months of advance planning.
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