Restaurant in Seoul, South Korea
Onjium
2,070Pearl PointsResearch-driven Korean tasting menu. Book early.

About Onjium
Ranked #57 on the World's 50 Best Restaurants 2025 and holding a Michelin star, Onjium is one of Seoul's hardest reservations and one of its most justified. Chef Cho Eun-hee's research-driven Korean tasting menus draw from centuries-old recipe books, with a strong vegetable focus and techniques including fermentation and drying. Open Tuesday to Friday only; book as far ahead as possible.
Verdict
If you've already been to Onjium once, go back. The restaurant's research-driven approach to Korean culinary heritage means the menu shifts with the team's ongoing archival work, and a second visit rewards you with an entirely different frame on what traditional Korean cooking can be. Ranked #57 on the World's 50 Best Restaurants 2025 list and holding a Michelin star, this is one of Seoul's most credentialed dining rooms — and the booking difficulty means most visitors only ever manage one visit. Plan for two if your schedule allows. For first-timers and returning guests alike, dinner is the stronger booking for the full experience, though lunch deserves consideration on its own terms.
What You're Booking
Onjium sits on the fourth floor at 49 Hyoja-ro in Jongno District, directly across from the stone wall of Gyeongbokgung Palace. The setting is deliberate: the visual calm of traditional Korean architecture outside the window frames a dining room that applies the same restraint inside. The room communicates its intentions before a course arrives — this is not a space competing for attention with the food.
The kitchen is led by Cho Eun-hee, a court cuisine specialist, alongside Park Sung-bae. Their approach is rooted in centuries-old Korean recipe books. Fermentation, drying, and frying techniques drawn from historical records appear throughout the menu, applied to seasonal ingredients. The result is not a nostalgia exercise: the team researches historical sources and builds contemporary versions of what they find, which means the menu has genuine intellectual content behind each dish. Colleagues from kitchens across Asia and further afield have taken notice, and Tatler's Leading Restaurants Asia-Pacific 2025 list confirms the restaurant's standing among regional peers.
Counter seating is available and worth requesting , it gives you a direct line of sight into the kitchen's quiet precision. The beverage pairings are curated to complement the historical sourcing of the food rather than operate as a separate showpiece.
Multi-Visit Strategy
The strongest argument for planning two visits to Onjium is the menu's research dependency. Because the culinary team sources dishes from archival study rather than a fixed seasonal rotation in the conventional sense, what you encounter on visit one may have limited overlap with visit two. On a first visit, focus on the counter seats and the full tasting menu at dinner , this gives you the deepest read on the kitchen's current thinking. On a second visit, lunch offers a different pacing and, at ₩₩₩₩ pricing, a different cost-to-time ratio that may suit a tighter itinerary. The vegetable focus is consistent across visits: Onjium's commitment to vegetables as primary ingredients rather than supporting elements is a deliberate philosophical position, not a trend accommodation, and it shapes the menu substantially on every occasion.
For anyone planning a broader Seoul itinerary across multiple meals, Onjium pairs well with Mingles for a contrast in how two top-tier Seoul kitchens interpret Korean heritage, or with La Yeon if court cuisine is your specific focus and you want a direct reference point. Kwonsooksoo offers another angle on refined Korean tasting formats at a comparable price tier. See our full Seoul restaurants guide for the wider picture.
Awards and Standing
The credential set here is dense and recent. World's 50 Best ranked Onjium #57 globally in 2025, up from #96 in 2024 , a meaningful jump that reflects growing international consensus rather than a single year's momentum. Asia's 50 Best placed it #10 regionally in 2025. La Liste scores it 89 points in its 2026 rankings (84.5 in 2025). Michelin awarded one star in 2024. Opinionated About Dining ranked it #134 in Asia in 2025. Tatler's Leading Restaurants Asia-Pacific 2025 list includes it. This is a restaurant with simultaneous recognition across multiple independent ranking systems, which makes the case for booking considerably easier than at venues relying on a single accolade.
Booking and Practical Details
Onjium operates Tuesday through Friday, with lunch from 12 PM to 3 PM and dinner from 6 PM to 10 PM. Saturday and Sunday are closed, as is Monday. That four-day window combined with the restaurant's international profile makes this one of Seoul's hardest reservations to secure. Treat it as a near-impossible booking and plan accordingly: pursue a reservation as early as the booking window allows, which typically means weeks to months in advance depending on the period. Walk-in attempts are not a practical strategy here.
The address is 4th Floor, 49 Hyoja-ro, Jongno-gu, Seoul. The Gyeongbokgung Palace area is well-served by Seoul's subway network, making the journey from most central hotel locations direct. For accommodation near the restaurant, our Seoul hotels guide covers options in and around the Jongno District.
If you're building a broader Korea itinerary, note that strong tasting-format restaurants operate beyond Seoul: Mori in Busan and Baegyangsa Temple in Jangseong-gun are worth considering alongside Onjium for a multi-city approach. See also our Seoul bars guide and Seoul experiences guide for planning around your dinner slot.
For Korean fine dining outside Korea, bōm in New York City and DOSA in London provide reference points in their respective cities.
Quick reference: Onjium, 4/F 49 Hyoja-ro, Jongno-gu, Seoul. Tue–Fri, lunch 12–3 PM, dinner 6–10 PM. Closed Sat, Sun, Mon. Price range ₩₩₩₩. Booking difficulty: near impossible , reserve as far ahead as the window permits.
