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    Restaurant in Lima, Peru

    Mérito

    1,895Pearl Points

    Book early. The counter seats are worth it.

    Mérito, Restaurant in Lima

    About Mérito

    Ranked #55 on the World's 50 Best in 2024 and #6 in OAD's South America list for 2025, Mérito is one of Lima's most consistently recognised kitchens. Chef Juan Luis Martínez blends Venezuelan instincts with Peruvian ingredients at a technical level that justifies the booking difficulty. Reserve well ahead and request the chef's counter.

    The Verdict

    Seven years after opening in Barranco, Mérito has earned its place among the most consistently decorated restaurants in Lima. Ranked #55 on the World's 50 Best in 2024 (up from #59 in 2023) and #6 in Opinionated About Dining's South America rankings for 2025, this is not a restaurant riding a trend — it is a kitchen with a clear, technically precise point of view. The premise is Venezuelan-Peruvian fusion executed with genuine finesse: chef Juan Luis Martínez uses Peru's pantry as his canvas while drawing on his Caracas roots to produce a menu that reads as neither novelty nor nostalgia. Book here for a special occasion or a serious meal. If you cannot get a table — and at this level of recognition, that is a real possibility , Kjolle and Maido operate in a comparable register.

    About Mérito

    Mérito opened in 2018 at Jr. 28 De Julio 206 in Barranco, Lima's most design-forward neighbourhood, and has built its reputation on a discipline that is rarer than the awards suggest: restraint. Martínez, who trained at La Casserole du Chef and spent years absorbing Peruvian technique before opening his own room, does not overcrowd plates. The kitchen's strength is in coaxing flavour from ingredients that most menus treat as supporting cast. Vegetables, fermented elements, and Amazonian fruits like cocona and sanky get the same attention as the protein. La Liste scores Mérito at 92 points in 2026 (down slightly from 94.5 in 2025, but still firmly in the upper tier of South American fine dining), and that consistency across multiple independent systems , 50 Best, OAD, La Liste , is meaningful evidence that this is not a single-year flash.

    The verified menu touchstones give a useful flavour of the kitchen's approach: scallops paired with sanky and jalapeño; fish tartare with green tomato, huacatay (black mint), and matured cheese; white fish with cocona citrus. These combinations share a logic , Peruvian acids and aromatics meeting Venezuelan-inflected seasoning , rather than being scattered experiments. The signature dessert is a Peruvian chocolate rock; when in season, the grilled custard apple is also worth ordering. The cocktail list deserves attention beyond the wine: the Cinnamon Spice (pisco macerated with cinnamon and apple liqueur) and the Coconut Anise (rum, coconut liqueur, passion fruit) are house signatures built around the same Latin American pantry that drives the kitchen. The wine list is weighted toward South American low-intervention bottles with Old World selections alongside , a sensible pairing for the food's flavour range.

    The two-floor restaurant runs lunch and dinner Tuesday through Saturday, with a lunch-only window on Monday. Sundays are closed. Service hours are 12:30–3:30 pm and 7–10:30 pm. For a special-occasion dinner, the chef's counter is the seat to request , it is the most engaged version of the Mérito experience, and worth specifying when you book. The room draws a strong local following, which matters: restaurants that rely on international press tend to coast; restaurants packed with informed Lima diners stay sharp.

    Pricing is not confirmed in Pearl's data, so budget conservatively for a Lima fine-dining benchmark. For comparison, the top tier of Lima's dining scene , venues ranked in 50 Best's top 60 , typically runs in a range that warrants treating this as a considered splurge rather than a casual dinner. Booking difficulty is rated Near Impossible at this level of global recognition, so plan several weeks ahead at minimum and consider midweek lunch if your dates are flexible. Mérito is part of a Barranco dining cluster worth building a day around; see our full Lima restaurants guide for context on the wider neighbourhood, and our Lima hotels guide if you are staying nearby.

    For those planning a broader Peru itinerary, the country's high-altitude and regional cooking is worth exploring beyond Lima: Mil Centro in Moray, Chicha por Gastón Acurio in Cusco, and Cirqa in Arequipa each represent distinct regional traditions that complement what Mérito does in the capital.

    Recognition & Rankings

    • World's 50 Best Restaurants: #55 (2024), #59 (2023)
    • Opinionated About Dining , South America: #6 (2025), #7 (2024), #10 (2023)
    • La Liste Leading Restaurants: 92 pts (2026), 94.5 pts (2025)
    • Google Reviews: 4.8 from 900 reviews

    Booking & Practical Details

    Mérito operates Tuesday–Saturday for lunch (12:30–3:30 pm) and dinner (7–10:30 pm), plus Monday lunch only. Sundays are closed. Given its consistent position in global rankings, expect Near Impossible booking difficulty , reserve as far in advance as possible. Midweek lunch is your leading option if the dinner slots are gone. Request the chef's counter explicitly when booking. No phone or booking URL is confirmed in Pearl's data; search directly for Mérito at Jr. 28 De Julio 206, Barranco, or check via third-party reservation platforms. For broader Lima planning, see our Lima bars guide, Lima wineries guide, and Lima experiences guide.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should a first-timer know about Mérito?

