Restaurant in London, United Kingdom
Sune
390Pearl PointsSerious neighbourhood restaurant, no ceremony required.

About Sune
A Michelin Plate-recognised wine-forward restaurant in Hackney, Sune delivers focused sharing plates — around 14 options — at a £££ price point that undercuts comparable quality in central London. With a 4.7 Google rating from 326 reviews and two consecutive Michelin Plates, it's the strongest case for a serious but relaxed special-occasion dinner in east London.
Is Sune worth booking for a special occasion in east London?
Yes — and it earns that answer without the price tag or the ceremony you'd expect from a Michelin-recognised room. Sune, on Pritchard's Road in Hackney, holds a Michelin Plate for both 2024 and 2025, carries a Google rating of 4.7 from over 326 reviews, and sits in a part of east London where the bar for neighbourhood dining has risen sharply. If you're looking for a wine-led dinner that feels like a genuine occasion without demanding a ££££ budget, this is the most credible answer in E2.
What Sune actually is
Sune (pronounced 'sooner') is the project of hospitality duo Charlie Sims and Honey Spencer — the name drawn from Spencer's wine background. The format is a small wine bar in feel, with the substance of a serious neighbourhood restaurant underneath. Around 14 sharing plates form a fluid menu, and the kitchen's discipline is worth noting: dishes are built on simple, complementary combinations rather than complexity for its own sake. The Michelin assessment singles out pork collar with tardive and wild sea bass with charred greens as examples of that restraint , bold pairings that stay focused rather than reaching for novelty.
For a special occasion, that focus is an asset. The menu doesn't sprawl, which means dishes arrive at a sensible pace. Michelin reviewers specifically flag the service team for managing this well , no plate-shuffling, no awkward stacking, just a rhythm that lets the meal breathe. On a date or anniversary dinner, that matters as much as what's on the plate.
The wine program is the point
Sune is wine-forward by design, and this shapes how you should approach it. The format , sharing plates built around flavour-led combinations , is structured to support wine pairings rather than compete with them. If wine is central to how you mark a special occasion, this is a stronger match than most neighbourhood restaurants at the £££ price point. The room has the feel of a wine bar, which means a later evening at Sune , staying on after dinner for another glass , is a natural extension of the meal rather than a change of venue. As a late-night option, it is better suited than a formal dining room that clears tables at pace.
Who this is right for
Sune works well for couples marking anniversaries or birthdays who want a real dinner without a £££££ bill. It also suits small groups of three or four who share a bottle-led approach to eating out , the sharing format rewards a table that wants to order widely and drink well. Solo diners and pairs who favour counter or bar seating will want to check availability, as the wine-bar feel of the room suggests bar seats may be an option, though this is not confirmed in available data.
It is less suited to large group celebrations where separate mains and a structured timeline matter more than a fluid, shared progression through the menu. For that format, venues with fixed tasting menus or broader table configurations may be more practical.
East London context
Pritchard's Road puts Sune in a part of Hackney where serious food has become the norm rather than the exception. Nearby, The Baring and Caia operate in overlapping territory , neighbourhood-rooted, wine-conscious, ingredient-led. The difference with Sune is the Michelin recognition, which adds a layer of credibility for occasions where you want some external validation to go with your booking. If you're choosing between east London options for a celebratory dinner, Sune's sustained Michelin Plate across two consecutive years is a meaningful signal.
For a broader view of where Sune sits across London's restaurant scene, the full London restaurants guide covers the range from neighbourhood plates to formal tasting menus. If the evening calls for a cocktail before dinner or a bar to move on to afterwards, the London bars guide is the practical next step. Wine-focused visitors planning beyond one evening may also find the London wineries guide and the London experiences guide useful for building out the trip.
Further afield, the European Contemporary category that Sune belongs to is well represented by Zén in Singapore and Schwarzer Adler in Hall in Tirol for those benchmarking the format internationally. Within the UK, The Fat Duck in Bray, L'Enclume in Cartmel, Moor Hall in Aughton, Gidleigh Park in Chagford, Hand and Flowers in Marlow, and hide and fox in Saltwood define the upper tier of serious cooking outside the capital.
Practical details
Address: 129A Pritchard's Road, London E2 9AP. Price range: £££. Booking difficulty: Moderate , plan ahead for weekends and special occasions, but this is not in the six-weeks-out bracket of central London's most sought-after rooms. Awards: Michelin Plate 2024 and 2025. Google rating: 4.7 from 326 reviews. Format: Around 14 sharing plates, wine-forward, approximately wine-bar scale in terms of room size. Dress: No confirmed dress code , the east London neighbourhood feel and wine-bar format suggest smart casual is appropriate. Late-night suitability: The wine-bar atmosphere makes Sune a reasonable choice for extending the evening rather than an early-table-only venue.
