Restaurant in Belfast, United Kingdom
Orā
290ptsGlobal small plates, low fuss, fair price.

About Orā
Orā on Great Victoria Street is Belfast's most useful late-night small-plates option at ££: a Michelin Plate-recognised kitchen (2024) serving globally-influenced sharing plates in a bright, high-energy room. It's the right call for groups wanting real cooking without a formal dining commitment. For structured tasting menus or white-tablecloth occasions, look to OX or The Muddlers Club instead.
Should You Book Orā? The Verdict
If you've been to Orā before, the question on a return visit is whether it still holds up — and for a small-plates bar on Great Victoria Street, the answer is yes, with caveats. The format is designed for repeat visits: dishes rotate with the kitchen's mood, plates arrive as they're ready, and the Michelin Plate recognition earned in 2024 confirms this is a kitchen operating with genuine care rather than coasting on casual-bar expectations. At the ££ price point, it's one of the more compelling reasons to stay out late in Belfast. The Google rating of 4.6 across 161 reviews suggests consistency rather than fluke.
Book here if you want a fun, low-commitment evening with real cooking behind it. Look elsewhere if you need a structured dining experience with a fixed sequence and formal service.
The Space and Atmosphere
Orā occupies the kind of room that makes small-plates dining feel like the right call: bright, animated, and built for sharing. The spatial logic is tapas-bar rather than fine-dining — counter seating and a convivial layout that keeps energy levels high without tipping into chaos. This is not a room for quiet conversation or intimate whispers across a candlelit table. It's better suited to groups who want to graze, drink, and talk loud.
The late-night angle is where Orā earns its position in Belfast. On Great Victoria Street, options for serious food after standard dinner hours are thin. Orā's format , small plates served as they come , suits the rhythm of a night that started elsewhere. You can drop in after a show or a drink somewhere else and put together a meal from whatever the kitchen is running. That flexibility is genuinely useful and harder to find at this quality level in the city than it should be.
For a special occasion, Orā works leading when the occasion is low-key celebratory rather than milestone formal. A birthday dinner where everyone orders freely and shares across the table fits the room well. An anniversary dinner requiring attentive, choreographed service and a wine list with depth probably doesn't.
The Food
The kitchen draws on global reference points , arancini, laksa, and dishes that reflect the owner's travels , rather than a single cuisine tradition. Chef Sasu Laukkonen brings a considered approach to what could easily feel like a trend-chasing menu. The Michelin Plate recognition is the clearest external signal that the cooking here is disciplined, not just eclectic. Dishes are prepared carefully and served as they're ready, which creates a rhythm that works better when you're not watching the clock.
Because the menu covers wide ground , Italian, Southeast Asian, and points in between , the kitchen's execution across different styles is the real test. The 2024 Michelin Plate suggests it passes. But this is not a venue to visit for a single definitive dish or a tasting menu with narrative structure. The appeal is variety and spontaneity, and that's a reasonable trade-off at ££.
Comparing Orā to what else Belfast offers at the same price tier: EDŌ runs European contemporary small plates at ££ and is the closest structural comparator. Yugo covers Asian-leaning plates at the same price point. Orā's edge is its Michelin recognition and its suitability for late-night eating; the others may offer a tighter thematic focus.
Practical Details
Reservations: Easy to book , walk-in friendly for the format, but a booking is worth making if you have a group or a specific time in mind. Dress: No formal dress code expected at this price tier and style; smart-casual is fine. Budget: ££ , expect a reasonable per-head spend, especially if you're ordering several small plates and drinks. Location: 12 Great Victoria Street, Belfast BT2 7BA , central, well-connected, and close to the city's theatre and hotel district. Awards: Michelin Plate 2024. Google Rating: 4.6 (161 reviews).
How It Fits Belfast's Dining Scene
Belfast's restaurant scene has matured significantly at the upper end, with OX and The Muddlers Club holding the ££££ and £££ end of the market. Orā sits at ££ with a Michelin Plate, which makes it one of the stronger value propositions for serious food without a serious bill. If you're planning a broader Belfast visit, our full Belfast restaurants guide covers the complete range, and our full Belfast bars guide is useful for mapping a late-night route that starts or ends here. For accommodation nearby, the full Belfast hotels guide covers options within walking distance of Great Victoria Street.
If you're moving around Northern Ireland, Artis in Derry and Lir in Coleraine are worth noting as regional comparators. For a broader read on the modern cuisine category internationally, Frantzén in Stockholm and Maison Lameloise in Chagny represent the ceiling of what the category can deliver , useful context for understanding where Orā sits in the wider picture.
For a complete view of what Belfast offers beyond dining, the full Belfast experiences guide and full Belfast wineries guide fill in the gaps. Other Belfast restaurants worth comparing directly include mrDeanes, Stove Bistro, and Beau.
Compare Orā
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Orā | It’s all about sharing at this bright, buzzy tapas-style bar – a fun place which echoes the city’s cosmopolitan vibe. Carefully prepared small plates reflect the owner’s travels and range from arancini to laksa; they’re served as they’re ready, creating anticipation for each one to arrive.; It’s all about sharing at this bright, buzzy tapas-style bar – a fun place which echoes the city’s cosmopolitan vibe. Carefully prepared small plates reflect the owner’s travels and range from arancini to laksa; they’re served as they’re ready, creating anticipation for each one to arrive.; Michelin Plate (2024) | ££ | — |
| OX | Michelin 1 Star | £££ | — |
| The Muddlers Club | Michelin 1 Star | £££ | — |
| Deanes at Queens | ££ | — | |
| EDŌ | ££ | — | |
| Yugo | ££ | — |
A quick look at how Orā measures up.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Orā good for solo dining?
Yes — the bar format and small-plates service style work naturally for solo diners. Dishes arrive as they're ready, so there's no awkward waiting, and the bright, animated room doesn't feel isolating when you're eating alone. At ££, the spend per head stays manageable for a solo visit.
Is Orā good for a special occasion?
It works for a low-key celebration rather than a formal milestone dinner. The Michelin Plate recognition (2024) adds credibility, but the sharing format and casual energy sit closer to a good night out than a landmark meal. For a genuinely special occasion, OX or The Muddlers Club set a more deliberate table.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Orā?
The venue data does not confirm a tasting menu format — Orā runs as a small-plates sharing bar, not a structured tasting progression. If you want a set tasting experience in Belfast, EDŌ or OX are the more relevant options. At Orā, the value is in ordering across the menu rather than following a fixed sequence.
What should I wear to Orā?
Nothing on the venue record suggests a dress code. The room is described as bright and animated, and the ££ price point and sharing-bar format point to a come-as-you-are crowd. Neat casual is a safe read — no need to dress up.
What are alternatives to Orā in Belfast?
For more ambitious cooking at a higher price, OX (££££) is Belfast's strongest fine-dining option and holds a Michelin Star. The Muddlers Club (£££) sits between the two on formality and spend. If you want a similar casual, flavour-led format to Orā but with a different reference point, Yugo's Asian-leaning small plates are worth comparing.
Can Orā accommodate groups?
The sharing-plates format makes Orā a natural fit for groups — dishes are designed to be ordered across the table rather than individually. For larger parties, booking ahead is worth doing to secure space on Great Victoria Street, even though the venue is generally walk-in friendly.
Is Orā worth the price?
At ££, yes — Michelin Plate recognition at this price bracket is a reliable signal that the kitchen is doing more than the cover charge implies. The global small-plates format means you can calibrate spend by how many dishes you order, which keeps it flexible. For what it is, the value holds up against comparable casual options in Belfast.
Recognized By
Similar venues by awards
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