    Book the chef's counter if it's available — the database specifically flags it as the seat to request, and at a restaurant ranked #55 on the World's 50 Best (2024), that access matters. Mérito blends Venezuelan and Peruvian ingredients in a format closer to a tasting-menu experience than à la carte. Come with an open schedule: lunch runs until 3:30 pm and dinner until 10:30 pm, so there's no rush, but tables turn.

    Can I eat at the bar at Mérito?

    The chef's counter is the seat to target at Mérito — the venue data specifically recommends booking it. Beyond that, Mérito is a two-floor sit-down restaurant in Barranco, not a bar-first format, so walk-in bar eating is not a reliable option. If you want flexibility, plan ahead and request the counter when reserving.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Mérito?

    Both services run the same hours structure (12:30–3:30 pm and 7–10:30 pm, Tuesday through Saturday, plus Monday lunch), so the kitchen isn't scaled back at midday. Lunch in Barranco carries a relaxed neighbourhood energy that suits Mérito's two-floor, locally loved format — and it may be slightly easier to secure a reservation. Dinner is the call for a special occasion when the full cocktail list and wine selection are part of the plan.

    Does Mérito handle dietary restrictions?

    The venue data highlights vegetable dishes as a clear strength — La Liste specifically calls them out — which suggests the kitchen has range beyond meat-focused plates. That said, specific dietary accommodation policies aren't documented in available data. check the venue's official channels before booking if a restriction is non-negotiable; at OAD #6 in South America (2025), the kitchen is unlikely to be inflexible, but confirm ahead.

    Is Mérito good for a special occasion?

    Yes, and it's a more considered choice than the obvious Lima options. Ranked #55 on the World's 50 Best (2024) and 94.5 points on La Liste (2025), it carries the credentials without the corporate-event feel. The bespoke cocktail list and South American low-intervention wine selection give the meal structure for a celebratory dinner. Book the chef's counter for two rather than a standard table if the occasion calls for it.

    What are alternatives to Mérito in Lima?

    Kjolle (led by Pía León, also World's 50 Best ranked) is the closest peer for produce-driven progressive cooking, and worth comparing directly if you're deciding between the two. Mayta is the call if you want a more Peruvian-focused menu without the Venezuelan inflection. Astrid & Gastón remains the landmark Miraflores option for groups who want a full tasting-menu format in a more formal setting. Isolina Taberna Peruana is the right pick if you want Peruvian comfort cooking without the fine-dining stakes.

    What should I wear to Mérito?

    Mérito sits in Barranco, Lima's most design-forward neighbourhood, and draws a local crowd that skews creative and well-dressed without being formal. A dress code isn't documented in the venue data, but the combination of World's 50 Best standing and a two-floor restaurant format points to smart casual as a reasonable baseline. Avoid beach-trip casual; the setting and the price point warrant more than that.

    Location

    Jr, 28 De Julio 206, Barranco 15063, Peru

    Lima, Peru

    Compare Mérito

    Price vs. Value: Mérito
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    MéritoNear Impossible
    Astrid & GastónUnknown
    KjolleUnknown
    MaytaUnknown
    FiestaUnknown
    Isolina Taberna PeruanaUnknown

    What to weigh when choosing between Mérito and alternatives.

    Also Consider

    How It Compares

    Mérito sits in a different category to most of Lima's fine-dining options: its Venezuelan-Peruvian framework is singular, and its consistent performance across OAD, La Liste, and the World's 50 Best gives it more objective validation than most peers at this price tier. Astrid & Gastón carries more institutional prestige and a deeper wine program, making it the better choice if legacy and occasion formality matter most to you. But Mérito's kitchen is tighter and more personal in its current form. Kjolle is the strongest direct alternative if Mérito is fully booked: it operates at a comparable technical level with a similarly produce-led approach, though it focuses exclusively on Peruvian territory rather than cross-cultural fusion.

    Mayta is a useful comparison for diners who want modern Peruvian cooking in a somewhat more accessible booking window. It does not carry Mérito's ranking weight, but the kitchen is serious and the value proposition is strong. Fiesta and Isolina Taberna Peruana serve a different purpose: both are rooted in traditional Peruvian cooking with less fusion ambition, and they are the right choice if you want to eat dishes that feel grounded in Lima's culinary heritage rather than a chef's personal cross-cultural dialogue. Isolina in particular is the practical pick for a lower-commitment, high-satisfaction meal in a neighbourhood setting.

    If you are deciding between Mérito and the very top of Lima's ranking — Central and Maido — the choice comes down to what you want from the meal. Central is the most ambitious and theatrical of the three, with a tasting menu built around altitude and ecosystem. Maido is the pick for Nikkei precision. Mérito is the right call when you want technical cooking that feels personal rather than monumental, and when the Venezuelan-Peruvian dialogue is itself the draw. For anyone building a Lima itinerary across multiple meals, see our full Lima restaurants guide to sequence the options by neighbourhood and occasion type.

    Hours

    Monday
    12:30–3:30 pm, 7–10:30 pm
    Tuesday
    12:30–3:30 pm, 7–10:30 pm
    Wednesday
    12:30–3:30 pm, 7–10:30 pm
    Thursday
    12:30–3:30 pm, 7–10:30 pm
    Friday
    12:30–3:30 pm, 7–10:30 pm
    Saturday
    12:30–3:30 pm, 7–10:30 pm
    Sunday
    Closed

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