Skip to main content

    Restaurant in Manilla, Philippines

    Metiz

    350Pearl Points

    Michelin-noted, easy to book, no fuss.

    Metiz, Restaurant in Manilla

    About Metiz

    A Michelin Plate neo-bistro in Makati ranked #82 in Asia by Opinionated About Dining (2025), Metiz is the pick for food-focused diners who want technically precise cooking — French method, Philippine ingredients — without the ceremony of Manila's more theatrical tasting menus. Booking is easy, making it one of the more accessible serious tables in the city.

    Should You Book Metiz?

    If you are choosing between Metiz and Toyo Eatery for your one serious dinner in Makati, the decision comes down to format. Toyo leans into a more ceremonial Filipino tasting experience; Metiz, operating as a neo-bistro under chef Stephan Duhesme, runs leaner and more technically focused, with a kitchen that prioritizes precision over pageantry. For food-forward diners who want to see what a French-trained sensibility does with Philippine ingredients and technique, Metiz is the stronger pick.

    The restaurant holds a 2026 Michelin Plate and has climbed from a 2023 OAD Recommended listing to #82 in Asia on the 2025 Opinionated About Dining rankings — a three-year trajectory that signals a kitchen gaining confidence and consistency, not coasting. That kind of upward movement in a crowded regional field is meaningful: OAD rankings are driven by frequent, experienced diners, which means Metiz is earning repeat visits from people who eat everywhere.

    What Metiz Does Well

    The neo-bistro format is the key to reading this restaurant correctly. Unlike the more theatrical tasting menus at Gallery By Chele, Metiz keeps the room and the service register relatively informal while the cooking itself stays disciplined. That gap — relaxed room, serious kitchen , is where the restaurant earns its reputation. The cuisine sits at the intersection of French technique and Filipino ingredient logic, which is a genuinely productive combination in the right hands. Duhesme's training positions the kitchen to handle classical methods confidently, while sourcing locally gives the menu a specificity that differentiates it from Manila's generic fine-casual options.

    Visually, the room is ground-floor and unfussy , this is not a destination for dramatic interior design the way some Makati addresses try to be. The focus is the plate. For the explorer-type diner who reads OAD lists and tracks chef trajectories, that trade-off is a feature, not a drawback. If you want spectacle with your dinner, look elsewhere; if you want to eat well and pay attention to what is on the table, Metiz delivers.

    Leading Time to Visit

    Saturday lunch, available from 12–3 pm, is the format to consider if you want more breathing room. Dinner service runs Tuesday through Saturday from 6–11 pm (11:30 pm on Saturdays), and the later slots on Friday and Saturday evenings will be the most energetic. For a focused, quieter meal where you can actually assess the cooking without noise pressure, a weekday dinner , Wednesday or Thursday , is the practical choice. The restaurant is closed Sunday and Monday, so plan accordingly if you are building a Manila itinerary around it.

    The Makati address on Chino Roces Avenue Extension puts it in a practical part of the city for anyone staying in the BGC or Makati hotel corridor. See our full Manila hotels guide if you are still planning where to base yourself.

    Booking and Access

    Booking difficulty is rated easy, which is one of Metiz's practical advantages over some of its better-known Manila peers. You do not need to plan months in advance the way you might for the hardest tables in the region. That said, Saturday dinner slots and Saturday lunch fill faster than midweek, so book those at least a week or two out. No phone number or booking URL is listed publicly at time of writing , check the restaurant directly through its current channels for reservations.

    Know Before You Go

    • Address: Ground floor, Building A, 2316 Chino Roces Ave Extension, Makati City, Metro Manila
    • Hours: Tuesday–Friday 6–11 pm; Saturday 12–3 pm and 6–11:30 pm; closed Sunday and Monday
    • Awards: Michelin Plate (2026); OAD Leading Restaurants in Asia #82 (2025)
    • Google Rating: 4.5 from 149 reviews
    • Cuisine: Neo-bistro (French technique, Philippine ingredients)
    • Booking difficulty: Easy , no months-in-advance pressure; book 1–2 weeks out for weekends
    • Leading visit window: Wednesday or Thursday dinner for the quietest room; Saturday lunch for a more relaxed pace