Frequently Asked Questions
How far ahead should I book Onjium?
Book at least four to six weeks out, more if you're targeting a specific Friday dinner slot. Onjium operates only Tuesday through Friday — no weekends, no Mondays — which compresses availability significantly. With a World's 50 Best #57 ranking in 2025 driving international interest, lead time has increased. Contact via their Instagram (@onjium_restaurant) if the reservation system isn't surfacing availability.
Does Onjium handle dietary restrictions?
Communicate restrictions at the time of booking, not on arrival. The menu is research-led and changes based on archival sources and seasonal ingredients, so the kitchen needs advance notice to adjust. The culinary approach leans heavily on vegetables, fermented ingredients, and drying techniques, which gives the team some natural flexibility — but this is a set tasting format, not a build-your-own experience.
Is lunch or dinner better at Onjium?
Dinner is the stronger booking for most visitors. Lunch runs 12 PM to 3 PM and is a tighter window, while dinner from 6 PM to 10 PM allows the experience to unfold properly alongside beverage pairings. That said, lunch can be easier to secure given the compressed availability of a Tuesday-to-Friday schedule, so if your date options are limited, a weekday lunch is still the same kitchen and the same research-driven menu.
Is Onjium worth the price?
At the ₩₩₩₩ tier in Seoul, yes — provided you're here for Korean culinary heritage and not just a prestige tick. Onjium holds a Michelin star and ranked #57 on World's 50 Best in 2025, up from #96 in 2024, which reflects genuine momentum rather than static reputation. For a comparable price in Seoul, you're not getting this depth of archival research into traditional recipes. If you want a more accessible introduction to Korean fine dining, 7th Door or Bicena sit at a lower price point.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Onjium?
Yes, and the argument for returning a second time is stronger than at most restaurants in this bracket. Because the menu is sourced from centuries-old Korean recipe books and changes with ongoing research, repeat visits surface genuinely different dishes rather than seasonal tweaks to a fixed format. Onjium's Asia's 50 Best #10 ranking in 2025 and its We're Smart recognition for vegetable-forward cooking both point to a kitchen operating with clear intent, not trend-chasing.
Can Onjium accommodate groups?
Groups are possible but require early coordination. The restaurant is on the fourth floor at 49 Hyoja-ro, Jongno District — a deliberate, pared-back space — and the counter seating format means large parties need to plan carefully. For groups of six or more, reach out directly via @onjium_restaurant on Instagram well in advance. Smaller groups of two to four will have an easier time securing seating through standard reservation channels.
Is Onjium good for a special occasion?
Yes, if the occasion calls for something considered rather than celebratory. The setting across from Gyeongbokgung Palace, the historically grounded menu, and the focused atmosphere make it a strong choice for a milestone dinner where the food is the event. It is not the right call if your group wants a lively room or expects tableside theatre. For a special occasion with more social energy, L'Amitié or Zero Complex offer a different tone at a similar or lower price point.
Location
South Korea, Seoul, Jongno District, Hyoja-ro, 49 4층
Seoul, South Korea
Compare Onjium
Also Consider
- Solbam — Contemporary, ₩₩₩₩
- 7th Door — Korean, Contemporary, ₩₩₩₩
- Bicena — Korean, ₩₩₩₩
- L'Amitié — French, ₩₩₩
- Zero Complex — Korean-French, Innovative, ₩₩₩₩
At the ₩₩₩₩ tier in Seoul, Onjium competes directly with Bicena, 7th Door, and Zero Complex, but it occupies a different intellectual position than any of them. Onjium's menu is built from archival Korean culinary research — court cuisine sources, historical recipe books, traditional fermentation and drying techniques — which gives it a conceptual depth that restaurants working a contemporary-Korean-with-modern-technique format don't replicate. If that research-led framing is what you're after, Onjium is the clearest choice in this peer group. If you want contemporary Korean cooking that leans harder into innovation for its own sake, Zero Complex's Korean-French fusion approach is a credible alternative at the same price point.
Solbam at ₩₩₩₩ is the easier booking of the two and worth considering if Onjium's reservation window is closed when you're planning. 7th Door offers a different interpretation of Korean tasting-menu dining and is similarly priced, but neither carries Onjium's current global ranking weight — World's 50 Best #57 in 2025 is a meaningful differentiator in practical terms, not just prestige. For a slightly lower price commitment, L'Amitié at ₩₩₩ shifts the category entirely to French, which suits diners who want a break from Korean tasting formats mid-trip rather than a direct comparison.
The honest booking advice: if you can get an Onjium reservation, take it over every other venue in this peer set for a serious Korean culinary experience. If you cannot, Bicena and Solbam are the strongest fallbacks at the same price tier. For a wider view of Seoul's top dining options across all categories, see our full Seoul restaurants guide.
Hours
- Monday
- closed
- Tuesday
- 12 PM-3 PM 6 PM-10 PM
- Wednesday
- 12 PM-3 PM 6 PM-10 PM
- Thursday
- 12 PM-3 PM 6 PM-10 PM
- Friday
- 12 PM-3 PM 6 PM-10 PM
- Saturday
- closed
- Sunday
- closed
Recognized By
Explore Seoul
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