How It Compares
See the comparison section below for how Sune positions against London's broader fine-dining bracket.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should a first-timer know about Sune?
Sune is a sharing-plates restaurant, so come with someone you're happy to split dishes with — the menu runs around 14 plates built around simple, flavour-led combinations. It holds a Michelin Plate (2025), which signals quality cooking without the formality or cost of a starred room. Booking ahead for weekends is sensible; this is a serious neighbourhood spot in east London's E2, not a casual drop-in.
Is Sune good for solo dining?
The wine-bar format and sharing-plate menu make Sune a better fit for two or more. Solo diners can eat well here, but the menu's logic — around 14 plates designed to be split — means you'll either under-order or over-order on your own. If solo dining is the priority, a wine-bar counter seat would make this more workable, though seat availability is not confirmed in current data.
Is Sune worth the price?
At £££, Sune sits in the mid-range for London and delivers Michelin Plate-level cooking without the £££££ bill of rooms like The Ledbury or CORE by Clare Smyth. For east London specifically, it's one of the stronger value cases: the cooking is restrained and focused, the service is praised for pacing, and the wine program is a genuine draw. If you're comparing purely on price-to-quality, this is a strong booking.
Can I eat at the bar at Sune?
Sune has the feel of a small wine bar, which suggests counter or bar seating may exist, but specific seating configurations are not confirmed in available venue data. check the venue's official channels before assuming bar seats are available for walk-ins or solo visits.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Sune?
Sune does not operate a traditional tasting menu — it runs a fluid sharing-plate format of around 14 dishes, which changes based on availability and season. If you prefer a structured, set-course progression, the format here is looser than that. The upside is flexibility; the trade-off is that you're building the meal yourself rather than being guided through one.
What should I wear to Sune?
Sune is a Hackney neighbourhood restaurant with a wine-bar feel — the environment is relaxed rather than formal. There is no indicated dress code in available venue data, but smart casual fits the room: put-together without being stiff. You won't need a jacket, but this isn't a jeans-and-trainers-at-a-counter kind of place either.
Location
129A Pritchard's Rd, London E2 9AP, United Kingdom
London, United Kingdom
Compare Sune
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sune | This vibrant, wine-forward restaurant is in a cool foodie corner of east London and is the creation of experienced hospitality duo Charlie Sims and Honey Spencer. Sune takes its name from Honey's wine...; Sune (pronounced ‘sooner’) has the feel of a small wine bar, but the heart of a great neighbourhood restaurant. Its fluid menu lists around 14 sharing plates, which show an admirable restraint so that dishes are never overcrowded; the focus is on simple combinations of complementary flavours that are robust and satisfying. So, succulent pork collar might be paired with crisp, bitter tardive, and wild sea bass with charred greens. The delightful young service team ensure the arrival of dishes is well paced, so one never has to resort to the sort of plate shuffling choreography that sometimes blights similar places.; Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024) | £££ | — |
| CORE by Clare Smyth | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | ££££ | — |
| Restaurant Gordon Ramsay | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | ££££ | — |
| Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | ££££ | — |
| The Ledbury | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | ££££ | — |
| Dinner by Heston Blumenthal | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | ££££ | — |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Also Consider
- CORE by Clare Smyth — Modern British, ££££
- Restaurant Gordon Ramsay — Contemporary European, French, ££££
- Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library — Modern French, ££££
- The Ledbury — Modern European, Modern Cuisine, ££££
- Dinner by Heston Blumenthal — Modern British, Traditional British, ££££
Sune operates at £££ in a category where most of its Michelin-credentialed London competition charges ££££. That gap is the starting point for any honest comparison. CORE by Clare Smyth and The Ledbury both sit in the three-star tier — the quality ceiling is higher, but so is the commitment: longer meals, stricter booking windows, and a formal atmosphere that is a feature for some diners and a barrier for others. If your occasion calls for ceremony and you have the budget, those rooms deliver something Sune cannot match. If you want serious cooking without the full-service production, Sune is the more practical choice.
Restaurant Gordon Ramsay and Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library both anchor themselves in Mayfair and Chelsea, where the room design and location are part of the premium. Sune offers none of that geography or grandeur, which is precisely why it costs less. For a date or anniversary where the east London neighbourhood feel suits the occasion, Sune is the better value. For a business dinner where the address and room signal matters, the ££££ Mayfair options carry more weight. Dinner by Heston Blumenthal occupies a different register entirely — a hotel-anchored destination with a fixed concept — and is harder to compare directly to a neighbourhood wine-focused room like Sune.
Within east London's own bracket, Caia and The Baring are the natural comparisons. Sune's two consecutive Michelin Plates give it an edge in external credibility over most neighbourhood peers. If you are choosing between east London options for a special occasion and want a booking that carries some verifiable signal of quality, Sune is currently the strongest candidate in the area at this price point.
Recognized By
Explore London
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