    How It Fits Manila's Broader Scene

    For a broader picture of what Manila's restaurant scene offers, see our full Manila restaurants guide. If you want to compare across cuisine types, Antonio's and Grace Park Dining by Margarita Forés offer strong alternatives depending on your format preference. For Makati specifically, Blackbird Makati and Celera are worth knowing. If you are range-checking the neo-bistro format internationally, André in Valence and Barred in Rome show how the format plays in Europe for context. Elsewhere in the Philippines, Linamnam in Parañaque and Asador Alfonso in Cavite are worth a look if you are extending your trip. Round out your Manila planning with our bars guide and experiences guide.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    • How far ahead should I book Metiz? Booking difficulty is easy , one to two weeks is sufficient for most slots. Saturday lunch and Friday or Saturday dinner fill faster; midweek dinners can often be booked with less lead time. No advance reservation panic required, which is unusual for a Michelin-recognised restaurant ranked in OAD's Asia top 100.
    • What should I order at Metiz? No specific menu items are confirmed in available data, so avoid any source claiming insider dish knowledge it cannot verify. What is clear from the awards trajectory and neo-bistro format is that the kitchen's strength lies in technically precise cooking built on local Philippine ingredients with French method. Order what the kitchen is pushing that week rather than hunting for a fixed signature.
    • Is lunch or dinner better at Metiz? Saturday lunch (12–3 pm) is the only lunch service, and it suits a slower, more exploratory pace. Dinner runs Tuesday through Saturday and offers more menu depth for an evening commitment. For a first visit, dinner gives you the full picture; lunch is the right call if your schedule is tight or you want a lighter format.
    • Is Metiz good for solo dining? Yes. The neo-bistro format and relatively compact setting make solo dining practical. A focused, ingredient-driven kitchen rewards the kind of attention a solo diner can give it. Manila has few restaurants at this awards level where solo dining feels natural rather than awkward , Metiz is one of them.
    • Is Metiz good for a special occasion? Yes, with the right expectations. The room is relaxed rather than ceremonial, so if you need visual drama and tableside theatre, Gallery By Chele is the better fit. If the occasion is about eating seriously well in a room that does not feel stiff, Metiz works well , and the Michelin Plate and OAD #82 Asia ranking give it credibility as a destination table.
    • What are alternatives to Metiz in Manila? Toyo Eatery is the closest peer for cooking ambition and local ingredient focus, but leans more ceremonially Filipino. Gallery By Chele offers a more theatrical tasting menu experience. Locavore covers creative cuisine for diners who want a different angle. Bolero in Taguig is worth considering if you want a different neighbourhood base.
    • Does Metiz handle dietary restrictions? No confirmed policy information is available. Contact the restaurant directly before booking if restrictions are a factor , the neo-bistro tasting format often means the kitchen can accommodate with advance notice, but do not assume.
    • What should I wear to Metiz? No dress code is confirmed in available data. The neo-bistro format generally signals smart-casual: presentable but not black-tie. Makati dining at this level typically involves a collared shirt or equivalent for dinner; trainers are a judgement call. When in doubt, lean slightly formal , you will not be overdressed.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How far ahead should I book Metiz?

    Booking difficulty is rated easy, so a few days' notice is typically enough rather than weeks out. Saturday lunch (12–3 pm) is the most relaxed slot and the one most likely to have same-week availability. Dinner runs Tuesday through Saturday from 6 pm and fills more reliably on Fridays and Saturdays. Unlike Gallery By Chele, you do not need to treat this as a months-in-advance reservation.

    What should I order at Metiz?

    Metiz runs a neo-bistro format under Chef Stephan Duhesme, so the menu is structured rather than purely à la carte — follow the format rather than cherry-picking. The restaurant holds a Michelin Plate (2026) and ranked #82 on OAD's Top Restaurants in Asia (2025), which points to consistent execution across the menu. Specific dishes are not listed in the venue data, so ask the team on the night what is current.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Metiz?

    Saturday lunch (12–3 pm) is the better call if you want a more relaxed pace and easier access — it is the only midday service available. Dinner runs Tuesday through Saturday and gives you the fuller evening format. If Saturday is your only option and you dislike time pressure, lunch is the practical choice; otherwise dinner is the standard experience.

    Is Metiz good for solo dining?

    The neo-bistro format at Metiz works well for solo diners — counter or small table seating suits one person without the awkward large-table dynamics of more theatrical tasting-menu restaurants. Booking is easy, which removes the planning friction that can make solo reservations at harder venues feel disproportionate. It is a better solo choice than Gallery By Chele, where the ceremony of a full tasting menu can feel designed for groups.

    Is Metiz good for a special occasion?

    Yes, with the right expectations. Metiz holds a Michelin Plate (2026) and has climbed from OAD Recommended (2023) to #82 in Asia (2025), so the credentials are real. The neo-bistro format is less theatrical than Gallery By Chele, which means the occasion feels personal rather than produced. If you want a high-energy celebratory room, look elsewhere; if the meal itself is the occasion, Metiz delivers.

    Does Metiz handle dietary restrictions?

    The venue data does not specify a dietary policy, so check the venue's official channels before booking. As a neo-bistro with a structured menu, significant restrictions may limit what Chef Duhesme's kitchen can accommodate — it is worth flagging requirements at the time of reservation rather than on arrival. Tuesday through Friday dinner slots give the kitchen the most time to prepare if adjustments are needed.

    What should I wear to Metiz?

    The venue data does not specify a dress code. The neo-bistro format — less formal than a Michelin-starred tasting-menu room — suggests smart casual is appropriate, but this is not confirmed by venue data. When in doubt for a Makati restaurant at this level, neat and presentable is safe. If dress matters to your group, call ahead to confirm.

    Location

    Ground floor, building A, 2316 Chino Roces Ave, Extension, Makati City, 1232 Metro Manila, Philippines

    Manilla, Philippines

    Compare Metiz

    Comparing Metiz to Alternatives
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    MetizNeo-bistroMichelin Plate (2026); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Asia Ranked #82 (2025); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Asia Ranked #205 (2024); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Asia Recommended (2023)Easy
    Toyo EateryModern FillipinoMichelin 1 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Gallery By CheleModern FillipinoMichelin 1 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    LocavoreCreative CuisineUnknown
    M Dining + Bar MAsian FusionUnknown
    TxantonSpanishUnknown

    A quick look at how Metiz measures up.

    Also Consider

    Metiz sits in a tight cluster of Manila restaurants competing for the same food-serious diner, but each has a different profile. Toyo Eatery is the most direct comparison: both kitchens work with local Philippine ingredients at a high technical level, and both carry meaningful awards recognition. The difference is register — Toyo leans into a more explicitly Filipino tasting narrative, while Metiz operates in the neo-bistro mode, where French training shapes the plate without announcing itself. If you want a meal that reads as a statement about Filipino identity, Toyo is the call; if you want precision cooking in a lower-key room, Metiz pulls ahead.

    Gallery By Chele is the option for diners who want the full tasting-menu theatre — a more formal setting, more courses, more ceremony. It is the right choice for a special occasion that requires visual impact and a longer evening. Metiz is better value if what you are paying for is the cooking itself rather than the production around it. For something entirely different in format, Txanton covers Spanish cuisine with a different flavour logic altogether — worth knowing if your group has a preference for Iberian over Filipino-French.

    Locavore and M Dining + Bar M round out the Manila peer set for creative and Asian fusion respectively. Locavore suits diners who want to explore further outside the French-Filipino axis; M Dining is a practical option for groups who want a broader Asian fusion menu with less tasting-menu commitment. For the food enthusiast focused purely on kitchen ambition and upward trajectory, Metiz and Toyo are the two to choose between — and right now, Metiz's OAD climb from #205 to #82 in a single year gives it momentum that the other names on this list have not matched recently.

    Hours

    Monday
    Closed
    Tuesday
    6–11 pm
    Wednesday
    6–11 pm
    Thursday
    6–11 pm
    Friday
    6–11 pm
    Saturday
    12–3 pm, 6–11:30 pm
    Sunday
    Closed

    Recognized By

    Explore Manilla

    Keep this place

    Save or rate Metiz on Pearl

    Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.